Hi.  As we approach the election it's increasingly hard to choose
what I send you.  Today's choices were "Iraq in Hell," "This is what
Denial Does" (on the merging economic and ecological disasters,)
and a bunch of others.  But this one is closer to my own heart, always
uncomfortable with the common assumptions of people in the south,
'rednecks' and so on, without the ability to let you hear their music
and meet them as they are, human warmth and frailties, like the
rest of us. It took someone from North Carolina to write this fine essay,
which could be bettered only with Doc Watson (Deep Gap) or Brownie
Mcghee (Brownsville) playing along and speaking in their own ever-poetic
and more ethnic voices.  I truly miss that.
Ed

From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20081110/moser

Obamalina

By Bob Moser
The Nation: October 22, 2008


My home state, where I spent decades suffering serial heartbreaks along with
my fellow progressives, where Al Gore and John Kerry withdrew their
campaigns by Labor Day, where George W. Bush won last time by twelve
points--my home state was suddenly a toss-up. It had gone from red to pink
to indefinite on the cable TV maps just since last spring. Best known to
many as the place that gave us Jesse Helms, North Carolina now could--to the
astonishment of almost every pundit inside and outside the state--shift its
fifteen electoral votes and help seal the deal for the nation's first
African-American president. It was the most surprising thing this side of
Indiana.

"When we started this campaign," Obama crowed to 700 Democratic heavies and
a bank of local-news cameras at the Vance-Aycock Dinner he'd "crashed," "we
said we were going to change the political map. And people said no, it can't
be done." But "we kept coming down to North Carolina.... And despite the
pundits, despite the prognosticators, despite the cynicism, thirty days out,
we are right here in the hunt in North Carolina. We can win at the top [of
the ballot] in North Carolina, and we can win at the bottom of the ballot in
North Carolina."

This was Obama's third straight weekend in the state--eye-popping for a
place that hasn't gone Democratic for president since 1976, and has seen
only one pair of nominee's wingtips pounding its pavement since then--Bill
Clinton's in 1992, when he lost the state to George H.W. Bush by a hair. And
if Obama was sounding triumphal in Asheville, it's because winning North
Carolina would be sweet not only for the obvious reason of helping him get
past 270 electoral votes. It would also vindicate his campaign's extension
of Democratic National Committee chair Howard Dean's fifty-state project
into the presidential election.

Like Dean before him, Obama was questioned for putting cash and people into
states like Georgia and North Carolina, despite their increasing Democratic
leanings and rapidly changing demographics. North Carolina, where 3.5
million voted in 2004, gained 1.5 million legal residents from 1996 to
2006-- plenty of newcomers to fundamentally alter the state's voting
patterns. But while he's given up on full-scale efforts in Georgia, Obama's
North Carolina campaign, undergirded by 1,700 volunteers, forty offices and
close to 400 paid staffers (McCain has thirty offices but only thirty paid
staff), has outregistered Republicans five to one in the state this year and
drawn even in the polls heading into the campaign's last weeks. In the first
week of early voting, in mid-October, almost three times as many Democrats
as Republicans were casting ballots in a record turnout; while
African-Americans are only 22 percent of the state's population, almost 40
percent of early voters were black. Obama's been running many more ads in
the state than McCain--and gearing them, spot-on, to the economic troubles
shared by working-class Carolinians, who've suffered some of the nation's
highest job losses, and overspending white-collar families around
Raleigh-Durham and Charlotte, which was recently rocked by the implosion of
Wachovia, one of several banks headquartered in the city.

