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Thursday, 12/10/2015 11:37:16 PM

Thursday, December 10, 2015 11:37:16 PM

Post# of 482391
Protecting their Progressive own.
Where's outrage from White House over McDonald shooting? It comes by email


President Barack Obama, shown Dec. 10, 2015, in Washington, has responded to the recent developments in Chicago only through a spokesman.

President Barack Obama, shown Dec. 10, 2015, in Washington, has responded to the recent developments in Chicago only through a spokesman.

Kass: The president, Hillary Clinton and other national Democrats are keeping their hands off Chicago.

Have you watched the news about President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton loudly demanding justice in the Laquan McDonald case in Chicago?

No?

Me neither. I haven't seen word one from the mouths of Obama or Clinton about any of it. All I've seen are tepid, tapioca statements from their spokesmen.

That silence interests me. Sometimes, what politicians avoid, what they won't say, is more compelling than their dog and pony shows and photo ops.

Yes, Clinton did back a call for a Justice Department investigation of Chicago police when the mayor was still in denial. But since then, crickets. She and other national Democrats are keeping their hands off Chicago. And I'm sure you know why.

The guy who runs Chicago, Mayor Rahm Emanuel, is their guy.
President Obama 'concerned' about Chicago amid tumult, spokesman says
President Obama 'concerned' about Chicago amid tumult, spokesman says
Katherine Skiba

President Barack Obama is following the events in Chicago following the release of a recording showing the police shooting of Laquan McDonald, and "like other citizens of that fine city, he's concerned," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters Thursday.

Earnest said as of a few days ago,...

President Barack Obama is following the events in Chicago following the release of a recording showing the police shooting of Laquan McDonald, and "like other citizens of that fine city, he's concerned," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters Thursday.

Earnest said as of a few days ago,...
(Katherine Skiba)

Were Emanuel a Republican they'd be all over this town. But since he's theirs, a Democrat who was Obama's chief of staff and served President Bill Clinton as an aide, they've decided not to engage.

Chicago roils. Protesters — white, black, brown — take the streets. And calls continue for the mayor to resign over the monthslong suppression of a police video showing a white cop shooting black teenager McDonald 16 times until dead.

For national Democrats, this should be a perfect storm: race, politics, anger, cops, black votes and the politics of grievance or social justice.

This is the irresistible combination Democrats have used for decades. It is the stuff that drives the Democratic Party's political theater. And of course, Obama, Clinton and other national Democrats certainly remember what a smart political operative famously said a few years ago:

"You never let a serious crisis go to waste."

You know who said that. Rahm said it.
Obama 'deeply disturbed' by Laquan McDonald shooting video, 'personally grateful' Chicago protests peaceful
Obama 'deeply disturbed' by Laquan McDonald shooting video, 'personally grateful' Chicago protests peaceful
Katherine Skiba

President Barack Obama has viewed the video of the fatal police shooting of Laquan McDonald, saying in a Facebook post Wednesday that he was deeply disturbed by it while "personally grateful" that Chicago protests in the aftermath of the video’s release were peaceful.

On Thanksgiving, he asked...

President Barack Obama has viewed the video of the fatal police shooting of Laquan McDonald, saying in a Facebook post Wednesday that he was deeply disturbed by it while "personally grateful" that Chicago protests in the aftermath of the video’s release were peaceful.

On Thanksgiving, he asked...
(Katherine Skiba)

But now, with protesters on the streets and the mayor in the worst political scandal of his career, where are the national Democrats?

You can't find them in Chicago. They won't touch this town. As Democratic precinct captains would say in days of old, "They don't know nuttin'."

Obama was raised to prominence as a Chicago guy, and Chicago sent him to the White House.

Many on the far left who supported Obama from his beginnings in Chicago have a point of view, but the president can't find his tongue.

And where is Hillary Clinton, the presumptive presidential nominee of the Democratic Party? She, too, has her Chicago connections, born in Park Ridge, and like all Democrats, she needs black votes to win elections.

Clinton issued a statement backing calls for a Justice Department investigation of Chicago police. But other than that, she's been as ostentatiously discreet about Chicago as the president, and other top Democrats.

Obama has had much to say in other cities when things go wrong between communities and police. He's involved himself in the debate a number of times.

He had his say about the killing of Trayvon Martin in Florida, and later, the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo.

Obama even called race into question without having the facts, as in 2009, when Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. was arrested at his home after a neighbor reported a break-in.

Gates had forgotten his key, and he and his driver were trying to push open the door when white police Sgt. James Crowley arrived. Gates said he lived there. Crowley said he couldn't take his word alone for that.

Obama weighed in, and didn't bother with a spokesman to maintain a safe distance. The president used his own mouth, and forcefully, and Gates hadn't been shot 16 times.

"Now, I've — I don't know, not having been there and not seeing all the facts, what role race played in that," Obama said. "But I think it's fair to say, No. 1, any of us would be pretty angry; No. 2, that the Cambridge police acted stupidly in arresting somebody when there was already proof that they were in their own home. And No. 3, what I think we know separate and apart from this incident is that there is a long history in this country of African-Americans and Latinos being stopped by law enforcement disproportionately. That's just a fact."

But after he learned the facts, and after he was embarrassed by law enforcement groups, Obama walked it back a bit, admitting he could have chosen his words more carefully. And the president said that both Gates and the police "probably overreacted."

Obama's public relations wizards turned the mess quickly into a positive: the famous Beer Summit.

But when it comes to McDonald and Rahm and what's happening in Chicago, Obama and Mrs. Clinton speak to us by proxy.

They don't hold speeches. They don't discuss it publicly. They won't say a word on television. They don't want to talk about Rahm and Chicago and McDonald on camera.

They have, however, condemned the McDonald killing through their spokesmen.

A Clinton spokesman said she was "deeply troubled" by the killing. And the president's press secretary, Josh Earnest, said Thursday that the president is "concerned."

"I think the mayor himself has acknowledged that a lot of work needs to be done to rebuild trust between the Chicago Police Department and the citizens of that fine city that they were sworn to serve and protect," Earnest said.

Asked if the president and the mayor had spoken, and if Obama still had confidence in Emanuel, Earnest said:

"The last that I heard, which was a few days ago, the president had not spoken to Mayor Emanuel. But — so I'm not aware of any conversations at this point. OK?"

OK, we get it. Nobody knows nothing. That's a Chicago thing, too.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/kass/ct-obama-chicago-kass-met-1211-20151210-column.html

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