
They will try to Swift Boat me,”
said Barack Obama in the days before the New Hampshire primary, looking
forward to the Democratic nomination that he still believes will be
his, with a prediction both accurate and chilling. Whether he can go on
to claim the nomination is yet to be determined. Much more predictable
is the nature of the campaign that would be waged against him—and the
fickleness of the national press corps if and when that ugly process
eventually reaches its nadir.
The effective template for
attacking a Democratic nominee was developed by former Republican
political boss Karl Rove during decades of trench warfare in Texas and
across the country. While Rove may only whisper advice from the
sidelines next fall, his approach can be easily copied by lesser
talents: Seize upon the Democrat’s most attractive quality and sow
doubts to undermine that appeal. With candidates such as John Kerry and
Max Cleland, that meant tearing down their records as war heroes and
raising questions about their patriotism.
With Obama, the
obvious target is his inspirational life story. The task of the
opposition operatives will be to twist that saga, to unearth facts or
factoids that raise concerns about the candidate’s background, and to
make his cosmopolitan upbringing appear alien and even sinister—and of
course, to play the race card against him, either subtly or blatantly.
These themes will begin to appear in the right-wing press, which is of
course where the original Swift Boat smears first showed up four years
ago.
AP - The chief executive officer of failed insurance conglomerate AIG acknowledged Wednesday that the company's multimillion-dollar bonuses were "distasteful" to many and had provoked a firestorm of wrath. "I share that anger," Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of the American International Group Inc., said in testimony prepared for Congress.

AP - The chief executive officer of failed insurance conglomerate AIG acknowledged Wednesday that the company's multimillion-dollar bonuses were "distasteful" to many and had provoked a firestorm of wrath. "I share that anger," Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of the American International Group Inc., said in testimony prepared for Congress.


