Star Parker: Obama’s real ‘stay-at-home mom’ problem
by Star Parker
Columnist
April 22, 2012 12:00 AM | 1025 views | 3 3 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Spokespeople and pundits stick their foot in it all the time. But rarely do we see public relations heavy artillery brought out to do damage control to the extent provoked by Hilary Rosen’s recent remark that Ann Romney “never worked a day in her life.”

President Barack Obama himself responded to this: “It was the wrong thing to say.” First lady Michelle Obama tweeted, repudiating Rosen: “Every mother works hard and every woman deserves to be respected.”

Clearly, Rosen’s short verbal assault on Ann Romney was something the Obama campaign apparatus saw as a very serious problem. But why?

It seems ridiculous to think that women, married and at home or otherwise, would change their vote based on this relatively trivial observation.

Veteran Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg called this “nothing story” and predicted it would have no effect on how women vote in this election.

But no one can accuse the Obama political machine of being dumb. Quite the opposite. So, again, how to explain the high-level, PR damage-control barrage to clean up the perceived mess made by Rosen?

Here’s the real problem that I believe they saw.

The issue was not so much what Hilary Rosen said, but who said it. More than Rosen’s words, her persona itself is an assault on working-class, traditional-thinking Americans of both sexes.

Rosen, who works closely with the White House, is a lesbian, high-dollar, “inside-the-beltway” Washington power broker. She and her former partner, Elizabeth Birch, the former executive director of the Human Rights Campaign — an organization championing rights of lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgenders — adopted two black children.

Her current lesbian partner is Randi Weisgarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers — the nation’s second largest teachers’ union.

At a time when it is critical for Obama to gain support and confidence of the same middle-of-the-road white working-class Americans who swung over to him in 2008, the last thing he needs is to have Rosen become a poster child for his party.

She has earned millions, The Daily Reporter blog noted after obtaining her tax records, in the very influence-peddling and power-brokering business that Obama campaigned that he would purge from Washington. Her lifestyle embodies and boldly conveys the view that traditional American values and the traditional American family should no longer be considered “the way” but one of many possible legitimate lifestyle choices.

Obama was elected president in 2008 by voters unhappy with the Republican Party and unhappy with the status quo in Washington. He sold himself as a new kind of politician — a fresh, new beginning.

Recall his lofty words: “There is not a liberal America and a conservative America — there is the United States of America.”

Obama had no record then, so his charm and rhetorical skills closed the deal for him with voters.

But now he has a record and it is not pretty. And that same record points clearly to the fact that this is a man of the hard left, who heads a party of the left.

But his big problem is that he needs to be re-elected in a country that is right of center. The most recent Gallup polling on this shows that 40 percent of Americans self-identify as conservative, 35 percent as moderate, and 21 percent as liberal.

It has never been clearer that there is indeed a liberal America and a conservative America, and that today’s big question is which will define what will be the United States of America.

The president and his party have a huge political challenge to continue the shell game with voters and obscure the fact that they stand for liberal, left-wing America and that Hilary Rosen does indeed typify their party.

It’s why Rosen’s remarks and sudden high profile provoked political panic in the White House.

Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, Center for Urban Renewal and Education.
Comments
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Maatf
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April 23, 2012
The problem with the "other side" of course, is that we have no idea what he really stands for. He has flipped and flopped all over the place. What we do know is that the economy crashed under the cut taxes and fight unjustified war policies of the Republicans. It is coming back under OBama. What we also know is that Republicans in state and national legislative bodies have and are continuing to take apart the 50 years of progress women made in health issues and in equality in the business world.

We can't afford to keep Republicans in power because their economic policies crash the economy, because "trickle down" only trickles up, and their policies toward women will see unwanted pregnancies increase, abortions increase, women's health ruined, and increased discrimination against women in the workplace. We can't afford them folks.
what the
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April 22, 2012
Hillary Rosens comments where clearly in response to Romney deferring to his wife on issues concern ing working mothers. Her comment should have been phrased better referring, as intended, to mothers who must work outside the home. The struggles of working mothers, who must juggle work and home, and the privileged life of Ann Romney could not be more opposite. Ms. Rosen's sexual orientation in this matter is hardly relevant to an issue that confronts most women. Hillary Rosen is a strategist and pundit who speaks no more for the administration than, I would hope, Ted Nugent speaks for the Republican Party.
Harry Hagan
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April 22, 2012
This woman is superb! Please print more of her columns. She knows very well both sides, and has made wise choices and decisions in her life. Her writing is perfectly eloquent: concise and clear.
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