Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid apologized on Saturday for saying in 2008 that the race of Barack Obama — whom he described as a “light-skinned” African-American “with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one” — would help rather than hurt his eventual presidential bid.
Obama quickly accepted, saying: “As far as I am concerned, the book is closed.”
Reid, facing a tough Senate re-election bid this year, spent the day telephoning civil rights leaders and fellow Democrats in hopes of mitigating the political damage.
The revelations about Reid’s 2008 comments were included in the book Game Change by Time magazine’s Mark Halperin and New York magazine’s John Heilemann. The behind-the-scenes look at the 2008 campaign that elevated Obama to the White House is based on the writers’ interviews with more than 200 sources, most of whom were granted anonymity. Thus much of the material could not immediately be corroborated.
Among the details in the book:
• Obama’s rival in the Democratic primary, Hillary Rodham Clinton, said she believed Obama’s team had used out-of-state supporters to win the Iowa primary caucuses and had intentionally exploited Obama’s race. She said the US faced a “a terrible choice” between Obama and Republican nominee John McCain.
• Obama and running mate Joe Biden barely spoke, kept separate schedules and seldom campaigned together. The campaign kept Biden off the nightly calls that included Obama, instead having the campaign manager and senior strategist brief Biden separately.
• Aides to McCain described the difficulties they faced with their vice presidential pick, then-Alaska governor Sarah Palin. Steve Schmidt, a senior adviser to McCain, is quoted telling Palin’s foreign policy tutors: “You guys have a lot of work to do. She doesn’t know anything.”
• Former US president Bill Clinton’s efforts to persuade Senator Edward Kennedy to endorse his wife’s presidential bid fell flat when Clinton told the Democratic lawmaker that just a few years ago, Obama would have been serving the pair coffee.
What caused the biggest stir Saturday, however, was the Reid statement.
“He [Reid] was wowed by Obama’s oratorical gifts and believed that the country was ready to embrace a black presidential candidate, especially one such as Obama — a ‘light-skinned’ African American ‘with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one,’ as he later put it privately,” the book said.
After new excerpts from the book appeared on the Web site of The Atlantic, Reid released a statement expressing regret for “using such a poor choice of words. I sincerely apologize for offending any and all Americans, especially African-Americans for my improper comments.”
Obama issued a statement saying he had spoken with Reid, who faces a difficult re-election amid frustration from both liberals and conservatives with his leadership in the Senate and his agenda.
For Reid, not faring well in polls, the comments can’t help, even as Obama relies heavily on him to try to pass a health care overhaul.
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