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Friday, July 25, 2008
Analysis: Echoes of Clinton's campaign in race
BY JIM KUHNHENN
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Has there been an overreaction to the Jena 6 case?

There's something familiar about this stage of the presidential campaign. A candidate running on inevitability. A candidate running on experience. A candidate complaining about a rival's media coverage.

Ah yes, that was Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaign model.

Now, Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain are cribbing from different pages of her play book.

Obama struts his stuff in head of state fashion in war zones, the Middle East and in Europe. Berliners pay homage as if witnessing an address by the fourth U.S. president to visit their city. He daringly decides to deliver his nomination acceptance speech in a sprawling stadium rather than in the closer confines of a basketball arena. He plunks down $5 million to run national ads during the Olympics.

Message: I am a juggernaut.

McCain is running on experience _ the candidate who bears the scars of war and cancer and the wisdom of long public service. With McCain, the catch word is judgment; experience might be too close in definition to age. Most recently his campaign has been fretting about Obama's media coverage _ the entourage that followed him abroad, the sappy flatteries from television commentators. It posted a Web video, "Obama Love," featuring clips of star-struck pundits and correspondents.

Clinton and her strategists might want to seek some credit.

Before the Feb. 5 Super Tuesday primaries, Clinton was the front-runner who cast herself as the best candidate to confront Republicans. Anticipating her victory, Republican primary contenders ran as much against her as against each other. She was the world-traveling former first lady, the policy wonk and in-the-trenches legislator. And, like McCain now, her campaign chafed at the press that Obama received.

But lest Obama and McCain don't recall, here's a reminder: She lost.

Still, campaign themes repeat themselves. McCain has reason to emulate Clinton tactics. She did, after all, almost win. And certain strategies are hardy perennials not unique to a single campaign.

"In a sense, he's running Hillary 2.0," said John Feehery, a Republican strategist and one-time aide to former House Speaker Dennis Hastert. "But he can make the case this will be a more successful version because it's a general election and he doesn't have any of Hillary's baggage, especially with independent voters."

Certainly there is irony in McCain's complaint about fawning Obama media coverage. McCain himself has been a hot media commodity. But when the Clinton camp objected _ and "Saturday Night Live" parodied the media as obsequious Obama fans _ reporting on Obama toughened. No doubt, McCain is looking for a similar adjustment.

McCain also has added context to his claim of experience. He's not simply a resume. He's the longtime public servant who fought in Vietnam, was held captive as a prisoner of war and has served in Congress as a member of the House and the Senate since 1983. The public already perceives McCain as better suited to lead on national security issues. The McCain camp wants to expand that perception _ McCain is the safe choice; Obama is a risk.

He has gone so far as to say that "Obama would rather lose a war than lose a campaign." This week, he added a caveat to that charge: "I don't think it's a lack of patriotism, I think it's a lack of understanding," he told donors at an Ohio fundraiser. "So he treats the war as just another political issue." Continued...

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Subject: Mark
Even the gop website is also so awe with Obama. Obama is more present on the site than Mccain. Can you imagine that the gop has nothing to offer except attack Obama. Visit Obama's site and the gop and see the difference. Even the talk radio guys have given more time to Obama than any journalist I know. Hannity and Limaugh should not complain. obama has shown them that he is a btter comander in chief and has the right judgement in foreign policy. he is smarter than both Bush and Mccain combined.

The Media Is Getting Scarier Everyday
The media is so in awe of Obama, the kid's rock star/American Idol, they forget what freedom of the press is all about. Obama is so immature he actually believes he is the next coming of the Messiah. The scary part is if he is elected will the media have the guts to ask him hard questions about anything? Obama starts whining if the media reports anything at all negative about him. They back off so quick the general public only gets a small whiff of anything said. I remember the last debate he had with Hillary didn't go so well for him. He cried for several weeks over being treated unfair. It was the last debate he would do. Just think about it, when he is president will he cry foul if anyone dares question him, will be claim predigest against him in order to get his way? Will reporters or anyone else dare question him? He is not only arrogant, immature know it all, inexperienced but thinks he is entitled. Not a strong leader in my opinion. Humility takes more strength than cockiness ever has. The biggest problem Obama has, other than inexperience and immaturity, is he believes all the media bias hype about himself.
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