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The Hutchinson Report: Think Age Will Be Obama’s Ultimate Trump Card Against John McCain? Think Again

Date: Friday, February 22, 2008
By: Earl Ofari Hutchinson, Special to BlackAmericaWeb.com

Democratic presidential contender Barack Obama coyly hinted at something that has been virtually taboo during the fierce hunt for the White House in 2008. That’s likely GOP presidential candidate John McCain’s age.

In a speech at the Jefferson-Jackson dinner in Virginia in early February, Obama hailed McCain for his half-century of service to the country. This borderline ageist damn-with-faint-praise of McCain was of course tame stuff compared to the dumb crack from B-movie action guy Chuck Norris before the Florida primary last January that McCain was just too old to be president. Norris subsequently apologized, but he still got a swift and deserved disappearance as a prominent mouthpiece for McCain’s GOP presidential rival, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee. It probably ramped up in the number of votes McCain got from the loads of AARP seniors who retired in the state. That sweetened McCain’s victory there and rocketed his once seemingly DOA campaign forward faster.

Norris aside, age is and will be a factor in the possible showdown between McCain and Obama. Some Democrats undoubtedly bank that Obama’s boyish looks and fresh-faced vigor will stand in stark contrast to the weary, and slow pace gait of McCain. But age won’t be an Obama trump card against McCain.





It just doesn’t titillate and get the tongues furiously wagging as race does with Obama and gender with Hillary Clinton. It shouldn’t. Age is no legitimate measure of McCain’s mindset, physical health or even his possible longevity in the office. JFK, Nixon and Bill Clinton were all in their 40s when they took office. Each had serious health problems and each one faced serious political and personal crises during their terms, but their health didn’t lay them low. McCain released hundreds of pages of his health records before his presidential run in 2000 and last year to head off talk that he’s medically and emotionally incompetent (that pertains to his torture as a Vietnam POW) to be president. Even if he hadn’t, and even if there were health issues with him, his age still holds minefield peril for Obama.

Reagan is the best example of that. Other than snickers and wisecracks about his memory lapses and occasional gaffes, there was no evidence Reagan lost a single vote because anyone thought he was too old. The early signs of Alzheimer’s came much later in his term, and by then, the Reagan myth and legacy had been well ensured. The eyes of many in their audiences misted over the countless times McCain and the other one time GOP presidential candidates evoked Reagan’s name during their debates and on the campaign trail.

Reagan, for his part, did much to defuse the age issue when he turned to his Democratic opponent Walter Mondale in their presidential debate in 1984 and challenged, "I want you to know that I will not make age an issue of this campaign. I am not going to exploit, for political purposes, my opponent's youth and inexperience." The aim was not to score a quick debate point or to cut Mondale low; it was to make the point that age is not a liability, but a desired quality in a head of state; that age equates with experience, level headedness and maturity.

Then there are the voter demographics and age related issues. The vast array of programs, from Social Security to education and housing subsidies for seniors, soak up more than a quarter of the federal budget. Legions of senior citizen advocacy groups keep a hawk-like watch on funding, spending and possible cuts in those services. The slightest hint of any attack on Social Security, either real or manufactured politically, is the political kiss of death for a candidate. Seniors have the political muscle to make sure of that. Those aged 60 and older make up almost a quarter of those who turn out on Election Day.

There is no such thing as an old-age voting bloc. Seniors vote based on their needs, personal tastes, interests and political preferences just like other voting groups. But seniors have been far more likely to vote for Republicans than Democrats. In 2004, those over aged 60 gave Bush a wider vote margin over Sen. John Kerry than any other age group.

McCain deftly snatched a page from Reagan’s political playbook, dampened the age issue, and will try to turn the age table on Obama. He’ll pound on the point that a school-boy looking, relative political newcomer on the national scene simply can’t be trusted too make the mature, sober and vital decisions that presidents have to make, especially in times of war, terrorist peril and domestic crisis. The irony is that age may just turn out to be McCain’s trump card instead of the Democrats' -- even if Obama tries to help him out of his chair when they debate.

---

Earl Ofari Hutchinson's forthcoming book is "The Ethnic Presidency: How Race Decides the Race to the White House."




Discuss

Bertel says:

Age will play a difference for real because Mr.McCain can't remember facts as he has demonstrated time and read more

manofmystic says:

Fox TV Talk Show Personality bonehead Sean Hannity is obsessed with Democratic Presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama.
Every since read more

Mdazes says:

ONLY A FOOL WOULD THINK AGE WOULD PLAY A PART IN ELECTING CANDIDATES. IN THAT CASE WE WOULD NOT HAVE read more

madenuff2luv says:

I'm furious that Tavis scheduled this state of Black America Address when it was very OBVIOUS that Barack couldn' read more

tgn512 says:

told ya'll joewatson ain't nothing but some snot nosed punk white kid with access to the internet,unsupervised read more

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