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Progressive Women's Blog Ring
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Barack Obama

White Women Begin To Turn Away from Hillary

Joining those of us who never turned towards Hillary in the first place…

LEVITTOWN, Pa. ” Like many women over 50, Paula Houwen was eager to vote for Hillary Clinton for president.

“I was impressed when she was first lady. She wasn’t the country’s trophy wife,” the 56-year-old suburban Philadelphia pharmacist recalled.

Today, though, Houwen’s no longer a Clinton fan.

“I do not like the way Hillary Clinton has run her campaign,” she said.

Clinton’s strongest core of support ”white women” is beginning to erode in Pennsylvania, the site of the critical April 22 Democratic presidential primary, and a loss here could effectively end her White House run.

A Quinnipiac University survey taken April 3-6 in Pennsylvania found that Clinton’s support fell 6 percentage points in a week among white women. Nationally, a Lifetime Networks poll of women found that 26 percent said they liked Clinton less now than in January, while only 15 percent said they liked her more.

“These are Democratic women who waited all their lives for a woman president, but Hillary is not turning them on,” said polling analyst Clay Richards.

The Clinton campaign is aware of the danger, and last week it began dispatching friends of Clinton from New York, Washington and elsewhere to key Pennsylvania communities to have “living room chats” with women.

“We thought this might happen,” senior Clinton adviser Ann Lewis said of the erosion. A key reason, she said, is rival Barack Obama’s ad barrage, notably his gentle but persistent reminders to TV viewers that he’s well-equipped to heal the ailing economy.

“I can’t overcome the media barrage, so we need to go back to talking to people about their personal concerns,” said Lewis, “and emphasizing her experience.”

Economic concerns are at the top of most women’s lists, and “Obama is coming across to more and more people as qualified on that issue,” Richards said.

Interviews in suburban Philadelphia, an area full of swing voters who are likely to determine the outcome of the primary, found other reasons for Clinton’s shaky support.

A lot of white women, and for that matter white men, want the race to end and increasingly consider Obama an acceptable nominee.

“There may be a general, reluctant acceptance that things just don’t look that good for Clinton,” said Susan Carroll, a professor of political science and women’s and gender studies at Rutgers University.

The most familiar echo among many Pennsylvania women when they discuss Clinton, however, is disappointment. Ask them when they became disillusioned with the woman who would be president, and they can cite almost the exact moment.

For Clare Howard, a meditation teacher from Southhampton, it was the night in January when Bill Clinton suggested that Obama did well in the South Carolina primary because of his race.

That went too far, said Howard, 60. “It was like they would do anything to win,” she said.

Joan Schmidt, 60, a school psychologist in Levittown, grew tired of hearing Clinton tout €” and exaggerate ” her experience.

Jane Dovel, 68, an artist in Doylestown, turned away from Clinton after hearing the New York senator’s reaction to Obama’s comments that Ronald Reagan had been a “transformative political figure.”

Clinton fired back that Republicans hadn’t had better ideas. “I don’t think it’s a better idea to privatize Social Security,” she said. “I don’t think it’s a better idea to eliminate the minimum wage.”

That’s not what Obama had said, recalled Dovel. “What Clinton said was a blatant lie,” she said. “From that moment on, she was history. She was not to be trusted.”

Obama’s increasing ability to convince these women that he’s on their side has contributed to their shift away from Clinton.

Most are old enough to remember John F. Kennedy, and it’s common to hear them say how much the Illinois senator reminds them of the young president. “He’s definitely someone who knows how to get everyone on board,” said Jill Saul, a Bristol teacher.

Howard was struck by how much her three children were impressed with Obama — much the way Democratic youngsters were taken with Kennedy.

“If I ever want to look my kids in the eye again,” she laughed, “I have to go with Obama.”

The Clinton forces realize that a new trend_ Clinton, after all, still leads Obama among white women by 28 points in the Quinnipiac poll ”could quickly become a tidal wave if left unchecked.

So they’re planning more living-room visits, closed to the media and not publicized, as a way of reminding people of Clinton’s personal qualities.

