Redding: Jackson may abandon Obama

By Robert "Rob" Redding Jr.
Publisher
Jan. 3, 2008, 9 p.m. - The Rev. Jesse
Jackson seems to be pulling his support away from Sen. Barack Obama, a
fellow Democrat, in recent weeks.
Last week the civil rights icon would not answer a
question about where his support stands for Obama to win the
Democratic presidential primary, when asked by a Fox News reporter
following the death of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.
The reporter asked:
"Reverend Jackson, just shifting to politics for a second, you're
behind Barack Obama. In light of what has happened today (Bhutto's
assassination), do you still think that Barack Obama is the right
person to shepherd our country through the War on Terror?"
Jackson responded:
"Well, I think that all the candidates must now show their -- their
grit and their true worth of patriotism. He is as capable as [is]
the rest of them on dealing with this issue. Of course, I think
what's missed is not just that in my judgment. I think we must not
underestimate the danger (inaudible) in the cost of Pakistan. In
that place, Al Qaeda is in the hills. Taliban is in the hills. The
drug trade is coming through Afghanistan and Pakistan to the
mountains. They have their nuclear weapons [in] there. The guy who
gave the military nuclear weapons to North Korea and Iran is there.
It is a dangerous place, and so, whoever leads must now step-up and
show and give American people the sense of confidence that they can
lead."
This the 10th time I have read
the above response and I still cannot find an answer in Jackson's
intentionally convoluted response. Maybe he doesn't want a response on
Obama's foreign policy fitness to come back to haunt him should Obama be
elected president.
But this is not first time Jackson has been
questionable about his support for Obama.
In an editorial in November, he wrote that Obama's challenger former
Sen. John Edwards was the only presidential candidate who hasn't
"virtually ignored" the plight of blacks.
He also said early last
month that none of the candidates have adequately addressed the
subprime lending crisis gripping America.
The highlight of his Obama-bashing came during a speech at Benedict
College in South Carolina in September when he reportedly said the
candidate is "acting like he's white." He was referring to Obama's
response to the "Jena Six" march. Jackson, who felt Obama and others
could have done more, has since said his remarks were taken out of
context.
Finally, one can
only look at the fact that Jackson has also not been doing a lot of campaigning for Obama as an indicator that he is not fully behind him. Now aren't
you supposed to stump for people you endorse, or maybe Jackson is
just too busy?
Anyway, I think it is safe to say that Jackson may be regretting his
decision to endorse Obama. I would not be surprised if he began
campaigning for rivals Edwards or Sen. Hillary Clinton, should they win
the nomination.
(Robert "Rob" Redding Jr. is the Publisher of the Washington
Continent, Redding News Review and author of "Hired Hatred: Why
politicians, political parties & the political prejudices they tout
are mutually exclusive from good government.")