Are Dems Attacking McCain’s Age In Code?
MSNBC host Joe Scarborough repeatedly argued on his show last week that the Obama campaign was portraying McCain as a “doddering, old, confused fool. He needs to go to Miami Beach and play checkers.”
- What do you call a man who says we have 57 States?
In a campaign year marked by flare-ups surrounding comments that have offended one group or another, John McCain and Barack Obama have moved on to the next sensitive battleground: the question of McCain’s advanced age.
As some Republicans see it, Democrats are deliberately talking in code about the presumptive 71-year-old GOP nominee as part of an attempt to highlight his age.
“It is code; there is no question it is,” Ed Rollins, a Republican strategist who helped lead President Ronald Reagan’s 1984 reelection campaign, said when age surfaced as an issue. “They are trying to raise doubts.”
MSNBC host Joe Scarborough repeatedly argued on his show last week that the Obama campaign was portraying McCain as a “doddering, old, confused fool. He needs to go to Miami Beach and play checkers.”
To Democrats, however, Republicans are imagining slights and smears where there are none as part of an attempt to silence any discussion of McCain’s vigor.
“They are definitely trying to just put a lid on the kind of language we use,” said Democratic consultant Jonathan Prince.
Obama aides deny any strategy to highlight age, and Obama, 46, himself told reporters last month that age should not be a factor. Indeed, he used to compliment McCain’s “half-century of service” to the country as a Vietnam War veteran and a member of Congress, but after McCain campaign manager Rick Davis argued that it was a sly way to inject age into the debate, Obama dropped the reference in February.
But a Democratic strategist not involved in the campaign, who requested anonymity to speak candidly, said he sees footprints of a deliberate Obama campaign strategy.
“They have made allusions to McCain’s age and temperament because, with McCain, both his age and his volatile temper are legitimate issues. There is a line of appropriateness that they cannot cross. And I don’t think they have,” the strategist said.
Certainly there have been times when Democrats have tackled the issue head-on, as Rep. John P. Murtha (D-Pa.) has several times in recent months.
“The older you get, the more difficult it is to have the energy to confront these things,” Murtha, who turns 76 on Tuesday, said in an interview with ThinkProgress, a liberal blog. “I know myself. I have to pace myself. I’m the same age he is. He said I was senile a couple of years ago. Well, that’s beside the point, whether I’m senile. But I just believe that his age is going to be very difficult for him to become a good commander in chief, because the decisions are so difficult.”
The issue is no small matter for McCain. Polls in recent months found voters more likely to take into consideration his age than Obama’s race, which explains why the McCain campaign has turned into ersatz word police, calling foul on even the slightest hint of a reference to the Republican’s age.
McCain senior adviser Mark Salter rebuked Obama last month for saying that the Arizonan was “losing his bearings.” Obama, who was defending against charges that Hamas wanted him to win in November, protested that the phrase has nothing to do with age.
But when Obama foreign policy adviser Susan Rice and Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) each described McCain as “confused” last week, Republicans became convinced that Democrats intend to run a crypto-ageist strategy, using words that create a subtle impression in voters’ minds.
McCain himself did little to wave reporters off the narrative.
“I’m obviously disappointed in a comment like that,” McCain said when asked about Kerry’s statement that the Republican “confuses” facts about Iran, Al Qaeda, and Sunni and Shiite Muslims.
Kerry called the suggestion that his comments had something to do with age “unfair and even ridiculous.”
But the dynamic of Obama’s running against a candidate who’s a quarter of a century older is nonetheless creating an environment where some Democrats see the need to self-censor, proving that the McCain offensive is already working.
“I was going to say, ‘He lost his grip,’” said Democratic consultant Jonathan Prince, recalling a recent appearance on CNN’s “Situation Room.” “Those are normal words you use when you are involved in campaigns. You say, ‘They are nuts, they are off their rocker, they lost it.’ They have become very adept at grabbing every opportunity they can to turn it into a personal slur.”




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Oh of course they are doing it. The Liberals cannot run a political campaign without getting personal.
June 17th, 2008 at 1:06 pmOf course they are, please. Didn’t you see those nasty Soros funded ads by moveon? They were explicit, not in code. Oh, and Murtha quoted in this? Ridiculous. He owes all service men and women an abject apology. Where is the MSM on him to do so?
June 17th, 2008 at 2:41 pmIs it just me or does anyone else think that Obama looks like he has been trying to look like Benito Mussolini when he gives his programed speeches? Maybe I’m crazy cause I am getting old and I led an eventful life that has destroyed more than a few brain cells, but go look at some poses of Il Duce and tell me what you think. Yes or just to much booze over the years?

June 17th, 2008 at 6:25 pmRVN68MIKE, your right but you got the verbiage wrong. It’s progrom, not program.
June 17th, 2008 at 8:15 pmGoogle the difference to see what I mean.
The Weekly Standard has a terrific article, It’s Not Race, It’s Arugula. Here’s a money quote:
“Obama’s problem may be less that he is running while black than that he is running to be the first Academician elected as president, a category that is zero for eight in national contests thus far. He is peering into an abyss not of bias, but a large Jackson Hole of rejection by warrior voters. And this problem is more than skin deep.”
0 for 8 sounds good to me!
June 17th, 2008 at 9:17 pmSpeaking of verbiage, it’s “you’re right”.
And RVN, is it the uplifted nose? I’ve never seen anyone who looks as unconsciously snooty as Oblabla!
June 17th, 2008 at 9:21 pmIn an article on Politico, it was reported that Republicans are convinced that Democrats are running a “crypto-ageist strategy.” Democrats, it’s argued, are using “code words” to make McCain’s very very old age an issue in the campaign.
In some original reporting, 23/6 has cracked the code. The GOP’s allegations are revealed and confirmed.
For example, Obama claims, “When it comes to the economy, John McCain and I have a fundamentally different vision of where to take the country.” What he MEANS is “John McCain is almost legally blind—that’s what happens to old people.”
See more code crackin’ at : http://www.236.com/news/2008/06/18/236_unlocks_democratic_ageist_1_7182.php
June 18th, 2008 at 1:12 pm