Clinton is getting to be a tougher sell, though, because a lot of women have thought long and hard about moving away from someone whom they’ve wanted for a long time.

“If elected, I’m sure she’ll do a good job,” said Michele Scarborough, a Quakertown borough councilwoman. “But I just don’t feel she’s one of us.”

To read the Lifetime Networks poll, go to:

www.mylifetime.com/community/my-lifetime-commitment/ewc/election-race-shifts-so-do-womens-opinions-candidates-perceptio

To read the Quinnipiac poll, go to:

http://www.quinnipiac.edu/x1327.xml?ReleaseID=1165

–David Lightman, McClatchy Newspapers

Do the Math

Pretty funny:

do the math

h/t the Fruit Fly

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Magic Bus

shuttle bus interior, on our way to Eden Prairie caucuses, Feb 5th, 2008 At left is a photo I took last night with my phone at approximately 7:45 pm, showing the view forward from my seat on a shuttle bus to the Eden Prairie caucuses. Half an hour previously I had finally battled my way through the traffic jam to reach EPHS, where I dropped off my two sons and then couldn’t find parking anywhere in the demolition derbies lots that adjoin the school and the EP community center.

The best I could do was park in a church lot about 6 blocks away and wait for a shuttle. When one finally materialized, just after 7:30, the crowd of about 50 of us waiting in front of the church let out a cheer — our shuttle was a schoolbus painted green, its interior illuminated entirely by bright green rope lights. Several whoops and hollers of “Allright! We got the Wellstone bus!” as we climbed aboard.

It was a happy, talkative crowd on that bus. I saw friends and lots of neighbors that I haven’t seen in years, and ended up sitting next to one of my son’s friends…

[she immediately texts Dave: "Dude! I'm sitting next to your mom on the shuttle!" Dave replies in what seems like only 3 seconds: "Cool! Meet us in East commons. After you vote go look at the GOP rooms. Nobody there! Hilarious." ]

Everyone was chatty and laughing and a little giddy with the knowledge that we were participating in an historic event, a caucuses turnout of historic proportions. Same as pretty much everywhere else in the metro, traffic had been backed up for hours in every direction from EPHS, and even at 7:45, with only 15 minutes left before the close of voting, traffic was as congested and slow-moving as it had been hours earlier.

Someone said something about: We’ll never make it in time to vote! and somebody else said: No, I know the bus driver, he has superior bus-fu and we’ll make it in time, don’t worry. [everybody laughs]

I sit, grinning from ear to ear as I remember something I heard Obama say when he was at the Target Center on Saturday:

“When I first got to the US Senate, I opened up the drawer of the desk where I was assigned. And it has the names of some of the great senators who have served. They carve their names in their own hand into the desk drawer, and one of those names was somebody who shared with me this belief that change doesn’t happen from the top down. A guy named Paul Wellstone…”

I asked Dave’s friend for help in figuring out how to take a picture with my newly-upgraded cell phone, and here, (again) is the picture I finally managed to take:

shuttle bus interior, on our way to Eden Prairie caucuses, Feb 5th, 2008
The line of green lights (which kind of looks like a big green checkmark on a ballot) are the ropelights that lined the bus interior. The faint red and yellow lights you can see above and below are the taillights of all the cars ahead of us . The looming black darkness to the left of the green line is actually people, all standing in the aisle on our jam-packed shuttle bus. We got to EPHS at 7:55 — just in time to run in, find our precincts and vote. I knew we’d make it in time. We were on the magic bus.

The results?

Dems:
Eden Prairie, with 100% of precincts reporting, went : 1924 for Obama, 68%; 882 for Clinton, 31%

Repubs:
Eden Prairie, with 100% of precincts reporting, went: 225 for mcCain, 26%; 438 for Romney, 50%; 88 for Huckabee, 10%, and 116 for Paul, 13%.
That makes 3673 total (Republican and Democrat) votes cast at the EP caucuses. Compare and contrast: In 2004, the total was about 800.