It does not hurt a bit that North Carolina Democrats, who have built a
powerful grassroots machine under the leadership of innovative state chair
Jerry Meek, have outhustled the Republicans. So has the Obama campaign.
Obama, his wife, Michelle, and running mate Joe Biden have all stumped in
the state's swelling metropolitan areas--where they need to rack up a big
margin, especially among the many younger independents from out of state
working in banking, universities and tech--as well as in the military
country of the coast and the largely white, conservative terrain of the
mountains. Unlike McCain, Obama has fine-tuned his message for local ears,
repeating, with the slightest hint of a twang, the themes that have
consistently won Democrats most statewide offices--better jobs, better
education, more responsible government. "I want y'all to listen to this," he
said in Asheville at his rally in blazing sunshine. "My opponent, Senator
McCain--his campaign has announced they plan to, and I quote, 'turn the
page' on the discussion about this economy and spend the final weeks of his
campaign launching Swiftboat-style attacks on me." The crowd hooted, just as
they hooted at Obama's invocation of McCain's name.

"You're trying to pay your bills every week and stay above water. You can't
ignore the economy!" Heads nodded all around, yes, yes. "You're worrying
about whether your job will be there a month from now. You can't ignore the
economy!" Whoo! "You're worrying about whether you can pay your mortgage and
stay in your house. You can't turn the page and stop thinking about the
economy!"

It's the right message at the right time in a state where Democrats
outnumber Republicans 46 to 32 percent. But was Obama--is he--the right
candidate to preach this new populist gospel? A new North Carolina, one that
would never have gone for Jesse Helms, is rapidly emerging. November 4 will
test how far the evolution has come. It will also test how much of native,
white North Carolina is ready to come along for the ride.

The opening lines of the University of North Carolina's fight song go like
this: "I'm a Tar Heel born, I'm a Tar Heel bred, and when I die, I'm a Tar
Heel dead." These are hardly profound sentiments when you look at them on
the page or yell them at basketball games, but they say some revealing
things about the state where I lived my first thirty-six years--in other
words, about the old North Carolina. We'll get to the new one shortly.

The Tar Heels I grew up around in the '70s and reported on in the '90s
carried the spirit of that song in their DNA: funny, proud and
self-deprecating all at once. After all, there we were, cheering to the
notion that when we die, well, that's all she wrote. We're dead Tar Heels.
Yee-hah!

The state has always been one of the nation's weirdest political places.
While North Carolinians have long been prone to noting that someone once
called us "a valley of humility between two mountains of conceit"--those
being South Carolina and Virginia--we have also had a tendency to make bold
and cranky choices, both liberal and conservative, when it comes to electing
people. At the ballot box, we were never humble. We were closer to
schizophrenic.

It is true, as Democratic consultant Mac McCorkle says, that North Carolina
qualifies as "the most advanced outpost of liberalism in the South." That's
been the case, in fact, since the nineteenth century, when the state led the
country in funding higher education and other such socialistic things. A
century ago, Governor Charles Brantley Aycock advocated free, universal
public education for blacks and whites alike. A few decades earlier, North
Carolinians had voted down secession, only to have their legislature
capitulate. The state lost more men in the Civil War than any other, but
also welcomed home an outsize share of Confederate deserters. Fool us
once... While Democrats dominated here for the rotten hundred years after
the war, as they did everywhere in Dixie, there was a difference: North
Carolina had not only a strong traditionalist wing fighting for Democratic
dominance but also a moderately progressive wing with some electoral oomph.

The seminal twentieth-century showdown between the traditionalists and the
modernists (excellent terms for the state's dueling ideologies, courtesy of
Democratic legislator and historian Paul Luebke) came right at its midpoint:
the 1950 primary battle for US Senate between former marine and aggressive
liberal Frank Porter Graham and segregationist rabble-rouser Willis Smith.
It was a doozy. Fliers were plastered around the state with the Klan-like
warning White People, Wake Up and a doctored photo of Graham's wife
supposedly dancing with a Negro. Another flier was circulated, pretending to
support Graham as the candidate of the "National Society for the Advancement
of Colored People."

The dark side won that one narrowly, in a runoff, but the Graham campaign
spawned progressive Terry Sanford. In 1960, at the height of the South's
civil rights backlash, Sanford beat a staunch segregationist to become
governor. (He also became the first major Southern politician to give JFK
his blessing, and the Catholic candidate carried the state.) At his
inaugural, two years before George Wallace's famous "segregation forever"
speech, Sanford declared segregation over, sending shock waves through the
South and making headlines across the country. Twelve years later, we
elected Jesse Helms to his first of five interminable terms. Go figure.

