Perhaps the most remarkable thing
about Democrat Sen. Mary Landrieu’s
mushrooming desperation over retaining a spot in the Senate is that when she inevitably
played the race card, she did not do so in its usual manner, off the bottom of
the deck. Rather, she displayed it openly and proudly, as if she thought this
was the thing polite people do, without any shame, lacking any self-awareness
how by doing so that confirmed she had about as much character as the pictorial
symbol of her political party – or that it shows complete surrender to a
strategy of that plays to the worst in people that likely will not work to
bring her electoral victory.
That when Landrieu
declared on national television that unfavorable feelings in Louisiana about
Pres. Barack
Obama – who had a white mother and black father but who identifies himself
as a black American – were as a result of “The South has not always been the
friendliest place for African-Americans …. [making it difficult] for the
president to present himself in a very positive light as a leader” did not come
accidentally at the time in the campaign that it did. With the last dozen polls
showing her behind Republican Rep. Bill
Cassidy heads-up, early voting not providing any helpful news for her
campaign, and just
having had the last candidate debate, where Cassidy committed no errors,
she really has to go for broke, and the standard (pun intended) Hail Mary play
in the Democrats’ playbook is to plead with voters, particularly their base, to
stop thinking and start emoting, juiced by scare tactics and attempted delegitimating
of those who disagree with you on the issues.
The strategy has the upside of
mobilizing that base. It’s a dog whistle to low information voters,
particularly blacks, that opposition to the likes of Democrats such as Landrieu
and Obama only can result from racist motives, and therefore implies that to
allow the opposition to her to win would create more racism in American
government. It’s intended to frighten the base enough to get it to the polls to
vote for Landrieu.