Results by city for Hennepin County

shuttle bus interior, on our way to Eden Prairie caucuses, Feb 5th, 2008

~

Women for Obama letter

Tild sez:  This was in my inbox this morning…

women for Obama logo

Dear Friends:

As women who have fought to advance women’s health and reproductive freedom in Minnesota we are tremendously impressed with Senator Barack Obama’s sterling legislative record in improving the health of women, children and their families.

We are proud to support Barack Obama for President of the United States–and we ask you to join us.

Senator Obama has shown leadership on reproductive health and freedom throughout his career.  He has a 100% pro-choice rating with Planned Parenthood and NARAL Pro-Choice America.  He worked with Senator Claire McCaskill (D-MO) on a bill that would make birth control more affordable for low-income and college-age women.  And when Congress failed to require insurance plans to cover FDA-approved contraceptives, Senator Obama made sure those contraceptives were covered in Illinois.

Sadly, we have seen attempts to distort Senator Obama’s clear record of progressive leadership, and we want to arm you with the facts so that you can deflect these attacks, if necessary.

In New Hampshire, a last minute mail piece claimed that “present” votes which Senator Obama cast in the Illinois State Senate meant he was “unwilling to take a stand on choice.”  This is absolutely untrue, and advocates for women’s health in Minnesota and across the country have been willing to stand up and say so.

Pam Sutherland, President and CEO of Illinois Planned Parenthood Council said “the ‘present’ votes Obama took at that time…were ‘no’ votes to bad bills…We asked Senator Obama and other strong supporters of choice to make the right choice by voting ‘present’…Obama showed leadership, compassion, and a true commitment to reproductive health care.”

Lorna Brett, former president of Chicago NOW, said “the ‘present’ votes he cast were part of a legislative strategy that we designed specifically to protect abortion rights.”  As a result of the attacks in New Hampshire Brett switched from being a Clinton supporter to an Obama supporter.  (See her YouTube video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OVuMYKs8iJs).  “There was no bigger champion in Illinois on our issues,” Brett said.

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan, who served with Obama in the Illinois State Senate, has also said, “It’s just plain wrong to imply that voting ‘present’ reflected a lack of leadership…it was the exact opposite.”

 

Here in Minnesota and all across the country people are voting for change.  They are turning the page on the divisive politics of fear, and choosing optimism and hope for a better future for our children and ourselves.  They know we can do better, and so do we.
We are proud to stand in support of Barack Obama and we urge you to join us in caucusing for Barack Obama on February 5th.

Signed:

Betty McCollum
Member of Congress, 4th Congressional District

Rebecca Otto
Minnesota State Auditor

Arvonne Fraser
Founder and Director, International Women’s Rights Action Watch

Tina Flint Smith
Former Board Chair, Planned Parenthood Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota

Susan Lenfestey
Founder, WATCH

Karin Birkeland
Former Board Member, Planned Parenthood Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota

Megan O’Hara
Pro-choice Democrat

Betsy Hannaford
Former Board Member, Planned Parenthood Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota

~

 

Spong & Chittister Friday

Tild sez:   It’s been too long since we last checked in on two of our favorite persons of faith, retired Episcopal Bishop John Shelby Spong and Benedictine Sister Joan Chittister.  

As you probably know by now if you’ve been reading this blog for a while, I am a fallen-away Lutheran; indeed, a fallen-away follower of organized religion of any stripe.  As always, my intent in presenting these essays is not to proselytize, but to highlight and amplify progressive voices in the Christian community that are too often drowned out by the Robertson-, Dobson-, Hammond- or Phelps- led choruses of cockamamie christianists.

~       

Spong Q&A on Nonsensical Fundamentalism

Kenneth Jacobson from Frazee, Minnesota, writes:

[Word] has been received that a California Episcopal Diocese (San Joaquin) has reached the second stage in voting to leave the national Episcopal Communion over the issue of homosexuality. The media is describing the anti-gay position as biblical, the pro-gay as being against Bible teaching. After reading Living in Sin and The Sins of Scripture, I cannot believe that it is that simple. Reporters are not doing their job of careful investigation.

