Kiplinger.com Multimedia
Subscribe
Starting Out Investing Your Money Spending Wisley Your Retirement
Kiplinger.com Channels
Tools
Columns
E-mail Alerts
The Kiplinger Letter
Online Forum
Basics
Site Map
Kiplinger Store
Customer Service
Corporate Sales
About Kiplinger
Give A Gift

ABOUT THIS ENTRY
This page contains a single entry by Richard Sammon published on April 22, 2008 3:28 PM.

McCain's Bogus Capital Gains Claim was the previous entry.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

About this blog

Subscribe to this blog's feed

EMAIL
DIGG
DEL.ICIO.US

CAMPAIGNS
Pastor Wright Back in the Spotlight

Comments (1) |

It seems like the only person remotely involved in politics who hasn't said much about the controversy over the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama's long-time pastor, is Wright himself. And his turn finally comes Friday in an interview on public television. Even if Wright hurts Obama by rekindling the controversy over anti-American comments he made from the pulpit, the appearance is a blessing -- a potentially excruciating one, but a blessing nonetheless.

Wright, who caused Obama some of the worst trouble of his campaign when video surfaced of tirades he delivered against the United States, was bound to go public sometime. And as far as Obama is concerned, the further from a general election battle with John McCain, the better.

Sure, his appearance comes less than two weeks before the North Carolina and Indiana primaries and is bound to make the Democratic front-runner nervous. But unless Wright uncorks information that is actually damning to Obama personally, it's hard to see how anything Wright says can cost him more support. Wright, who has retired from the church, has probably done all the damage he can do.

First, most voters have probably pretty much made up their minds about how Wright affects their thinking. Second, Wright has long survived in the brass knuckles world of Chicago politics and the politics of urban black churches, and unless he wants to deliberately hurt Obama, he is unlikely to do anything but put at least a somewhat softer face on the controversy. His heroic World War II service, for example, is likely to come up in the interview with Bill Moyers, and Wright is bound to provide some explanation, context and possibly even an apology for the remarks.

But even if Wright repeats or defends his most flagrantly hateful comments -- or makes new outrageous ones -- would that be all bad? It would give Obama a clear opportunity to say, OK, enough is enough and I just can't have anything to do with you anymore. That's something he really couldn't do before -- and apparently never wanted to do -- because it would appear so disingenuous.

The interview will make for interesting television Friday, most pundits will rearrange their schedules to watch. With the Democratic race dragging on, perhaps Wright will find a way to add one more dramatic twist. And who wants to take a chance of missing that?

0 TrackBacks
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Pastor Wright Back in the Spotlight.

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blog.kiplinger.com/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/117

1 Comments

JamesD said:

What turnip truck did you fall off? The only reason for Wright to go on television is to feed his own colossal ego, or perhaps he thinks to redeem his reputation. If he wanted to be helpful to Obama's campaign, he'd stay out of the country until the election is over. Reminding the voters of his association with Obama will have virtually the same effect as pelting him with paintballs filled with hydrochloric acid.

Leave a comment


RECENT BLOG ENTRIES

MORE POLITICAL COVERAGE FROM KIPLINGER