As the first serious female contender for president, she is hardly the natural choice for socially conservative, blue-collar Democrats. But because "they're less critical and less informed than upscale voters, they're more inclined to go with the mainstream candidate, at least early on," says Teixeira.
How Does Obama Woo 'Downscale Dems'?
He charms elites. But how does Obama woo a must-have: 'downscale Dems'?
By Andrew Romano
...Obama's "arugula moment" was silly, but the underlying concern about his candidacy is not. For the past 40 years, Democratic nominating contests have pitted "wine track" candidates (backed by young, well-off, college-educated elites) against "beer track" opponents (who cultivate a less-educated coalition of minorities and blue-collar workers). The 2008 contest is no exception. According to the latest Cook Political Report survey, Hillary Clinton polls 12 points higher among voters who haven't graduated from college than those who have; Obama's numbers are reversed. His problem: only 34 percent of likely Democratic primary voters have college degrees. "If you don't develop a solid base among downscale Dems, it's very hard to get the nomination," says demographer Ruy Teixeira. Unless Obama gets off the wine track, he could end up the latest in a long line of brainy, reformist also-rans like Gary Hart, Paul Tsongas and Bill Bradley.
Which is exactly what Clinton wants. As the first serious female contender for president, she is hardly the natural choice for socially conservative, blue-collar Democrats. But because "they're less critical and less informed than upscale voters, they're more inclined to go with the mainstream candidate, at least early on," says Teixeira. Clinton is working hard to solidify her head start among the beer-track types who powered her husband's "Comeback Kid" performance in the 1992 New Hampshire primary (and eventually won him the White House). Consider her oft-repeated line about being "born into a middle class family in the middle of America in the middle of the last century." "It's a class appeal," says Penn's Kathleen Hall Jamieson, author of "Packaging the Presidency." "It's a move away from First Lady, from Ivy League graduate." Obama, in contrast, "can be poetic, even cerebral," says Jamieson—and the Clinton camp is quick to agree. In a 10-minute interview with NEWSWEEK, Clinton strategist Mark Penn mentioned arugula three times. "It symbolizes his appeal to elites," says Penn, who also noted that Obama's first Iowa ad featured Harvard Law professor Larry Tribe.
Obama's team is undeterred. By most accounts, its candidate is better positioned than his predecessors to overcome the wine-track curse. "He started his career on the South Side of Chicago," says spokeswoman Candice Tolliver. "No one needs to prime him." His ace in the hole? Race. Even though polls show that blacks still have doubts about Obama, he weathered similar skepticism in the 2004 Illinois Senate primary before winning nearly all of their votes. "He soared with elites initially," says Mark Blumenthal, who polled for Obama's chief rival. "But it took until the last week of the campaign for blacks to decide." If they break his way again, says Blumenthal, Obama could ride a new black-upscale majority to the nomination. For early indicators, staffers are watching low-income, largely black South Carolina where, from April 1 to June 30, the campaign spent $480,000—four times Clinton's investment—to hire staff, stage rallies, organize house meetings and place ads on gospel and R&B radio. The result: an electorate that's more familiar with Obama—and polls that show a dead heat. "We have to do more to reach low-income voters," says South Carolina spokesman Kevin Griffis. But strong numbers heading into the Jan. 29 primary would bode well for Obama's beer-track appeal—if he can steer clear of the fancy lettuce.
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No, ' people with needs' for Clinton
He has to get out and press the flesh.
i wonder why edwards has had
i wonder why edwards has had trouble here.
kspence, I wonder about that too
especially since Edwards comes genuinely from a working class family. Edwards is the working class guy done good.
Nothing working class about where Hillary was born and raised.
Because Sen. Clinton has
Because Sen. Clinton has been building her image for a while. Edwards is in post-Kerry rebuilding mode while she's on maintenance.
Can I say something about Edwards?
I'm sorry, but have you read the Edwards Health Plan? The guy says he's going to make the health care industry more efficient, pass the savings onto receivers, and then MAKE EVERYONE BUY INSURANCE. Excuse me, but I can't afford health insurance even if you reduced individual premiums 50%. Having read his plan, I reckon he could conceivably get a 5% rate cut in six years. And I'd be criminalized because I can't afford it.
I mean, I feel a real loser saying that and all, but I really can't afford health insurance. I can't. I just can't, and I couldn't if you reduced the premium by 5%.
Granted, it's not like he makes a big deal about the criminalization.
Everyone goes on about how he's concerned about income disparity, and he's worried about jobs , and dammit, so am I . But he's just peddling a bunch of notions that had been circulating about blue dogs since the 1980's, and these ideas only look progressive because of what we've been reduced to.
That's everyone's plan
No one is promoting universal health care except Kucinich. Everyone else is talking universal health insurance. Catastrophic care is just about all that's being considered.
As for jobs, I really think everyone is trying to commit national suicide. The USofA became what it is through widespread low skill, high wage jobs. This system does not work wothout them.
Therefore the system will change.