* Have these biblical stories and texts that are quoted to support the anti-gay position ever been read, analyzed, thoroughly debated, and defended in bishops’ conferences? These are supposedly intelligent people who respect scholarship. How can they support exclusion on such flimsy evidence?
* Am I wrong to think this struggle among Episcopalians might be a healthy thing, and that resistance from the highest levels might be a way of teaching and illuminating facts and reality, exposing the prejudice for the evil it is?
* Where is all this going? What could or should be done to bring about a rational and acceptable result? Your thoughts and your comments would be very much appreciated.

Dear Kenneth,

It is not fair to expect secular journalists to be biblical scholars, nor should it be anticipated that they would spend the necessary time to research the issue. It is for that reason that they tend to accept uncritically the oft-repeated Evangelical Protestant and Conservative Roman Catholic definitions that the Bible is anti-gay. If these people were honest, they would have to admit that the Bible is also pro-slavery and anti-women.

There is also a widely accepted mentality that if the Bible is opposed, the idea must be wrong. That is little more than nonsensical fundamentalism. The rise of democracy was contrary to the “clear teaching of the Bible.” as the debate over the forced signing of the Magna Carta by King John of England in 1215 revealed. The Bible was quoted to prove that Galileo was wrong; that Darwin was wrong; that Freud was wrong; and that allowing women to be educated, to vote, to enter the professions, and to be ordained was wrong. So the fact that the Bible is quoted to prove that homosexuality is evil and to be condemned is hardly a strong argument, given the history of how many times the Bible has been wrong. I believe that most bishops know this but the Episcopal Church has some fundamentalist bishops and a few who are “fellow travelers” with fundamentalists

The Bible was written between the years 1000 B.C.E. and 135 C.E. Our knowledge of almost everything has increased exponentially since that time. It is the height of ignorance to continue using the Bible as an encyclopedia of knowledge to keep dying prejudices intact. The media seems to cooperate in perpetuating that long ago abandoned biblical attitude.

That is not surprising since the religious people keep quoting it to justify their continued state of unenlightenment. That attitude is hardly worthy of the time it takes to engage it. I do not debate with members of the flat Earth society either. Prejudices all die. The first sign that death is imminent comes when the prejudice is debated publicly. The tragedy is that church leaders back the wrong side of the conflict, which is happening today from the Pope to the Archbishop of Canterbury to the current crop of Evangelical leaders. That too will pass and the debate on homosexuality will be just one more embarrassment in Christian history.

