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Memo From a Poison Penn
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The words quoted above belong to Mark Penn, the top Democratic strategist and pollster for most of Hillary Clinton's run for the White House. They appear in a strategic campaign review memo, unearthed recently by the Atlantic magazine, that Penn sent to Clinton on March 19, 2007.
Let us note that Hillary Clinton did not take Penn's advice, though she continues her association with him.
Clinton did make much of her Middle American birth into the middle class, and she did pretend to be as one with the white working class, as Penn instructed in his strategy memo.
But she did not launch a frontal attack on Obama's life in Hawaii or on his diverse background or charge -- as Penn had urged -- that Obama is not "at his center fundamentally American."
So why bring this up now? It's not exactly a new line of attack against Obama. Check out the cable channels.
Also, when it comes to hitting below the belt, Mark Penn has plenty of company.
A widely distributed e-mail I received last month from "Sol" adopted Penn's "lack of American roots" libel against Obama, but more crudely.
Sol was taken aback by Obama's assertion that "we are now a nation of Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists. . ."
"I never thought," wrote Sol, "I'd see the day that I'd hear something like that from a presidential candidate in this Country."
"To think our forefathers fought and died for the right for our nation to be a Christian nation -- and to have this 'wannabe raghead' say with pride that 'we are no longer a Christian nation.' "
"How far will the good people of the USA let these 'minorities' tell us what we can and cannot do?"
"With God's help, He will still take control of this Nation and we can show this 'anti-Christ' and all his boot-lickers . . ."
Okay, it's easy to dismiss Sol as another misguided hater on the religious right.
It's not so easy, however, to look past Penn.
He's a longtime Clinton insider, the chief executive of the public relations giant Burson-Marsteller and an adviser to Fortune 500 chieftains. He's accorded respectability, access to the powerful and a fat bank account.
We have, thanks to Penn's own hand, a glimpse into his ethics and values. We can see how he would exploit heritage, background and class and use misleading and offensive characterizations in his work. We understand how he would go about challenging and demeaning Obama's American identity by suggesting that the Hawaii-born, Columbia- and Harvard-educated U.S. senator from Illinois is not American enough.
Cynically, he would make Obama out to be a threat to American values and culture.
It's clear from the memo exactly what type of politics Penn would practice.
What is unclear, though, in an increasingly diverse and multicultural America, where merit and not lineage or class should be deciding factors, is why the salons of Washington, the boardrooms of corporate America and the doors of foreign governments are open to such a divider and fear-exploiter as Mark Penn.
It's fair to ask about his roots in basic American values. Why do business with him?





