POLITICAL campaigning necessarily produces a wide gap between words
and deeds--this is the price of bringing together a broad coalition with
disparate interests. All effective politicians are at times
authentically insincere or sincerely inauthentic. Exaggeration,
embellishment, overstatement, double-talk, systematic deception, and
lies presented as metaphorical "truths" are the order of the
day.
So of course Barack Obama is no different. He exaggerates the
credit he deserves for a very limited piece of ethics-reform
legislation. He embellishes when he presents himself as having had a
consistent record on the Iraq War, when in fact he's done a fair
amount of zigzagging. He engages in double-talk when, on NAFTA and Iraq,
he tells the rubes one thing and the policy people another. He
overstates when he presents his minimal accomplishments in the Illinois
senate as proof of his stature. He engages in systematic deception when
he says he doesn't take money from lobbyists. He presents a lie as
metaphorical truth when he says it was the 1965 "Bloody
Sunday" attacks on peaceful civil-rights protesters in Selma, Ala.,
that inspired his parents to marry (they had been married for years
already).
All of this is unappealing, but also unexceptional. What makes
Obama different is that there's not just a gap but a chasm between
his actions and his professed principles-this would normally kill a
candidacy. And because his deeds are so few, the disparity is all the
more salient. Obama, far more than the others, is the "judge me by
what I say and not what I do" candidate. He wants to be the
conscience of the country without necessarily having one himself.
The disparity between Obama's rhetoric of transcendence and
his conventional Chicago racial and patronage politics is a leitmotif of
his political career. In New York, politicians (Reverend Al excepted)
are usually forced to pay at least passing tribute to universal
principles and the ideal of clean government. But Chicago, until
recently a city of Lithuanians, blacks, and Poles governed by Irishmen
on the patronage model of the Italian Christian Democrats, is the city
of political and cultural tribalism.
Blacks adapted to both the tribalism and the corrupt patronage
politics that accompanied it. Historically, one of the ironies of
Chicago politics is that the clean-government candidates have been the
most racist, while those most open to black aspirations have been the
most corrupt. When the young Jesse Jackson received his first audience
with Richard Daley the elder, the mayor--impervious to the universalism
of the civil-rights movement in its glory--offered him a job as a
toll-taker. Jackson thought the offer demeaning but in time adapted. In
Chicago, racial reform has meant that today's Mayor Daley has been
cutting blacks in on the loot. Louis Farrakhan, Jesse Jackson, Jeremiah
Wright, and Barack Obama are all, in part, the expression of that
politics. It hasn't always worked for Chicago, which, under the
pressure of increasing taxes to pay for bloated government, is losing
its middle class. But it has served the city's political class
admirably.
For all his Camelot-like rhetoric, Obama is a product, in
significant measure, of the political culture that Chicago Tribune
columnist John Kass described thus: "We've had our chief of
detectives sent to prison for running the Outfit's (i.e., the
mob's) jewelry-heist ring. And we've had white guys with
Outfit connections get $100 million in affirmative action contracts from
their drinking buddy, Mayor Richard Daley.... That's the Chicago
Way." At no point did Obama, the would-be savior of American
politics, challenge this corruption, except for face-saving gestures as
a legislator. He was, in his own Harvard Law way, a product of it.
Why, you might ask, did the operators of Chicago's political
machine support Obama? Part of the answer was given long ago by the
then-boss of Chicago, Jake Arvey. When asked why he made Adlai
Stevenson--a man, like Obama, more famous for speeches than for
accomplishments--his party's gubernatorial candidate in 1948, Arvey
is said to have replied that he needed to "perfume the
ticket."
Obama first played a perfuming role as a state senator. His mentor,
Emil Jones, the machine--made president of the senate, allowed him to
sponsor a minor ethics bill. In return, Obama made sure to send plenty
of pork to Jones's district. When asked about pork-barrel spending,
Jones famously replied, "Some call it pork; I call it steak."
