
(Off-camera) He has also been trying to show that he is – trying to show religious and values to voters, that he is one of them as well. And he gave a speech yesterday at the AME convention. Let’s hear a little bit of it.
(DEMOCRAT
I’ve talked about faith-based groups and individual responsibility for years. Again, I know some of our friends in the media might think it’s some new political positioning, but I say it because I believe it. Because I’ve always believed it. Because I believe this is the only work that we can do as individuals that this is the work we are called to do as Christians.
(Off-camera) Showing a little sensitivity about the press there, Michele, but it is true that he’s been talking about it for several years. He wrote about it in his books. And it seems to be bearing some fruit electoraly so far. He seems to be cutting into the evangelical vote.
MICHELLE COTTLE (“THE NEW REPUBLIC”)
I think this is a very shrewd approach for him. I mean, McCain is not beloved by the evangelical base. And all Obama has to do is kind of cut in or kind of soften their fears about voting Democratic. He’s meeting with evangelical leaders. He’s, you know, announcing that he’s going to expand the faith-based initiative. He’s going places like Colorado Springs to give these speeches. I think it’s an incredibly good move on his part and McCain needs to kind of pay attention and figure out a way to combat this. Right now, he’s just ignoring it.
(Off-camera) Well he did start to pay attention last week. I met with Franklin Graham and Billy Graham last Sunday. He’s trying to cut into this, Mark, but as Michelle points out, Obama doesn’t need to win this group, all he has to do is get his numbers with evangelicals up to the 30% that Bill Clinton got. He’s probably going to get elected.
MARK HALPERIN (“TIME”)
It’s very instructive I think to look at how Obama compares to Kerry and Gore who narrowly lost the White House on different indices. On this one, he talks better, more smoothly, more authoritatively, more authentically about his faith than either of those two guys did. And I think is – it does give him a chance to cut into that vote in states where it matters, in states that are swing states where he can at least make them competitive if not actually win them.
JONATHAN CAPEHART (“THE WASHINGTON POST”)
And here’s something else that talking about faith does for Senator Obama, it reminds people that he’s a Christian. It reminds people that he’s not a Muslim. And I’m still amazed that in every poll, you will find above 10% of the people polled believe he’s a Muslim. So this has a double duty. It does double duty. He reminds people that he’s a person of faith but he also reminds them that he’s a Christian.
(Off-camera) Ted, you’ve been combating this stuff on the internet all year long.
TED KOPPEL (DISCOVERY CHANNEL)
It’s an incredible story
(Off-camera) Well it is an incredible story. And you’ve spent so much time on “Nightline” and now Discovery also looking at issues of race. How big of an issue do you think this will end up being for him in the end, this cluster of issues?
TED KOPPEL (DISCOVERY CHANNEL)
I think in the final analysis, there was a wonderful story, I think it was in “The Washington Post” the other day, about Flag City USA down in Ohio. Where people are exposed to what is the truth, namely, that Obama is Christian, namely, that there is no reason to question his patriotism. But all of these rumors that have come through are connected to the fact that he is an African American. Has made apparently this entire community uneasy about him. And the rumor mill has been far more effective than any ads, any newspaper stories, any television stories. And I think there’s just a small but significant fraction of Americans for whom the truth in this instance is…