Helms wrecked our reputation. But while the rest of the country,
understandably enough, began to characterize our politics with the
misleading evidence offered by the bespectacled bigot, the state remained
mostly Democratic through the reigns of Nixon, Reagan and the Bushes. Most
of the Republicans who broke through statewide were from the politer,
Chamber of Commerce wing of the party--folks who held their noses whenever
Jesse and his true believers came around.

Helms-style Republicanism never flew in North Carolina--unless it was being
delivered by the man himself, who had a strange connection with the antic,
nonconformist, hell-raising side of us. Helms and his band of right-wing
fundraisers repeatedly backed cloned candidates for Congress, Senate and
governor, and they usually didn't make it out of the GOP primaries. That's
partly because the millions of nonnative Republicans who moved to the state,
swelling the party's ranks in the 1980s and '90s, tended to be social
moderates who didn't like being married to the religious right--and who have
shown a tendency to be swing voters when the Republican candidate is too
hard-core, or when they simply like the Democrat better. (This time, the
Democrats are poised to pick up another Congressional seat, giving them an
8-to-5 edge in North Carolina, with former textile worker Larry Kissell
leading five-term incumbent Robin Hayes [see Moser, "Mill Hill Populism,"
May 12].)

According to longtime Republican consultant Paul Shumaker, who advised
first-term Senator Richard Burr in his 2004 victory over former Clinton aide
Erskine Bowles, Republican candidates in 1980s North Carolina could count on
winning 85 percent of their party's base from the get-go. "These days,
candidates like Richard Burr start out their campaigns assured of only about
60 percent of their party's vote," he estimated in 2006. Considering that
there are already a lot more Democrats than Republicans in the state, that
lack of GOP loyalty could be deadly for many Novembers to come.

North Carolina is likely to become a presidential battleground for several
cycles. That means more national Democratic money and presence--and,
ironically, uncertainty for the dominant state Democrats. "In terms of
presidential politics, we've been kind of on the fringe," state chair Meek
told me in the spring of 2007. Has that cost NC Democrats? I asked him.
"There are mixed perspectives," he said. "If the DNC thought North Carolina
was important enough in play to spend significant resources here, then the
RNC would probably have the same reaction. Is it a wash?... Clearly in terms
of infrastructure, in terms of organization, in terms of resources, the NCDP
is in much better shape than the North Carolina Republican Party. And we
kind of like it that way."

On the other hand, Meek said all those months ago, "I'm much more optimistic
about the prospect for a Democratic nominee winning in North Carolina in
2008 than at any time in the recent past. There are a lot of changes going
on. We're one of the fastest-growing states in the country, and people who
are moving into places like RTP [Research Triangle Park], to the Charlotte
area, the Triad area [Winston-Salem, High Point and Greensboro] are
increasingly willing to vote Democratic at the federal level. They tend to
be fiscally conservative, but they don't tend to have so many hang-ups about
the cultural issues. That doesn't seem to drive their vote in the way that
it does for some of the more traditional Republicans in North Carolina."

This year moderate Republicans and independents have one GOP candidate they
can cheer wholeheartedly: former Charlotte mayor and gubernatorial candidate
Pat McCrory, the sort of Republican who raised taxes in his city to pay for
mass transit. McCrory is quick-witted, accent free, like so many new North
Carolinians, and despite some unpopular stances (including on education,
where he has talked about rolling back innovative Democratic programs), he
has a good chance to knock off Lieutenant Governor Bev Perdue, an awkward
debater and spawn of the corrupt Democratic machine in Raleigh. That's the
bright spot for Republicans. Elsewhere it's gloom, doom and desperation for
the NC GOP.