Obama repaid the generosity. When he had a chance to back
"clean" Democratic candidates for president of the Cook County
board of supervisors and Illinois governor, he stayed with the allies of
the Outfit. The gubernatorial candidate he backed, Rod Blagojevich, is
now under federal investigation, in part because of his relationship
with Tony Rezko, the man who helped Obama buy his current house.
The Chicago Way has delivered politically for Obama even this year.
Ninety percent of his popular-vote lead over Hillary Clinton comes from
Illinois, and two-thirds of that 90 percent comes just from Cook County.
Some of this advantage came from the efforts of Obama's political
ally, the flame-throwing reverend James Meeks, a political force in his
own right. Meeks, who mocks black moderates as "niggers," is
an Illinois state senator, the pastor of a mega-church, and a strong
supporter of Jesse Jackson's powerful political operation, which
has put its vote-pulling muscle squarely behind the Obama campaign.
It was only with Obama's remarks about "bitter,"
white, working-class, small-town voters that we saw his difficulties
appealing beyond the machine's reach. He won his U.S. Senate race
in 2004 not only because his opponents self-destructed, but also because
of the machine's ability to deliver votes (this minimized his need
to campaign among working-class whites downstate). In Pennsylvania he
has lacked such assistance--and the campaigning has not gone nearly so
well. First Obama pretended to be a bowler and scored a 37. Then,
appearing before a supposedly closed San Francisco audience, he
complained that small-town Pennsylvanians "cling to guns or
religion or antipathy toward people who aren't like them, or
anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment, as a way to explain
their frustrations."
This is the man who belongs to a church built around bitterness,
rancor, and conspiratorial fear. During the Reverend Wright affair,
Obama not only repeatedly lied about what he knew and when, but violated
the spirit of the civil-rights movement in its mid-1960s glory. When as
a young man I was on the periphery of the movement, there was an
unwritten rule that if people told racist jokes or speakers engaged in
defamatory rhetoric, you needed to register your immediate disapproval
by confronting the speaker or ostentatiously walking out.
Wright's "black theology" is essentially a
Christianized version of Malcolm X's ideology of hate. But for 20
years Obama, who had planned to run for mayor of Chicago, kept silent
about the close if at times competitive relationship between Reverend
Wright, whose 8,000-member mega-church gave him his political base, and
Louis Farrakhan. His ambition overrode his moral integrity.
As part of his "black value system," Reverend Wright
attacked whites for their "middle classism,"
"materialism," and "greed in a world of need." Obama
sounded similar notes in his recent address at the Cooper Union, in
which he laid the blame for the sub-prime mortgage crisis on those who
had "embraced an ethic of greed, corner cutting, and inside
dealing." But that's exactly what Obama did in buying his
luxurious house.
Given the choice of purchasing a less expensive home or
getting into bed with his fundraiser-cum-slumlord-cum-fixer Tony Rezko,
Obama chose the latter. Then again, the oppressed of Trinity Church are
building Wright a $1.6 million, 10,340-square-foot home complete with
four-car garage, whirlpool, and butler's pantry. This house, which
backs onto a golf course, is to sit in Tinley Park, a gated community
that is 93 percent white.
The Obamas' charitable giving is consistent with Reverend
Wright's talking left while living right. Obama and his wife are
quite well-off. They had an estimated income of $1.2 million from 2000
to 2004. But the man who preaches compassion and mutuality gave all of 1
percent of that income to charity during those years. Most of that went
to subvent Wright's church.
BELOW THE FRAY
There is a similar chasm when it comes to Obama's claim to
post-partisanship. His achievements in reaching out to moderate voters
are largely proleptic. But words are not deeds, and while Obama has few
concrete achievements to his name, his voting record hardly suggests an
ability to rise above Left-versus-Right. In the Illinois state senate he
made a specialty of voting "present," but after his first two
years in the U.S. Senate, National Journal's analysis of roll-call
votes found that he was more liberal than 86 percent of his colleagues.
