The Clinton Dozen
Clinton's statement, of course, was only the latest in the campaign's effort to play the race card. Slate's Timothy Noah recently did a fascinating post comparing a statement in West Virginia of Bill Clinton with remarks of George Wallace from the 1968 campaign. He asked readers to guess which statement came from Clinton and which from Wallace. As Noah concluded,"Harder than you expected, isn't it? Welcome to the final weeks of the Democratic primary campaign."
Payne's change of heart leaves Clinton with the support of only 12 African-American members of Congress: Maxine Waters, Lucille Roybal-Allard, Diane Watson, Alcee Hastings, Corinne Brown, Kendrick Meek, Emmanuel Cleaver, Charlie Rangel, Ed Towns, Yvette Clarke, Stephanie Tubbs Jones, and Sheila Jackson Lee.
A few of that list are at best half-hearted supporters: while Rangel backs Clinton, his wife endorsed Obama. And Cleaver has not only publicly predicted an Obama victory, but compared the Obama candidacy to the Indianapolis Colts, with Clinton representing the Kansas City Chiefs (one of the worst teams in the NFL last season).
On the other hand, several in the list above--notably Tubbs Jones and Jackson Lee, and Waters to a lesser extent--have been aggressive Clinton surrogates. The next time they denounce anyone else for racism, I'm sure their silence about the Clintons' tactics will be brought up. And, indeed, the fact that they had no problem going so strongly against the wishes of their constituents surely will weaken their long-term political positions at home.
It's no coincidence that the ranks of Clinton CBC supporters includes caucus' the most extreme practitioners of identity politics. One, perhaps salutary, effect of this campaign will come in discrediting the likes of Tubbs Jones and Jackson Lee.