Why My Mother Dumped Hillary for Obama
She wanted to vote for the woman, but couldn’t do it

At night, when Mark Penn sleeps and dreams of Hillary Clinton’s electorate, his head dances with visions of voters like this. Born June 13, 1944. White, female. College-educated. An elementary school teacher. Pays a mortgage and worries about her retirement. A lifelong Democrat. Born in the North, but lives in the South. Has four kids, three of them girls. Divorced. Definitely convinced that a woman could run this country.
Mr. Penn, meet my mother, Diane Rice.
My mom’s opinion mattered last week. She lives in South Carolina, the state that held the attention of the political world as it hosted the fourth contest of the Democratic primary season. For the last few months, as momentum swung back and forth between Clinton and Barack Obama, I’d been asking my mother which way she was leaning, always assuming it was toward the first woman to make a serious run. Mom deflected my questions with a cagey smile, saying she only wanted someone who could win, but there were many telltale signs of her preference. In December, like (I assume) a lot of registered Democrats in South Carolina, Mom received a glossy Christmas card from the Clinton family. She propped the smiling portrait of Bill and Hillary up on the microwave next to a picture of her sisters, and it stayed there through the holidays.
Last week, I went back to Columbia, my hometown, to cover the primary. I found my mother in an advanced state of fretfulness, and the Clintons’ card had disappeared. Over the previous few weeks, Mom’s sympathies had whipsawed at a dizzying pace. After Iowa, she’d told me she was angry that Hillary Clinton was being counted out so early. Just before New Hampshire, she’d said she felt sorry for Hillary—all the pressure she was under from the media and those dismissive male candidates. But afterward, she’d been little chagrined to see the female candidate’s victory credited to a few phantom tears. Now, a few days before my mother had to vote, she didn’t know what to do. Recent events had turned her into that elusive and mysterious animal, the undecided voter.
Mom told me her confusion had really set in a few nights before, with the Democratic debate in Myrtle Beach. All that nasty invective about slumlords and Wal-Mart had really turned her off. No one looked good, except maybe John Edwards. (Poor John Edwards! Mom loves his wife.) But mostly, my mother blamed Clinton for the negativity. “Boy, you want to see an angry-looking woman,” Mom said. “She looked like she would have choked Obama if she could have.”
My mom has never really understood why some people—men, mostly—hate Hillary so much. The day I got to Columbia, she received an automated message on her answering machine that contained a sulfurous litany of references to the likes of Vince Foster. Mom didn’t enjoy hearing that one bit. But she did worry about what the crazies might do to Hillary in a general election campaign. Two nights before the primary, I came home from covering a Bill Clinton speech in the little town of Barnwell and found Mom in front of the television, watching the G.O.P. candidates debate in Florida. “I’ll tell you, those Republicans didn’t look bad,” she said, worriedly. “I mean, they’re not bickering.”
Among the political columnists and the cable TV blabbermouths, the consensus was that Clinton had won the Myrtle Beach debate, making Obama look flustered, and that the master tactician Bill Clinton was “getting inside his head.” On the ground in South Carolina, I saw a totally different reaction to the attacks. The night before the primary, Barack Obama spoke in the town of Florence. A long line stretched around the local civic center as thousands of shivering people of all races waited to clear airport-style security. When Obama came on, he looked tired and sounded defensive. “Don’t believe that stuff,” he told the audience. “They’re trying to mess with your mind. Hoodwink you. Bamboozle you.” It wasn’t his finest performance, but the audience was enthralled. People shouted out “Yes!” as the candidate delivered the most prosaic of lines, in the classic call-and-response pattern of evangelical churches. It was as if the crowd was willing itself to be inspired, as if it was lifting Obama, and not the other way around.
I got locked out of Obama’s final event of the primary campaign, a late-night speech at a concert hall in Columbia, which was so packed that fire marshals cut off entry. Back at home Mom was sitting around, looking for coverage of Obama’s speech. A local television station’s Web site was streaming it live. Mom watched, and then she took an online quiz that was designed to match her to a candidate. She told the computer that she wanted our troops out of Iraq, didn’t want war with Iran, wanted more money for education and approved of tighter gun laws. The computer told Mom to vote for Dennis Kucinich. She crinkled her nose. Mom poked around the Web a bit more, investigating Obama’s platform. She liked his stance against predatory lending practices.