His voting record has only moved farther left since then. The liberal
Americans for Democratic Action now gives him a 97.5 percent rating,
while National Journal ranks him the most liberal member of the Senate.
By comparison, Hillary Clinton, who occasionally votes with the GOP,
ranks 16th. Obama is such a down-the-line partisan that, according to
Congressional Quarterly, in the last two years he has voted with the
Democrats more often than did the party's majority leader, Harry
Reid.
Likewise, for all his talk of post-racialism, Obama has, with the
contrivance of the press, played traditional South Side racial politics.
The day after his surprise loss in New Hampshire, and in anticipation of
the South Carolina primary, with its heavily black electorate, South
Side congressman Jesse Jackson Jr.--Obama's national
co-chairman--appeared on MSNBC to argue, in a prepared statement, that
Hillary Clinton's teary moment on the campaign trail reflected her
deep-seated racism. "Those tears," said Jackson, "have to
be analyzed.... They have to be looked at very, very carefully in light
of Katrina, in light of other things that Mrs. Clinton did not cry for,
particularly as we head to South Carolina, where 45 percent of African
Americans will participate in the Democratic contest.... We saw tears in
response to her appearance, so that her appearance brought her to tears,
but not Hurricane Katrina, not other issues." In other words,
whites who are at odds with, or who haven't delivered for, Chicago
pols can be obliquely accused of racism on the flimsiest basis, but
pillars of local black politics such as Reverend Wright, with his
exclusivist racial theology, are beyond criticism.
Liberals love Obama's talk of taking on powerful financial
interests. But here too he is rather slippery.
In his Cooper Union
speech, he denounced in no uncertain terms the "special
interests" of people on Wall Street (who are well represented among
his campaign donors). He of course had an opportunity to push for
repealing the privileged tax treatment of private-equity firms when that
question was before Charles Grassley's Senate subcommittee--but he
simply made a pro forma statement in favor of doing so and disappeared
into the woodwork. Nationally, as in Chicago, Obama the soi-disant
"reformer" never crosses swords with any of his putative foes.
To pick another example, he has attacked "predatory" sub-prime
lenders while taking roughly $1.3 million in contributions from
companies in that line of business.
Obama is the internationalist opposed to free trade. He is the
friend of race-baiters who thinks Don Imus deserved to be fired. He is
the proponent of courage in the face of powerful interests who lacked
the courage to break with Reverend Wright. He is the man who would lead
our efforts against terrorism yet was friendly with Bill Ayers, the
unrepentant 1960s terrorist. He is the post-racialist supporter of
affirmative action. He is the enemy of Big Oil who takes money from
executives at Exxon-Mobil, Shell, and British Petroleum.
Obama has, in a sense, represented a new version of the Invisible
Man, a candidate whose color obscures his failings. Perhaps his remarks
about bitter Pennsylvanians' clinging to their guns have finally
made visible the real man and his Harvard hauteur.
But so far, the wild discrepancy between Obama's words and his
deeds, and between his enormous ambitions and his minimal
accomplishments, doesn't seem to have fazed his core supporters,
who apparently suffer from a severe case of cognitive dissonance. Like
cultists who rededicate themselves when the cult's prophecies have
been falsified, his fans redouble their delusions in the face of his
obvious hypocrisy. That is because Obama, in the imagination of many of
his fans in the public and the press, is both a deduction from what
was-the failures of the Bush administration and the scandals of the
Clintons-and an expression of what should be. The ideal, the aspiration,
is so rhetorically appealing that it has been assumed to be true. They
remind one of Woodrow Wilson's answer when asked if his plan for a
League of Nations was practicable: "If it won't work, it must
be made to work."
Mr. Siegel is a contributing editor of City Journal. He teaches at
the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art.
COPYRIGHT 2008 National Review,
Inc.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved.
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