Showing posts with label endorsement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label endorsement. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

And the winner is: Barack Obama



By Diane Silver

As anyone who has been reading this blog, my column and my other work knows, I have waffled like a maniac when it comes to picking a Democratic candidate. I worried about Hillary Clinton and gnashed my teeth over Barack Obama.

But the time for questions is over. It's Super Tuesday and in six hours I head to the first caucus I've ever attended in my life.

First to state the obvious: I will vote for whichever Democratic candidate gets the nomination. This country can no longer afford the incompetence, the policies and the narrow minded politics of the Republican Party.

I've thought long and hard about supporting Hillary Clinton. I WANT to be able to vote for the first woman president. I am furious at the sexism Clinton has faced in this campaign. I also think Clinton is brilliant, capable and able to serve as president on day one, as she is fond of saying. As important, I agree with New York Times columnist Paul Krugman that Clinton has the best health care plan, and that Obama's plan and approach has serious difficulties.

But I don't want any more family dynasties. I don't want a nominee whose willingness to fight for me is questionable.

Clinton can fight. That's not an issue, but as Frank Rich wrote this weekend, she tends to hang back when the battles involve important policy issues.

On the Iraq War, in particular, Clinton supported George W. Bush in the crucial first vote. I simply do not buy Clinton's explanation that she didn't have the right information at that time. All of the failures of the Iraq War were detailed and predicted before that vote. I heard about them. How could she have missed them?

As Rich wrote:
That both Clintons are capable of fistfighting is beyond doubt, at least on their own behalf in a campaign. But Mrs. Clinton isn’t always a fistfighter when governing.

As a nation, we can't survive with a leader who won't make the tough stands. As a lesbian and a woman, I know my family can't survive under a president who refuses to stand up for me when it counts.

In the last few weeks, two events have finally tipped me into the Obama camp.

In January, Obama appeared at Dr. Martin Luther King's old church, Ebenezer Baptist in Atlanta, and confronted the congregation about its own failings. What moved me was the fact that he was willing to stand up for lesbians and gays, Jews and immigrants and tell his own community that it was wrong. Obama said:

And yet, if we are honest with ourselves, we must admit that none of our hands are entirely clean. If we're honest with ourselves, we'll acknowledge that our own community has not always been true to King's vision of a beloved community.

We have scorned our gay brothers and sisters instead of embracing them. The scourge of anti-Semitism has, at times, revealed itself in our community. For too long, some of us have seen immigrants as competitors for jobs instead of companions in the fight for opportunity.

The final weight on the scale came in the form of an endorsement -- of all things. I've never been swayed by an endorsement before in my life.

The first that caught my attention was Caroline Kennedy's. That one literally gave me whiplash because I had never heard of her becoming involved in a campaign before.

However, it was Ted Kennedy's endorsement that swayed me.

I have worried that Obama's approach might, as Rich wrote, make him "so obsessed with transcending partisanship that he can be easily rolled." I worried that Obama's commitment to progressive ideals might not be real.

Although I am sometimes dismayed with Ted Kennedy's personal failings, no one can deny his decades of commitment to compassion and reality-based politics. When it comes to policy and politicians, I trust his word. The fact that he has worked with both Clinton and Obama makes Ted Kennedy's endorsement doubly important.

Very soon I will join other Democrats in Lawrence and make my voice heard.

Tonight I will stand up for Obama in the belief that he will stand up for me.

VIDEO: Obama's speech at the Ebenezer Baptist Church.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Super Tuesday Watch: Hillary Clinton picks up an LGBT endorsement

By Diane Silver

The New York Blade split with the Gay City News and endorsed Hillary Clinton. The Blade's editorial board writes:
We must look beyond gay issues to endorse a candidate. We’re not alone in doing this. A November survey of LGB Americans by Hunter College (funded by the Human Rights Campaign) found that only 21 percent of respondents placed LGB rights above issues such as the economy, health care and the war....

Looking at the wreckage left by our current Commander in Chief, we want an experienced leader who can get serious work done. That is why we endorse Sen. Hillary Clinton.

The Blade acknowledges some hesitance over endorsing Clinton, but then argues:

We question whether Obama can muster the aggression needed to force change. His talk of bringing people together reminds us of current Democratic Congressional leaders’ talk of bipartisanship. In an effort to avoid confrontations with Republicans, Dems have gotten us nowhere in 2007: no hate crimes, no ENDA, no impeachment...

This would not be the case if Hillary were running the show. It might be if Obama were President. In October, Obama learned that “ex-gay” minister Donnie McClurkin had been invited to speak at one of his fundraisers. Under the rhetoric of bringing opposing viewpoints together, Obama allowed McClurkin to speak. In doing so, he gave credence to the harmful “pray the gay away” propaganda.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

It's Official: Sebelius endorses Obama

Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius tells AP that, yup, it's true: She is endorsing Barack Obama.

No surprise here, especially after Sebelius' very Obama-ish speech last night.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Sebelius to endorse Obama

The word from The Atlantic is that Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius will endorse Barack Obama within a day or two. Some from her administration have already endorsed Hillary Clinton.

This should make for an interesting caucus next week.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Obama targets Kansas & Sebelius is momentarily silent

By Diane Silver

Kansas politicos got the biggest shock of the presidential season months ago when Barack Obama opened an office in Lawrence. Obama reportedly has 16 paid staffers in the office. Hillary Clinton recently opened an office with 2 staffers.

At first, I thought this was a routine part of Obama's 50-state campaign exuberance, but now it seems that Obama is truly targeting Kansas. For a state where voters never ever see a Democratic presidential candidate (and rarely even see Republican candidate), this is heady news indeed.

The Washington Post reports:

The Obama campaign's heavy emphasis on grass-roots organizing, which served it so well in Iowa, has led it to target the six states that will hold caucuses rather than primaries on Feb. 5. These are typically lightly attended affairs, but they could deliver big returns if Obama can follow his Iowa model of identifying a pool of supporters, including nontraditional participants such as college students and independents, and methodically turning them out.

The big three in that category are Colorado, Kansas and Minnesota.

Meanwhile, Gov. Kathleen Sebelius' press secretary says "with 100 percent certainty" that the popular Democratic governor won't endorse any presidential candidate until after she gives the State of the Union response.

That has to count as one of the most non-significant promises ever made. Waiting that, ah, "long" still gives Sebelius six days to make her presidential choice known and to influence the Feb. 5 Kansas caucuses.