Many of us have noticed Obama going negative since last summer. The most intense attack was a recent conference call in which Obama's team said a fellow Democrat lacked the integrity to lay a wreathe at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
But that didn't matter, because the press saw Obama as a new kind of politician who didn't go negative. Perception is reality. It's the entire premise of Obama's campaign: he may be thin on experience, but he's above the fray. And yet.
Today we see the third liberal publication in two days running a lead story on Obama's "nasty" negative campaigning in Pennsylvania. This undermines his entire argument. How will the voters react? How will the Superdelegates see this move? These things take time to sink in. We may not know for a few weeks.
As he did in Ohio and Texas, Obama outspent Hillary by more than two to one in Pennsylvania. He may pull out a win. He better. But if he doesn't, following the sympathy he received from ABC's unfair debate questions last week, that may not be a problem given he's the one who doesn't (as the press says) go negative. Or does he?:
PHILADELPHIA--Barack Obama's final push through Pennsylvania has shown the combative, angry side of a candidate and campaign that had once been defined by its good cheer and condemnation of negative tactics.
In television commercials and in appearances before crowded rallies, Mr. Obama, of Illinois, cast his opponent in one of the most negative lights of the entire 16-month campaign, calling her a compromised Washington insider.
DOWNINGTOWN, Pa.--At the next train stop, I'm going to stand behind Sen. Obama when he speaks. When he's decrying the trivial distractions in politics, I think he may be crossing his fingers behind his back.
How this fresh, new untested candidate will handle the press turning on him remains a mystery. He could be fantastic. Or petulant. Let's let it play out over the next month.
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