HE race for the
Democratic Party’s nomination for the US presidency in November between Hillary
Clinton and Barack Obama is becoming as hot as a summer’s day.
The candidates – one a twice-elected senator from New York
and the other a rookie senator from Illinois – are now the only ones left with
the sudden withdrawal of former senator and vice presidential bet John Edwards
from the race.
The same thing is happening in the Republican Party. Former
NY Mayor Rudy Giuliani has likewise abandoned his own bid, leaving Sen. John
McCain of Arizona and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney to fight for their
party’s nomination as its presidential candidate.
The much more interesting political episode, however, is the
battle between Clinton, who would be the first woman US president, and Obama,
who would be the first African-American president of the United States.
This is what makes the race between them most exciting. Even
some sectors of the American media have been attracted to their brewing fight.
As a matter they have already been sniping, hurling verbal missiles, and
exchanging diatribes against each other during the early primaries. And they
continue to do so even before the so-called "Super Tuesday" next week that would
serve as a national primary for them.
Already, no less than the editorial board of the influential
New York Times has published an editorial in which they categorically selected
the "brilliant if at times harsh sounding" Hillary Clinton over the
"incandescent if still undefined Barack Obama.
In recommending Hillary as their Democratic nominee in the
presidential election in November, the NY Times board stated that by choosing
Mrs. Clinton "we are not denying Mr. Obama’s appeal or his gifts. The idea of
the first African-American nominee … is exhilarating, and so is the prospect of
the first woman nominee. ‘Firstness’ is not a reason to choose …"
The editorial noted that Clinton and Obama would help restore
America’s global image, to which President Bush has done so much grievous harm.
It went on to say that Obama’s campaign around the nation of
change may be exciting, but he "holds no monopoly on ideas that would repair the
governing of America."
On the other hand, after hearing Clinton talk about the
presidency, her policies and awareness for America’s big problems, the NY Times
board concluded, "… We are hugely impressed by the depth of her knowledge, by
the force of her intellect and by the breath of, yes, her experience …" And the
editorial concluded, Hillary Clinton is "the best choice for the Democratic
Party as it tries to regain the White House."
On its part, the New York Post expressed its own support for
Obama’s bid. But, upon reading the editorial, political observers felt that it
seemed like a reluctant, if not back-handed, endorsement. "For all his charisma
and eloquence," it stated, "Obama sorely lacks seasoning… His worldview is
beyond naďve – blithely unaware that America must defend itself against those
sworn to destroy the nation."
And, in conclusion, the NY Post observed that Obama’s
"all-things-to-all-people" approach to complex domestic issues also arouses
scant confidence. ‘Change’ for the sake of change does not a credible platform
make."
These are but just two endorsements by the excited American
print media. There are surely others. But the tenor of these two editorials
seems to indicate hesitance to go all the way for Barack Obama and what one
would call his "amorphous promise" for change, unlike their confidence with
Hillary Clinton as the more qualified to be the next president of the United
states of America.
Apart from all these I have read, too, the declarations of
the most influential and powerful African-American figures and ministers in
support of Hillary Clinton as the kind of leader that is ready to lead America.
An anxious world is waiting for that day when the Americans will elect either
the first African-American or the first woman president of the most powerful
nation in these parlous times in world history.