Axelrod Defends Jeremiah Wright, Says He Was Victim of Selective Editing
by Joel B. Pollak
David Axelrod, chief political strategist for President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign and former White House political adviser, defended Jeremiah Wright on Tuesday evening in a speech in Thousand Oaks, CA.
Axelrod described the initial news reports  in 2008 on Obama’s long-time family pastor and mentor as “ninety  seconds of vitriol plucked from thirty years of sermons by some enterprising  opposition researcher.”
   

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The claim that Wright’s sermons were selectively edited by Obama’s political  opponents contradicts what is known about Wright’s  preaching and the radical, racialist creed of the Trinity United Church of  Christ, to which Obama belonged for two decades and to which he contributed a large  amount of money. 
Axelrod’s claim is also contradicted by Obama himself, who has cited Wright’s  enthusiasm  for radical politics as the main reason he was attracted to the church.
Axelrod brought up the Wright controversy during a lecture recounting his  role as the “architect” of Obama’s rise from the Illinois state senate to the  presidency. Axelrod praised Obama’s infamous “race speech,” contrasting his media skills to those of GOP  vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin.
The lecture was part of the Distinguished Speaker Series of Southern California, and was  delivered before a largely friendly audience.

Recording was not permitted in the Fred Kavli Theater, but Axelrod’s remarks  on Wright are an exact quote, written down and tweeted  immediately upon delivery. Axelrod’s tone was somewhat bitter, a brief flash of  passion in an otherwise relaxed presentation.
The questions that followed the lecture were non-controversial, having been  pre-screened by a sympathetic moderator to weed out any hostile or even remotely  challenging inquiries.
Asked to describe the highlights of his service in the White House, Axelrod  cited the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”; the killing of Osama bin Laden, the  nomination of two new liberal Supreme Court justices; the resumption of stem  cell research, the passage of the Lily Ledbetter Act (extending the statute of  limitations for equal-pay lawsuits); and the vote to pass the Patient Protection  and Affordable Care Act, also known as ObamaCare.
Almost apologetically, the moderator asked Axelrod to comment on Jodi  Kantor’s new and controversial book, The Obamas, which has alleged  that First Lady Michelle Obama clashed with the president’s senior advisers.  While saying that he generally respected Kantor’s work, Axelrod claimed that  Kantor had not spoken to the “best” sources, and described the role of the First  Lady in the administration as a positive one.
The audience tittered in agreement when Axelrod criticized the creation of  Super PACs, acknowledging the fact that Democrats as well as Republicans had  formed them, but noting that Democratic Super PACs were raising far less money.  He mentioned that Mitt Romney’s Super PAC was formed by his friends and former  aides, but failed to note that former Obama aides had created  the pro-Obama Priorities USA Super PAC last year.
Axelrod also claimed that the Supreme Court’s Citizens United  decision in 2009 had let corporations spend massive amounts of money on  elections–neglecting to mention that the ruling also applied to unions,  and that the case rested on principles of free speech. Conversely, he praised  the administration’s efforts to push campaign finance legislation through the  Senate–failing to mention that the bill only  applied to corporations.
Clearly, Axelrod’s purpose was not to inform, but to inspire. He suggested  that Obama would reiterate the “hope and change” message of his 2008 campaign in  2012, and would emphasize economic equality as well as economic growth.
Axelrod’s defense of Jeremiah Wright, however, is a sign that the Obama camp  is still resisting and obscuring the degree to which Obama’s own inspirations  and ideas remain outside the political mainstream.
 
 
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