Can it be baseball if Obama, Clinton and McCain all face strike three? (Page 1 of 2)

April 3, 2008
By: Don Williams

My last column ended so:

Many an Obama supporter must feel like the kid who approached Shoeless Joe when the story broke about the Chicago White Sox throwing the 1919 World Series.

You want to cry out, “Say it ain’t so, Barack. Say it ain’t so….”

But Casey’s at the bat, the pitch is on its way.

And there is no joy in Mudville.


Even before that column saw print, the game took an unexpected turn as Sen. Barack Obama delivered a major speech on race, soothing his supporters.

Since then it's become more dramatic yet, as both Sen. Hillary Clinton and John McCain made blunders that could be called Strike Two.

For Clinton, Strike One was lowering the tone of debate by throwing everything, including the kitchen sink, at Obama. Calling his friend Tony Rezko a slumlord, accusing Obama of plagiarism, unfavorably comparing his character and experience to McCain, slyly playing the race card, accusing the media of an Obama bias, running scary red-phone ads, fanning back Nancy Pelosi with deep-pocket threats of holding back contributions to the Democratic Party and more. To many, such hardball was a strike against her.

Strike Two came last week as she was caught in what appeared to be a bold-faced lie regarding a March 1996 trip to a U.S. military base in Bosnia. In a widely televised speech last month, Clinton said, “I remember landing under sniper fire. There was supposed to be some kind of a greeting ceremony at the airport, but instead we just ran with our heads down to get into the vehicles to get to our base.”

Tapes show a smiling Clinton casually walking across the tarmac with her daughter Chelsea, surrounded by friendly troops. What a gaffe. Several other fibs or lies have surfaced, one in which she said Chelsea was jogging around the World Trade Center on Sept. 11 and happened to duck into a coffee shop when the airplanes struck. She said the move saved Chelsea's life. Later Chelsea acknowledged she was in the apartment of a friend four miles away.

Clinton tried spinning. “You know, I say a lot of things — millions of words a day — so if I misspoke, that was just a misstatement." But that won’t wash. As Clinton told Obama when accusing him of plagiarism, “Words matter.”

Strike Three could come April 15, the date by which Clinton promises to release income-tax records. Depending on what’s revealed, her candidacy could be imperiled, especially if more “misstatements” and questions pop up regarding all those deep-pocket donors who contributed millions to the Bill Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock.

Presidential is how McCain often looks compared to these Democrats. Still, he’s had his share of miscues. Strike One came when he suggested we might stay in Iraq for 100 years. It’s one thing to suggest the Surge was the right thing to do, quite another to embrace a 100-year deployment.

Strike Two shows up on YouTube with President George W. Bush apologist Joe Lieberman at his back as McCain repeatedly states that Iran is training and arming al-Qaeda and injecting its fighters into the war in Iraq. On the tape an uneasy Lieberman leans forward, whispers in his ear and McCain makes a clumsy retraction. Despite McCain spin, this wasn't a slip of the tongue. McCain's made that statement more than once to important media and foreign policy groups. George Will gave him a pass on "This Week with George Sephanopoulos" March 16 by asserting that such a gaffe won't affect the coming election at all, because McCain's foreign policy expertise is not in doubt. The Weekly Standard tried to spin it by asserting that al-Qaeda indeed has links to Iran, similar to links trumped up regarding Iraq. Despite such efforts, it was an impressive blunder. One hopes that if McCain ever answers the red phone at 3 a.m. he knows the difference between Hezbollah and al-Qaeda, Sunni and Shia. Show me why this should not be an issue from now until November?

McCain’s Strike Three could be the ump’s fault. A matter of misperception and not fair at all. Welcome to baseball. My last column suggested that Obama started with such a handicap. When it comes to his name and race, Obama doesn’t get a pass. For lots of folks, these circumstances color his every association, every act.

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