By contrast, North Carolina progressives are giddy as hell and worried sick,
both. What we remember, most vividly and horrifyingly, is 1990--the other
seminal matchup of the last century. Ol' Jesse was running for re-election
for the four millionth time, all the while conducting surgical strikes
against the National Endowment for the Arts, the judicial system and global
democracy. His opponent was former Charlotte mayor Harvey Gantt, a handsome,
genial Democrat with personal integrity and the guts to say that he was
"proud to be a liberal." He was also the African-American who had famously
integrated Clemson University in 1963--at a time when Helms was
rabble-rousing nightly on the state's widest-reaching TV station. The same
year that Gantt matriculated at Clemson, Helms blustered into the camera,
"The Negro cannot count forever on the kind of restraint that has thus far
left him free to clog the streets, disrupt traffic and commerce and
interfere with other men's rights. Mob action invites mob action. Violence
invites violence; lawlessness invites lawlessness."

The symbolism of Helms versus Gantt was thick as grits. The question in 1990
stared North Carolinians in the face: are we finally, once and for all,
better than that? For most of the year, it looked like we were. Gantt,
running on an energized grassroots, led in the polls right up to election
day. Celebrations were in the works. A few days before the voting, a Gantt
organizer called me up and cracked, "Does anybody have a copy of 'The Night
They Drove Old Dixie Down'?"

But while we were busy planning victory parties, aglow with the thought of
Jesse losing to a civil rights hero, Helms unleashed his infamous "white
hands" ad: a close-up of a pair of white male hands opening, reading and
then crumpling a rejection letter. "You needed that job and you were the
best qualified," the narrator somberly intoned. "But they had to give it to
a minority because of a racial quota. Is that really fair? Harvey Gantt says
it is. Gantt supports Ted Kennedy's racial quota law that makes the color of
your skin more important than your qualifications." Just like forty years
earlier, the dark side prevailed. Gantt had come close, but his slight
advantage in the final polls had disappeared by the time North Carolinians
went to vote. We weren't there yet.

John McCain has done his darnedest to help Obama in North Carolina, running
a campaign that has been alternately angry and absent. The news that the
Democrat had drawn even in the state was apparently slow to register with
them. Until a visit on October 13, the GOP nominee hadn't set foot in the
state since June, when he huddled privately with the Rev. Billy Graham.
McCain had talked to Tar Heel voters before the May primary, when he told a
crowd at Wake Forest University that he appreciated "the hospitality of the
students and faculty of West Virginia." Maybe that's why it took him so long
to show his face again.

Right after the second debate in October, the McCain camp roused itself and
sent Sarah Palin to East Carolina University in Greenville, the red heart of
Jesse Helms's eastern North Carolina base. It was quite the Helmsian scene,
starting with the invocation, when local pastor Walter Leake prayed: "We
know the truth is out there, and the truth is that the other side is lying,
unbelievably lying.... God, we ask you to close their mouths."

Then out came Helms's replacement senator, Elizabeth Dole, locked in the
fight of her life (now uphill) against scrappy Democratic State Senator Kay
Hagan, to carry on about how the outsider Democrats were ganging up on her.
In her impossibly honeyed Hollywood drawl, Dole complained vociferously
about a most terrible person called Senator Chuck Schumer, who had already
poured some $5.5 million into ads attacking her for voting with Bush 92
percent of the time and coming in ninety-third in one Senate effectiveness
ranking. (Two good ol' boys argue whether she's "92" or "93" in a
devastating Democratic commercial, not so subtly playing on Dole's record
and her age, which is 72.) "He's try-un to buy North Carolin-uh with his New
York money, and we're naht goin' to let that happ-un," she instructed the
folk. (It has been reported, coincidentally, that Dole's percentage of
out-of-state contributors far exceeds Hagan's.) Loud boos were aimed at this
Schumer character. The crowd later roused itself into a gleeful, guttural
chant: "Nobama! Nobama! Nobama!"

The main speaker was not about to lighten the tone. "Here in North
Carolina," said Sarah Palin, just getting warmed up, "you can help put us
there in Washington, DC." That was about as positive, or specific, as she
got. But she did have something to say. It was in Greenville where she first
asked the immortal question, whether Obama really "didn't know that he had
launched his political career in the living room of a terrorist?" The folks
cheered themselves hoarse. And when the next set of polls came out, Obama
had taken a slight lead in the state.

