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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RetiredNow who wrote (19851)5/1/2008 2:03:57 PM
From: manalagi  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Obama Defends Handling of Furor Over Ex-Pastor

By BRIAN KNOWLTON
Published: May 1, 2008

WASHINGTON — Senator Barack Obama on Thursday defended his handling of the firestorm around his former pastor, saying he had not denounced the minister’s provocative comments sooner because he wanted to “give him the benefit of the doubt” as a man who had married the Obamas and baptized their two daughters.

The senator made the comments in an interview with Meredith Vieira on the NBC “Today” show. He was joined by his wife, Michelle, and Ms. Vieira said it was their first interview together in more than a year.

Mrs. Obama spoke passionately of her pride in her husband, and how he has handled the harsh glare of public scrutiny. “I love my husband, you don’t want anybody talking poorly about the people you love, and quite frankly, I think he’s handled this stuff” well, she said. “I’m so proud of how he has maintained his dignity, his cool, his honor.”

The husband-and-wife interview, during which the two held hands, laughed and seemed particularly close and mutually supportive, appeared to have been designed at least partly to soften Mr. Obama’s image at a time when it has been buffeted by controversy surrounding the former pastor, the Reverend Jeremiah Wright Jr. It might also help him in his so-far problematic courtship of working-class white voters.

When provocative snippets from Mr. Wright’s past sermons were aired weeks ago, Mr. Obama at first denounced the comments but supported the man. When Mr. Wright went further in recent days, saying that it seemed possible the United States government had introduced the AIDS virus to undercut minorities, and that Mr. Obama’s original denunciations of Mr. Wright were not sincere, the senator finally made a break, calling the former pastor’s comments “outrageous,” and “divisive and destructive.”

Meanwhile, Mr. Obama’s standing in polls has suffered.

Asked by Ms. Vieira if he should have spoken out sooner, Mr. Obama replied, “I think the sequence of events was the right one, because this was somebody who had married Michele and I, who had baptized our children.”

He went on: “When those first snippets came out, I thought it was important to give him the benefit of the doubt, because if I had wanted to be politically expedient, I would have distanced myself and denounced him right away.”

When Ms. Vieira pressed Mrs. Obama on whether Mr. Wright had betrayed her husband, she demurred, saying, “I think Barack has spoken so clearly and eloquently about this.” She added: “We’ve got to move forward.”

Mr. Obama, who faces his next key test against Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in the Indiana primary on Tuesday, currently a toss-up according to polls, again acknowledged that he was partly responsible for the tightening of the race. North Carolina holds its primary on Tuesday as well, and polls give him a double-digit lead there.

Both Senators Clinton, of New York, and Obama, of Illinois, were campaigning on Thursday in Indiana.

Mr. Obama again described his earlier comments in San Francisco — that some small-town Americans were “bitter” over the economy and tended to “cling” to religion and guns — as “very poorly phrased.”

“I should have said ‘angry and frustrated’ instead of ‘bitter,’” he said, “I should have said people rely on their religious faith during these times of trouble as opposed to ‘cling to.’”

Asked about surveys that show fewer Americans identify with Mr. Obama’s values than before, the senator struck a philosophical tone.

“We always knew this was an improbable journey,” he said. “We always knew this was hard, and the reason is because we’re trying to do something new.”

The Obamas had a playful moment late in the interview, as she was strongly defending him and he tried to cut her off.

“I know you’re trying to cut me off when I’m, you know, talking nicely about you,” she said, laughing.

“I know,” he smiled, “it gets me embarrassed.”

As part of the senator’s media campaign, he is scheduled to spend a full hour on Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

nytimes.com



To: RetiredNow who wrote (19851)5/1/2008 6:51:42 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Northwestern withdraws offer of honorary degree to Reverend Jeremiah Wright

May 01, 2008 - (AP) — Northwestern University has withdrawn a previously offered honorary degree to Barack Obama's former pastor, the Reverend Jeremiah Wright due to the controversy surrounding Wright’s recent comments.

Alan Cubbage, Northwestern's vice-president for university relations, says the school had offered Wright an honorary Doctorate of Sacred Theology.

However, Cubbage now says the offer has been rescinded "to ensure that the celebratory character of commencement not be affected."

Wright is the former senior minister at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, and his outspoken criticisms of the United States have drawn criticism to Obama's candidacy.

A phone call to Wright's home seeking comment wasn't answered, and the voice mail was full.

Northwestern's commencement is set for June 20th.