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Obama Denies Shifting to Reach Political Center
(AP) - Asked by a voter about
accusations of flip-flopping, Democrat Barack Obama dismissed the
notion Tuesday that he has shifted stances on Iraq, guns and the death
penalty to break with his party's liberal wing and court a wider swath
of voters. "The people who say this haven't apparently been
listening to me," the likely Democratic presidential nominee said in
response to a question at a town-hall style event.
Obama blamed criticism from "my friends on the left" and "some of the
media" in part on cynicism that ascribes political motives for every
move candidates make. "You're not going to agree with me on 100 percent
of what I think, but don't assume that if I don't agree with you on
something that it must be because I'm doing that politically," he said.
"I may just disagree with you."
The Illinois senator was responding to a question from a self-described
"reformed Republican" who said he worked for Democrat Bobby Kennedy
four decades ago and thanked Obama for restoring "that faith."
"You had an interesting week of being accused of flip-flopping, which
is mostly nonsense," the man said. He then asked Obama to restate his
Iraq position, and Obama used the opportunity to dispel the idea he had
generally changed his stances.
Since wrapping up the Democratic nomination last month, Obama has
voiced positions that break with the Democratic Party's left and seem
to shade his own past positions on a range of subjects. He's drawn
criticism from some liberal Democrats who question his loyalty and from
Republicans who accuse him of flip-flopping.
His remarks aside, Obama is clearly competing for the center of the
electorate. Originally best known as an anti-Iraq war candidate, his
general election commercials appear nonpartisan and make an obvious
play for voters across the political spectrum by focusing on family
values and patriotism as well as "welfare to work" and lower taxes.
Over the past few weeks, he angered liberals by supporting compromise
electronic surveillance rules for the government's wiretapping program
even though the bill provided immunity that he opposed last year for
telecommunications companies that conducted warrantless eavesdropping.
When the Supreme Court overturned the District of Columbia's gun ban,
he said he favors both an individual's right to bear firearms and a
government's right to regulate them.
And, he broke with death penalty opponents when he disagreed with the
Supreme Court's decision outlawing executions of people who rape
children.
On Iraq, he has gone from a boisterous end-the-war call that endeared
him to the left flank to more nuanced rhetoric. He has long called for
a troop drawdown process that could last 16 months. Last week, he said
his upcoming Iraq trip might lead him to refine, but not basically
alter, his determination to pull U.S. troops out of combat in Iraq and
that the safety of U.S. troops and the stability of Iraq might force
him to adjust his timetable. It's a potentially flexible formulation
that has troubled liberals even though he's said throughout his
candidacy that the nation needs to be careful leaving Iraq.
"I am somebody who is no doubt progressive. I believe in a tax code
that we need to make more fair. I believe in universal health care. I
believe in making college affordable. I believe in paying our teachers
more money. I believe in early childhood education," Obama told his
audience here. "I believe in a whole lot of things that make me
progressive and squarely in the Democratic camp."
But, he said: "I'm not just somebody who is talking about government as
the solution to everything. I also believe in personal responsibility.
I also believe in faith."
So, he said when he talks about the idea of recruiting churches and
other religious groups to provide community services through
faith-based initiatives, as he did last week, "that's not something
new. I've been talking about that for years now. I've been organizing
with churches for years in the community. So the notion that somehow
that's me trying to look more centered, more centrist, is just not
true."
He also raised the Supreme Court ruling that upheld the rights of
individuals to bear arms and said: "I actually have said that I agree
with that for years, even before the ruling came down." He said that
doesn't contradict his view that "we've got decent controls over the
use of illegal firearms in our community."
And, addressing the questioner's Iraq query, Obama drew cheers when he
said: "I opposed this war from the start" and "I have also consistently
said that once we were in, we had to be as careful getting out as we
were careless getting in."
McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds argued Obama "put politics ahead of
principle" on numerous issues and "has proven his rhetoric to be
nothing but empty words and broken pledges that are at odds with his
left wing partisan record. Barack Obama is wrong: everyone's been
listening and still nobody knows what Barack Obama truly believes."
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