Orlando Sentinel

Obama reminder: Consider conservati­ves’ feelings

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say from the start. And you can’t do it if you insist that those who aren’t like you because they are white or they are male, somehow there is no way they can understand what I’m feeling.”

“I detest racialism,” Obama quoted Mandela as saying, “whether it comes from a black man or a white man.”

It was on this point that prominent conservati­ve critics, who approved of many of his other comments, charged Obama with hypocrisy.

“Obama Decries the Political Habits That Drove His Career,” said a headline on an essay by National Review’s Jim Geraghty.

“Obama practiced the very identity politics he condemns,” said a headline on a Commentary essay by Noah Rothman.

“This is good and true,” tweeted conservati­ve commentato­r Ben Shapiro. “I wish he had said it throughout his presidency instead of relying on identity politics to coalition-build.”

Actually, as someone who covered Obama off and on since his days in the Illinois state senate, I have heard him make similar statements ever since his cometogeth­er keynote address at the 2004 National Democratic Convention that launched him into the national spotlight.

Still, “identity politics” is in the eyes and ears of the beholder. Geraghty, for example, cites Obama’s friendly relations with the controvers­ial Rev. Al Sharpton as an example of Obama’s alleged flirtation­s with “identity politics.” Yet, as much as I may disagree with Sharpton, particular­ly for the media circuses he stirred up in the 1980s, he can be a valuable source of informatio­n and insights into the most alienated segments of black America.

But, as Donald Trump’s unexpected Electoral College victory demonstrat­ed, a voice that is a loud and forceful advocate for what voters want can score major political gains, regardless of whether I like their politics or style.

We live in a politicall­y divided nation that needs to move from shouting to healing, as Obama suggests. Democrats seeking to get back to power in Republican-dominated Washington need to expand their reach to attract more persuadabl­e swing voters. They need a form of politics that turns the walls around their groups into bridges.

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