President Barack Obama has made a mantra out of insisting he and his White House won’t get caught up in “cable chatter,” with aides proudly insisting they don’t let 24-hour news outlets drive decision-making.
But this week’s forced resignation of a previously obscure Agriculture Department employee is just the latest example of Obama officials reacting to a cable news-driven obsession of the right.
It not only infuriates Obama’s liberal base, which feels like the episodes just reinforce the power of the right to push a damaging story into the mainstream press. But as this week shows, the White House’s touchiness even threatens Obama’s ability to keep control of his own public persona, or steer the national conversation in a way that’s conducive to promoting his message and his agenda.
The anger on the left is now reaching new decibel levels due to the quick decision by the Agriculture Department to push out a Georgia-based employee, Shirley Sherrod, who was captured on video at a recent NAACP conference appearing to make racially insensitive comments about a white farmer.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, used his Wednesday news briefing to apologize to Sherrod, saying, “Without a doubt, Miss Sherrod is owed an apology. I would do so on behalf of this administration."
For many progressives, it smacked of a similar ousting — that of Obama environmental adviser Van Jones, who was cashiered after weeks of Fox News coverage about his involvement with 9/11 conspiracy theorists.
But Sherrod’s comments, captured by conservative mischief-maker Andrew Breitbart and played on Fox News, were part of a longer parable in which she explained how she had come to help the same farmer and learned to view the world outside a racial lens. The Agriculture Department is reviewing the decision to seek her resignation. - Politico Story
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