So Barack Obama is the elitist in the race for the Democratic
presidential nomination? I’m not so sure about that.
Obama’s famous comment that small-town Pennsylvanians “get
bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who
aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade
sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations,” made at a $1,000
per plate fundraiser in San Francisco, made his name synonymous
with “elitism.”
Last July, Obama asked an audience in Adel, Iowa, “Anybody gone
into Whole Foods lately and see what they charge for arugula? I
mean, they’re charging a lot of money for this stuff.”
Granted, Obama is no Joe Sixpack. Yet one of the things that
makes him so interesting as a presidential candidate is that for
the most part he doesn’t pretend to be. In the same Iowa event at
which he brought up shopping for arugula at Whole Foods, as if
everyone does that a few times a week, a farmer told Obama, “You
can come and help me load hogs in the morning.” Obama replied, “You
can tell that I’m dressed for it.” He was wearing “slacks and a
pressed shirt,” the New York Times reported.
That’s pretty much what Obama wears everywhere. He might stand
out in rural Iowa or Pennsylvania, but that helps him. He’s not
trying to pretend that he knows squat about farming or working on a
factory floor. He told the Adel audience, “Although there are an
awful lot of farms in Illinois, in the neighborhood where I live,
the main livestock is squirrels. So I don’t pretend to know
everything there is to know about agricultural issues.”
When was the last time Hillary Clinton didn’t try to pretend to
fit in with whatever crowd happened to be surrounding her?
Clinton is Zelig, or at least she wishes she could be. While
Obama makes fun of himself for showing up in farm country dressed
like it’s casual Friday, Clinton rides around in pickup trucks,
drinks Bud and pretends that she’d know the difference between a
Glock and a Lugar.
Clinton is careful not to speak her condescension as clearly as
Obama did in San Francisco, but her elitism is of a worse sort
because it manifests itself in such brazen acts of attempted
deception. Obama is out of touch, but at least he doesn’t treat the
rabble like complete morons. He doesn’t assume that they are so
stupid they will be fooled by a pickup truck prop or a phony
accent. Clinton does.
On the day of the Indiana and North Carolina primaries, Clinton,
her husband, and her daughter all wore a shade of pale blue easily
recognized by any North Carolinian as strikingly close to the
University of North Carolina’s official color. What an amazing
coincidence.
Clinton’s pandering is all the more condescending because it is
so blatant. She really doesn’t think the people are smart enough to
catch on. That’s true elitism. It’s the attitude that all the
people can be fooled all the time. (Wow, she really grew up in
suburban Chicago as a lifelong Yankees fan?!) It’s the sign of a
woman who deeply believes herself to be superior to most everyone
else.
Does Obama believe he’s superior to the average American?
Probably. His lapel pin comments alone suggest it. But it is also
evident that he respects the average American enough not to treat
him like a total idiot. Clinton has never shown such respect. She
thinks the American people are rubes who can be fooled into voting
for her by the most obvious lies and the simplest campaign
trickery. So in the end, who is the real elitist?