• Monday, November 23, 2009
  • Print

Obama and the Race Card

Princeton historian Sean Wilentz, who has been vociferous in his support of Hillary Clinton throughout the Democratic primary season, has caused quite a stir with his latest foray into the realm of presidential punditry. In an acerbic essay that appeared on the Web site of The New Republic, Wilentz charges the Obama campaign with cynically exploiting the issue of race by "deliberately, falsely, and successfully" portraying the Clinton campaign as "unscrupulous race-baiters." 

Wilentz continues: "A review of what actually happened shows that the charges that the Clintons played the 'race card' were not simply false; they were deliberately manufactured by the Obama camp and trumpeted by a credulous and/or compliant press corps in order to strip away her once formidable majority among black voters and to outrage affluent, college-educated white liberals as well as college students."

Wilentz's essay is brimming with other such sharply worded accusations. Not surprisingly, it has stirred a vigorous response. As of this writing the piece has generated 440 comments on The New Republic's Web site. And Jim Sleeper, a lecturer in political science at Yale, has entered the fray, accusing Wilentz of writing a bitter rant fueled by his (maybe?) dashed hopes of being the Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. of a Hillary Clinton administration.

Wilentz's piece "reads as if written in an exciting evening of phrase-turning in Princeton after a nice, long chat with someone from the Clinton campaign," Sleeper writes. "The result is embarrassing to Wilentz, embarrassing to the New Republic, and offensive to those of us who've staked our credibility on wresting truth from storms of racial intimidation, insinuations, and lies."As long as we are on the topic of race, it is worth pointing out the cover story of The Chronicle Review, which is an essay by David Hollinger examining how the emergence of Obama has changed the debate about identity politics in America. In addition, Peter Schmidt has a profile of Stanford law professor Richard Thompson Ford, author of The Race Card, who argues that many allegations of racism -- as well as other forms of discrimination -- are not just false but counterproductive.