“It’s a lot of pressure,” she said. “I feel like I’m picking the next president.”
She sat pensively for a moment.
“I think I’ll vote for Obama,” she said, finally. “Really, I just want to pick a winner.”
She still wanted to sleep on it. The next morning, Election Day, all the candidates made the rounds to the morning news shows. Hillary looked harried and bug-eyed; Obama was confident and composed. “He’s so impressive to me,” Mom said. “I just hope people will vote for a biracial person.” Next Page >

















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Thank you Mrs. Rice!
Think you for your well considered vote.
OBAMA and MICHELLE are the new BILL and HILL....ONLY WAY BETTER!!!!!!YIPEE... A NEW BEGGINING!
A new beginning indeed.
Hillary!!!!!a new beginning indeed.....
I was touched by your mothers story. It hasn't been easy for woman (older woman in particular) to let go of the feeling that they should be loyal to H.C.
I am impresed by your mothers fortitude!
Welcome to the Obama camp!!!
We are so happy you voted for Barack!!
I believe you will not be disappointed...
From another white woman..
OBAMA FOR PRESIDENT!!
It's great to hear that people are really listening to what the candidates are saying and not just voting for someone because of race or gender. I'm one of the first baby boomers and will some day be thrilled to see a woman become President. But Hillary Clinton reminds me of Richard Nixon. You can see the anger, almost hatred, in her face when shes attacking anyone that doesn't think like her.
I would love to take all the great qualities in Obama, mix them together with the honesty and patriotism of McCain and vote for the outcome.
The differences from today's Huffpo. Too bad we can't get television debate moderators to get down to the nuances between the two. There are REAL differences that matter for the 21st Century.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/george-lakoff/what-counts-as-an-issue_b_84...
Well, it seems as if one woman has good sense when it comes to Hillabitch the spawn of Satan.
Let's hope all women wake up to the truth about this truly evil, and vicious female who would be king.
She deserves the same fate as Marie Antoinette.
joel goodman, what hateful remarks. Sounds like a guy who's scared of a woman in power. I hope she wins just to spite you.
Me, I have actually been pushed away from Obama and more toward Clinton. I like Obama, but the way Hillary has been treated as a woman is dispicable. joel goodman's horribly mean-spirited comments illustrate that. People would never say the same things publicly about Obama's race that they say about Clinton's gender, about whether she's too emotional, calling her a witch and Hitlary and so many awful things. She has been treated terribly and she continues to stand tall through it all. I think it shows incredible endurance on her part, and if anything, don't we need a president who can take all the crap being tossed at them with ease?
I'm voting for Barack Obama because, while many of his policies are the same as Hillary's, he stood alone as an objector to the war when she was posturing as tough by aligning with the Bush administration. It has nothing to do with gender or race. I simply believe that he's more honest than she is.
He also happens to be extremely charismatic and understands how to heal this nation and bring people together, not only from opposite ends of the table, but in ways that our culture(s) can't quite name yet.
I believe Barack Obama truly believes his campaign messages. I think Hillary is a career politician who believes that the ends justify the means.
But I have to add to that: I think it's really sad that so many Americans might find that their actual values and policy wishes might align with Dennis Kucinich, and then they don't vote to align with their conscience. (What... was he not tall enough?)
I too am a white woman in SC. After many of the same kind of deliberations I had settled on John Edwards about two weeks before the primary. Before that I had supported Kucinich I liked Edwards because his proposed policies were the next best fit to my own. Kucinich had already been excluded by the time of the SC primary. So I voted for Edwards but then three days later had the heartbreaking experience when he pulled out of the race. I am not necesarily against Clinton but at this point I am rooting for Obama.
