Media Matters for America

Ignoring Tennessee GOP and McCain staffers, Politico claimed "smears" against Obama "have not been traced back to GOP sources"

May 22, 2008 7:09 pm ET

SUMMARY: The Politico stated that Sen. Barack Obama is "blaming Republicans for the smears" about his religion, patriotism, and citizenship "even though they have not been traced back to GOP sources." In fact, there have been numerous instances in which Republicans, including on Sen. John McCain's own staff, have promulgated or promoted these smears, some of which the Politico itself reported on.

A May 22 Politico article stated -- of an "e-mail campaign" against Sen. Barack Obama that, in Politico's words, "began as a demonstrably false attempt to cast Obama as a Muslim" and "spiraled into a broader assault that questions his patriotism and citizenship and generally portrays him as a threat to mainstream, white America" -- that Obama is "drawing the campaign into partisan combat, blaming Republicans for the smears even though they have not been traced back to GOP sources." The article went on to quote Obama: "The Republicans, they're trying to make [it] 'this is not about you; it's about me.' They're trying to say, 'Well, Obama, we don't know him that well, he hasn't been around that long, he's got a funny name; maybe he's a Muslim.' " But contrary to the assertion in the article, by Politico senior political writers Ben Smith and Jonathan Martin, that the smears "have not been traced back to GOP sources," there have been numerous instances of Republicans, including on Sen. John McCain's own staff, promulgating or promoting these smears.

From the May 22 Politico article:

What began as a demonstrably false attempt to cast Obama as a Muslim has now metastasized into something far more threatening to the likely Democratic nominee. The spurious claims about his faith have spiraled into a broader assault that questions his patriotism and citizenship and generally portrays him as a threat to mainstream, white America.

The spread of these e-mails has forced Obama to embark on a campaign to Americanize his image and his biography. Pivoting away from his pitch to a primary election audience uninterested in flag-waving and nationalism, he's returning to the message that first brought him to the national spotlight in 2004: the idea that his is the quintessential American story.

He's also drawing the campaign into partisan combat, blaming Republicans for the smears even though they have not been traced back to GOP sources. "The Republicans, they're trying to make [it] 'this is not about you; it's about me.' They're trying to say, 'Well, Obama, we don't know him that well, he hasn't been around that long, he's got a funny name; maybe he's a Muslim,'" Obama said Monday in Montana. "They want to make people worry about me."

Ironically, the smear campaign represents the dark side of the Internet's emerging dominance in American politics -- a phenomenon that has driven Obama's unparalleled grass-roots and financial campaigns. After harnessing the Web to great advantage, Obama is now struggling to beat back the viral threat from the same uncontrollable medium.

&mdash K.H.

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