When they came to Washington, Barack and Michelle Obama pleaded with the press to give their daughters a zone of privacy. An extremely reasonable request, with which the press has admirably complied. What's the media supposed to do when the President injects his children into the limelight specifically for political advantage?
Obama said that every morning when he's shaving, his daughter comes in and asks, "Did you plug the hole yet, Daddy?"
Every morning. Which suggests the President's response to his daughter has yet to include anything like: "The media only thinks I'm God, sweetheart. I can't actually plug the hole myself. But thanks for your confidence."
Another president exploited his daughter for political ends. In 1980, at the close of his last debate with Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter played the Amy card:
“I had a discussion with my daughter, Amy, the other day, before I came here, to ask her what the most important issue was. She said she thought nuclear weaponry, and the control of nuclear arms."
In rehearsals, Carter's aides had urged him not to do it. They were sure it would sound as phony to most voters as it did to them. "But under the heat of the lights, and in front of 100 million Americans, Carter decided to do it anyway." Six days later, the Carter campaign's internal polling showed undecided voters breaking decisively for Reagan, who was elected by a landslide on November 4, 1980.
No historians claim Carter lost the White House because he exploited his daughter politically. There were other, larger forces — a horrible economy, the Iran hostage crisis — that worked against Carter in that campaign. Still, no historian thinks Carter helped his cause by trying to convince skeptical voters that his 13-year-old daughter's big issue was "nuclear weaponry."
Americans say Obama's response to the Louisiana oil crisis has been inadequate. Whether the President's daughter-ploy will help him politically is anyone's guess. Calling Americans stupid might not be his best card at the moment: "Those who think we were slow in our response or lacked urgency don't know the facts." (Unless, of course, that's actually the best card he's got at this point.)