I have been watching the political race from abroad. I am an American currently living in England, and I too, DESPERATELY want to support Hillary and can't bring myself to do it.
I have the distinct pleasure of being related to the Rice's (Andrew and Diane) and found this to be an excellent article. My Aunt Diane wouldn't be one to waste her vote. Her opinion counts very highly in my book, and should be held in as high regard by the candidates as well. She is not a "typical" voter, however she is everything a voter should be.... Involved, informed, curious, and concerned about the BEST choice for our country, not the popular, trendy or ground breaking choice.
I still maintain a residence at home in the good 'ole USA and would never ignore my responsibility as a citizen to cast my vote. It won't be on a piece of paper mailed to some P.O. Box.....I will fly home, vote and come back to England. It's that important to me, and should be that important to all of us. I know it is to my Aunt Diane.
IF YOU THINK HILLARY IS THE ONE WE NEED TO RUN OUR COUNTRY. HERE ARE SOME THINGS YOU NEED TO LOOK UP. 1902 TO 1906 SCANDALS.
1.CHINAGATE -THE CLINTONGATE ADMINISTRATION
2.BEHIND THE TREASON ALLEGATIONS.LATE 1995 TO EARLY 1996.
THIS IS JUST TWO OF THE SCANDALS.I'M A WOMAN AND OLD ENOUGH TO REMEMBER THE CLINTON DAYS.WE NEED CHANGE AND THE CLINTONS ARE NOT IT.
First, I would like to thank the author of this article. It was a pleasure to read.
I am shocked with the hatred comments that are mentioned.
I live in California, where we are scheduled to vote this tuesday. I have yet to make up my mind. I am an african-american male and finding this just has hard as Diane. Much like she wanted to vote for Hilary because she is a woman, I find it hard not to consider voting for Barack because he is Black. I of course won't decide this way but would not be human for it not to be considered. I also find it interesting that Barack is considered bi-racial of course he is, but we all know....in a dark alley in the depths of the south where some people, not all but some, would just consider him BLACK and have many terms for that.
Anyway, I agree a lot with more of Hilary's views than Barack. At the same time, she is a POLISHED politican therefore I am not sure if she is just saying the right things or if she really means it. I have also heard about the Bill comments. Honestly, I am not even considering that nonsense. Maybe I should, I don't know.
Anyway, I am slowly leaning towards Obama but still just not sure. I don't like his tax increase for the 75K and higher people. That is huge for me. I like Hilary's health care plan. I like Obama's view on Iraq. If they would run as a team....I would be very happy.
Thanks for reading...
why my brother dumped obama for hillary ,
- because he has been traveling with them both across many states and primaries and now thinks obama is nothing more than a tv evangelist.
- because he thinks people do not listen to hillary they just judge and they listen to obama without judgment (and that is a scary thing) we do not need slickness we need cold hard reality.
- because he says once enamored with his "kennedy thing" he looks like little more than a male model.
- because hillary has what it takes to get the job done
why my brother dumped obama for hillary ,
- because he has been traveling with them both across many states and primaries and now thinks obama is nothing more than a tv evangelist.
- because he thinks people do not listen to hillary they just judge and they listen to obama without judgment (and that is a scary thing) we do not need slickness we need cold hard reality.
- because he says once enamored with his "kennedy thing" he looks like little more than a male model.
- because hillary has what it takes to get the job done
You mom is a very smart woman. I wish she or Elizabeth Edwards were running for President
I totally agree with your brother, Obama doesn't have the experience that Hilary does. Hilary has all the knowledge of a president, and therefore knows how to get us through the next years(which will probably be very...problematic). The main reason Obama is winning right now is because Hilary has made some enemies where as Obama is too young to make any. We all fall for Obama on TV, but that's JUST TV!!!
Thank you. Obama is simply a great guy, that is what he is - listen to him talk and you will know it. Thank you
I'm sorry to hear that you didn't vote for Hillary. By the way, I'm for Hillary but no, I'm not a woman. Hillary is an inspiration and a great leader. When Hillary makes it to the general election, I hope we have your vote!
ee
vote for Obama
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