The GOP's attack strategy, its only strategy in North Carolina, hasn't--so
far--paid dividends any more than Hillary Clinton's fervid populist effort
last spring, in the primary that ended her nomination hopes numerically and
realistically with a 56-to-42 drubbing. At the height of the hoo-ha about
the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Bill Clinton had been dispatched to some four
dozen small-town arenas and community college auditoriums, talking to
overwhelmingly white audiences and basically delivering the message: "You
know, remember now, we're all right, we're one of you. Not like that other
fellow." But Obama rode the metropolitan areas, where the swing votes and
new votes reside, to a victory bigger than the polls had suggested.

The night of his primary triumph in May, Obama was all swole with joy and
uplift--and in full sales mode. After calling North Carolina "a swing state,
a state where we will compete to win if I am the...ominee for president,"
Obama raised the roof with his big preacherly finish: "In this country,
justice can be won against the greatest odds. Hope can find its way back
from the darkest corners.... We answer with one voice, 'Yes we can.' North
Carolina and America...don't ever forget that this campaign is about you.
It's about your hopes, it's about your dreams, it's about your struggles,
it's about your aspirations."

There is something about North Carolina, both the old one and the new one,
that has an ear for that kind of thing. And an ear, too, for the folksier
and more focused (on economics) Obama of the general election. In early
October he sounded just like a successful NC Democrat, speaking the language
of sound, responsible, inarguable progress and duly noting the 24,000
manufacturing job losses in the state this year, part of an avalanche of
layoffs with the collapse of textile, furniture and tobacco industries. And
he snatched the high road--the one that always works best for North Carolina
Democrats. "Senator McCain and his operatives are gambling that they can
distract you with smears rather than talk to you about substance," he said,
his body swaying more animatedly than usual. He looked loose here, at home.
"They'd rather tear our campaign down than lift this country up. That's what
you do when you're out of touch, out of ideas, and running out of time!"
Cheers.

"I'm going to keep on talking about issues that matter.... I'm going to talk
about healthcare. I'm going to talk about education. I'm going to talk about
energy. I'm going to keep on standing up for hard-working families who
aren't getting a fair shake in this economy." Whoops all around. "We're not
going to let John McCain distract us. We're not going to let him hoodwink
ya, or bamboozle ya"--here, Obama could not help chuckling at himself.
"We're not going to let him run the okey-doke on ya. The American people are
too smart for that, because they want to move this country forward."

It was pretty good talk. And it had nothing to do with guns, or NASCAR, or
"life," or "faith," or any of the sorts of cultural shtick national
Democrats have trotted out so uncomfortably in the South and Midwest. Here
was Obama, crisply dressed in his usual white shirt and tie, harking back to
Tar Heel politicians like Aycock and Sanford and four-time governor Jim
Hunt, who appealed to people's common sense in order to advance
progressivism. At the same time, he was also establishing himself as the
torchbearer of a whole new brand of rational progressivism that appeals
mightily to the new North Carolina.

But the Republican robocalls cranked up soon after Obama's visit. More
disturbingly, Helms-style "white hands" made a comeback, courtesy of an RNC
mailer that infected mailboxes across North Carolina in mid-October. The
main image is a close-up of a big, weathered Caucasian hand resting on a
chest decorated with an American flag pin. "It used to be easy to recognize
patriotism," reads the main headline. The flier mostly criticizes Obama and
Biden on taxes, but the racial implications are anything but subtle.

There is, surely, worse to come. Everybody in North Carolina knows that.
What nobody will know, until November 4, is whether such tactics can still
work their satanic charm in a state that's at the vanguard of a new, and
increasingly blue, South.

About Bob Moser

Bob Moser, a Nation contributing writer, is the author of Blue Dixie:
Awakening the South's Democratic Majority, just published by Times Books.

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