In April, right-wing hatchetman Floyd Brown, best known for creating the infamous “Willie Horton ad” in the 1988 campaign, launched a bizarre smear ad against Barack Obama. The point of the ad wasn’t especially obvious — Brown’s spot argued that Obama resisted an effort to allow the Illinois to execute gang members, which somehow contributed to three murders in Chicago, which somehow means he won’t be aggressive towards al Qaeda. The whole thing was kind of odd.
So, Floyd Brown went back to the drawing board, and came up with a more transparently stupid/deceptive smear.
For those who can’t watch clips online, here’s the script: “Question: Was Barack Obama ever a Muslim. He says no, but the Associated Press found records that showed Obama was in school as a Muslim living in Indonesia and the Obama campaign can’t explain why. Maybe it doesn’t matter if Obama were a Muslim back then, but it does matter if he’s not telling the truth about it now.” The final image on the screen shows Obama alongside text that reads, “Can we trust him?” (The ad also features a now-infamous picture of Obama wearing Somali garb, originally distributed in February.)
Now, it’s worth noting that Brown’s outfit, a political action committee called the National Campaign Fund, had just $14,027 in the bank at the end of March. These clowns must have raised at least some money in order to create the new ad itself, but it seems unlikely Brown & Co. are going to be financially able to get this ad in front of millions of TV viewers nationwide.
Which helps, of course, explain its level of inanity. Brown is trying to be outrageous on purpose, which would in turn prompt a heated response, which would in turn generate interest in his smear campaign, which would in turn inspire unhinged lunatics to give him money so the ad might actually air.
So, is it better to just ignore the garbage and wait for Brown to crawl back under some rock? Perhaps, but there were those who said the same thing about the Swiftboat Liars in 2004. Ignoring trash doesn’t make it stink any less.
The Huffington Post, which accurately calls the ad “sleazy,” did some fact checking.
For starters, the school Obama attended at the time was Catholic — a spokesman for Indonesia’s Ministry of Religious Affairs said as much. And while someone did list Obama as a Muslim (the religion of his step father) on a document that required students to list religious affiliations, the campaign has insisted that it was a mistake.
“Senator Obama has never been a Muslim,” Robert Gibbs, Obama’s communications director, said. “As a six-year-old in Catholic school, he studied the catechism.”
Moreover, Brown’s own ad concludes that the issue is inconsequential. “Maybe it doesn’t matter if Obama were a Muslim back then,” the spot goes, before questioning why he won’t tell the truth now.
What may be more telling than the smear ad is the reaction that it engenders. Brown has a history of using barely discreet racist messaging to drive political discussion. So it is hardly a surprise to see him meddling in the Obama-is-a-Muslim affairs.
But Sen. John McCain has pledged to run a smear-free campaign. His candidacy has no direct connections to Brown’s National Campaign Fund. And yet, his reaction to the group’s latest work could go a long way in determining the tone and tenor of the general election.
Ben Smith added an interesting point: “If there’s an upside for Obama, it’s that what had been a faceless viral whispering campaign now gets the face of a Republican operative explicitly working to elect McCain.”
It’s getting ugly in June. And the Republican Attack Machine is just getting warmed up.