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View Full Version : Obama says 'Lay off my wife'


Sugaree
May 19th, 2008, 02:22 PM
Mon May 19, 7:58 AM ET

WASHINGTON - Democrat Barack Obama has a message for Tennessee's Republican Party: "Lay off my wife."

Obama, his party's presidential front-runner, and his wife, Michelle, were asked in an interview aired Monday on ABC's "Good Morning America" about an online video last week by the state's GOP taking her to task for a comment some considered unpatriotic.

"The GOP, should I be the nominee, can say whatever they want to say about me, my track record," Obama said. "If they think that they're going to try to make Michelle an issue in this campaign, they should be careful because that I find unacceptable, the notion that you start attacking my wife or my family."

He called the strategy "low class."

The video, posted on YouTube, centered on remarks Michelle Obama made while campaigning in Wisconsin last February, when she said: "For the first time in my adult life, I am really proud of my country."

The four-minute video replayed the remark six times, interspersing it with commentary by Tennesseans on why they are proud of America. In a news release that included a link to the video, Tennessee's GOP said "the Tennessee Republican Party has always been proud of America." It urged radio stations to play "patriotic music" during Michelle Obama's visit to Nashville last Thursday.

Michelle Obama later clarified the remark, saying she meant she was proud of how Americans were engaging in the political process and that she had always been proud of her country.

"Whoever is in charge of the Tennessee GOP needs to think long and hard about the kind of campaign they want to run, and I think that's true for everybody, Democrat or Republican," Obama said in the ABC interview, adding: "These folks should lay off my wife."

Obama said his wife "loves this country. For them to try to distort or to play snippets of her remarks in ways that are unflattering to her is, I think, just low class. I think that most of the American people would think that as well."

Tennessee's Republican Party was roundly criticized in March, including by likely presidential nominee John McCain, for a news release that used Barack Obama's middle name — Hussein — and showed a photo of him wearing what it said was "Muslim attire."

The release ultimately was removed from the party's Web site at the urging of the state's two Republican senators and Republican National Committee Chairman Mike Duncan, who said he "rejects these kinds of campaign tactics."

Zephyr
May 19th, 2008, 04:35 PM
I don't blame Obama for getting fed up.
Politics arn't about the people in the candidate's life,
Politics are about worldly issues and the people handling them.

Sugaree
May 19th, 2008, 05:39 PM
Yeah, well it's almost nothing but rumors now. The world isn't like it used to be. I agree with Obama on this one.

Politics, let alone everything else, is never like it used to be.

Dolphus Raymond
May 21st, 2008, 03:35 AM
I agree and disagree.

I agree that stupid sound bite attacks on candidate's wives are uncalled for and shameful politics.

But I'm not sure I'd declare them "off-limits." Pettiness is part of politics and all campaigns engage in some of it. When his wife is acting as a surrogate for him, I wouldn't say she's 100% off-limits. But she isn't the candidate, and she isn't a politician, and acting like she's either is totally unfair.

A lot of people don't seem to, but I like Michelle Obama...she seems very self-possessed, even if she's unpolished in interviews. She's the anti-Stepford Wife.

Whisper
May 21st, 2008, 04:02 AM
shes completely within limits she stated that while campaigning
she was representing him when she stated that
even if she wasn't thats not something the wife of a potential future president should be blurting out, she needs to be more careful how she phrases things
its politics, adapt or die

that being said this is from last feb
if thats the best the republican party in Tennessee can do
then there truly weak and pathetic

if anything
they played into Obama's hand now he can be seen as the family man protecting his beloved
amateurs