NASCAR Politics: Obama Waves the Green Flag
Mark Warner campaigning at a NASCAR race in 2001 (
It's been said in recent weeks that Barack Obama is making a mad dash for the political center. Now at least he can ride there in style.
According to SportsIllustrated.com, the Democratic presidential candidate is currently in talks to sponsor a car--or, more specifically, BAM Racing's No. 49 Sprint Cup car--at a NASCAR race on Aug. 3 in the Poconos region of Pennsylvania. Of course, NASCAR politics is nothing new--although, with the stock-car stereotype skewing In 1971, Richard Nixon became the first president to invite a driver, Richard Petty, to the White House. A dozen years later, Ronald Reagan became the first to actually attend a NASCAR event. Since 2003, George W. Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, Bill Frist and Arnold Schwarzenegger have all made appearances at NEXTEL Cup races, and in January Rudy Giuliani requested a ride in a pace car at Daytona International Speedway.
That's not to say the Democrats haven't attempted any outreach--just that it hasn't been particularly successful. During the 1992 campaign, for example, fans booed Bill Clinton when he delivered a speech at the Darlington (S.C.) Raceway. Overhead, planes trailed "Clinton is a Draft Dodger" banners. Last election cycle, two Democratic contenders--Bob Graham and Howard Dean--decided sponsor vehicles, but neither survived the primaries. And Hillary Clinton's cringeworthy May alongside legendary driver Junior Johnsonmajor presidential candidate to sponsor a car in NASCAR's premier series, Obama is clearly hoping to follow the lead of former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner, who in 2001 used his own stock-car sponsorship to become the first statewide Democratic contender to carry rural Virginia in a generation--and still ranks as the only prominent Dem ever to practice NASCAR politics successfully. As Warner adviser Dave "Mudcat" Saunders has said, "If you're not the right messenger with the right message, it will come off as disingenuous."
Predictably, critics on both the right and left are already saying the plan could backfire (rimshot, please). "Talk about pandering," wrote a conservative commenter at Politico.com. "I wonder if Obama will ask if they serve a nice '72 Cabernet at the race along with an arugula salad?" Meanwhile, liberals worry that "if his car losses, and the odds are fairly great that it will, there will be all kinds of meaning read into it"--a pretty fair assessment, unfortunately, of how the MSM will cover the Pocono race. (And "you can count on a thousand hack political writers running the ol' 'turning left' metaphor straight into the wall," writes Jay Busbee at Yahoo.) That said, I'm not sure either concern outweighs the basic upside of Obama's NASCAR partnership--i.e., that it's nothing more than a really effective advertising opportunity. Despite the silly "redneck" stereotypes,
Team McCain, at least, thinks its Democratic rival is on to something with the whole motorsports thing. Less than an hour after the Obama-NASCAR story hit the wires, McCain's press shop sent out an email announcing that "Mrs. Cindy McCain will ride in a pace car in the Firestone 200 Indycar Race on Saturday, July 12th in Lebanon, Tennessee."
Gentlemen, start your engines.
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Andrew Romano is a senior writer for Newsweek. He reports on politics, culture, and food for the print and Web editions of the magazine and appears frequently on CNN and MSNBC. His 2008 campaign blog, Stumper, won MINOnline's Best Consumer Blog award and was cited as one of the cycle's best news blogs by both Editor & Publisher and the Deadline Club of New York. Follow Andrew on Twitter.
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