- John Shelby Spong

 

~~~

What about the ones who are both sexist and racist?

By Joan Chittister
Created Jan 18 2008 - 07:49
From Where I Stand by Joan Chittister, OSB January 18, 2008
Vol. 5, No. 19

One of the more interesting dimensions of the current presidential campaign is that we may all need to wrestle now with the question of which is more prevalent in US society — racism or sexism. This is an alternative that strikes me as a very strange question to begin with, frankly. After all, all races have a male-female question since all men of all races have been raised in the historical mythology of male superiority. All males, any males, everywhere. Which means then that discrimination is also true for all women, any women, anywhere.

As the United Nations Population Fund report puts it:

“At the dawn of the 21st Century, humanity continues to witness massive human rights violations in the form of discrimination and violence against half of the world’s population. The unequal status, freedoms and opportunities afforded to women and girls exist to a greater or lesser degree in every society and country of the world and regrettably, all too often taken for granted as “normal” aspects of society and human relations.”

In fact, we are only beginning to discover that sexism is based on a bad biology that has been theologized. Women, women were told by men,, were physically smaller and therefore secondary human beings, that their single purpose was obviously for pregnancy and child-rearing, that they were more emotional and therefore less rational — read “less capable, less adequate” — than men.

As a result, physical size was confused with intellectual competence and spiritual development, child rearing trumped intelligence for women but not for men, and hard-heartedness was more important than compassion in governance. Which may, from at least one perspective, be true if the town is surrounded by hungry lions and rampaging elephants.

But, in the end, one argument silenced common sense everywhere. Sexism, we were meant to believe, was simply built into the human race by God. There was nothing we could do about it. It was ‘God’s will’ for women.

Everywhere, exceptions were used to prove the rule: a queen here, a cowgirl there, a woman athlete, a couple women scholars. These were all women who could, they said, “think like a man,” or throw a ball “like a man,” or lead a government “like a man” but who were then, of course, always the exceptions, never the norm. The norm was male.

Racism on the other hand is universal, too — meaning found to some appreciable and determining degree in all cultures. The difference is that where racism is concerned, there is no universally acclaimed superior race as males were/are argued to be, by nature, over women. In fact males of all colors have been seen as the “natural” leaders, the superior beings, the social elite from tribe to temple everywhere.

Not so for women.

Nevertheless, where issues of either racism or sexism are concerned in a global society, in a world characterized by seeping borders and compulsory education and open universities, ideas are beginning to change. And society is changing with them. Our commitment to the biological or social notions of inferiority — either racist or sexist — is reversing itself everywhere and theology is struggling to cope with it.

As St. Augustine says, however, we are in “the already but not yet” moment in history. People still live in one of two mental universes everywhere. Or worse, maybe, we’re all living in both of them at one time. Like here, for instance.

Enter the 2008 electoral process and let the confusion begin.

One of the most amusing but least funny of all the analyses of campaign politics to date was the comparison of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton before the Iowa/New Hampshire primaries.

The criticism of Clinton was that she was hard and cold. She appealed to strategy and reason, it seems. She didn’t laugh right or smile right or talk in the right register. She wanted to discuss particular programs and experience instead of being more “likable.” She wanted to talk about the problems we’re having and what she thought would fix them.

Obama, on the other hand – ironically — appealed to the heart. He wanted to talk about the need for change. He appealed to good old-fashioned Americanism, the melting pot, can-do (Yes, we can!) world of national unity and compassionate vision.

There was no applause for her rationality, no criticism of his sensitive and stirring appeals, no acknowledgment of her concern for people- problems, no derision of his vocal register.

He was, that is, what every woman is afraid to be: emotional. And not a word of criticism came from it.

And then the change: When asked how she felt about being criticized for being unemotional, she said, “It hurts my feelings.” And, to their eternal credit, the audience laughed.

And when she lost in Iowa, they asked her why she stayed in the race when she seemed to be losing so much ground so quickly and with tears in her eyes, she said, “(What happens to this country) is personal to me …” And the country blinked.

Apparently, the old categories of hard vs. soft, rational vs. emotional and who is allowed to be them is shifting in the wind.

So now the argument is emerging that some women leaders — the few of them that history provides us — haven’t been so good. So why haven’t we heard any of them argue, on the other hand, that we shouldn’t elect a man because all the male leaders we’ve had around the world, over the ages, then and now haven’t been so good either.

Obviously, the old reasons for why we do or don’t elect someone aren’t as convincing, aren’t as certain anymore as they used to be.

Maybe we ought to just start listening to what our candidates say about how they will do all the things they promise to do and then, male and female, female and male, make up our own minds — whatever their color, whatever their sex — whether what they’re promising is necessary, is doable, is important to us or not. In fact, maybe we ought to just listen to them to see if they’re really promising anything or not.

From where I stand, how people vote is becoming less and less important than why people vote for the candidates they do.

The analysts tell us, for instance, that people voted for George Bush because they saw him as “likable,” as someone you’d “want to have a beer with.” Al Gore, it seems, wasn’t the pub-crawling, beer-drinking type. He was “stiff,” we said. And as a result, we turned down a potential Nobel Peace Prize winner for a winsome warrior. Five years of war later and over 600,000 Iraqi and almost 4,000 U.S. military dead, makes you wonder, doesn’t it?

This time it could even be worse. We could turn down a good president now simply because the candidate is either a gender we don’t like or a color we don’t accept. Then, what we’ll get from voters who are both sexist and racist at the same time, I shudder to even imagine.

–Sr. Joan Chittister

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