Ann Romney and Hilary Rosen flap: Must Team Obama always be first responder?
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| Washington
The Ann Romney flap may have unintentional consequences for Team Obama.
When Democratic activist Hilary Rosen dissed Ann Romney Wednesday, saying she has 鈥渘ever worked a day in her life,鈥 the president, first lady, and countless other Democrats swooped in and condemned the slam on the wife of presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney. Ms. Rosen apologized for her 鈥減oorly chosen鈥 words.
So what happens the next time someone in the vast universe of Democratic strategists and cable TV pundits makes an untoward remark about a critical issue or voter group? Will President Obama or his surrogates have to step in? And if they don鈥檛, will Mr. Obama be blamed for tacitly condoning the comment?
Liberal editorialist Jonathan Capehart set up that test Thursday. In a Washington Post blog entry called 鈥淪elective outrage: Hilary Rosen vs. Allen West,鈥 Mr. Capehart raised the Florida Republican congressman鈥檚 statement Tuesday that he believes there are 鈥渁bout 78 to 81 members of the Democratic Party that are members of the Communist Party.鈥 It鈥檚 called the Congressional Progressive Caucus, Congressman West said.
Certainly, a preposterous assertion, as Capehart notes. Maybe so preposterous that it doesn鈥檛 deserve a reply. But then Capehart scolds GOP leaders for not condemning the McCarthy-esque allegation.
As a practical matter, Obama and Company can鈥檛 strike down every off-key remark by an ally uttered in front of the ever-proliferating cameras. They would start to look like kids at an arcade playing Whac-A-Mole.
But clearly, the Rosen comment hit a nerve right as Mr. Romney had effectively locked in the Republican presidential nomination, and attention had turned to the general election. Obama is winning big among women, and needs to keep that advantage to win in November. With one off-hand comment 鈥搒uggesting that Mrs. Romney can鈥檛 understand women鈥檚 struggles because she hasn鈥檛 worked outside the home 鈥 Rosen handed a gift to Mr. Romney right when he needed it.
The Romney campaign has followed with a fundraising e-mail titled 鈥淲ar on Moms.鈥 It says: "If you're a stay-at-home mom, the Democrats have a message for you: You've never worked a day in your life."
According to the latest census data, about 1 in 4 women with children under 15 is not working outside the home. That is a significant voting bloc 鈥 and most aren鈥檛 wealthy like Ann Romney. Mrs. Romney herself noted on Thursday that she has had struggles of her own, particularly with her health.
In addition, Mrs. Romney has carved out an image as an appealing surrogate for her husband, complete with stories about how exhausting it was to raise five boys. Polls show her favorability rating far exceeds her negatives.
So for Obama, the Rosen comment created a PR emergency on multiple levels: She had disrespected a big voting bloc and had gone after a candidate鈥檚 wife. Team Obama pushed the panic button.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 have a lot of patience for commentary about the spouses of political candidates,鈥 the president said.
First lady Michelle Obama chimed in on Twitter: "Every mother works hard, and every woman deserves to be respected,鈥 she wrote.
Rosen鈥檚 gaffe was arguably as big as Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom鈥檚 Etch-a-Sketch comment 鈥 though Rosen doesn鈥檛 work for Obama. Still, she has sparked a 鈥渕ommy wars鈥 discussion that continued to rage Friday. The next time a Democratic pundit blunders on camera 鈥 and it will surely happen 鈥揺veryone will be watching to see whether it merits a presidential response. And yes or no, that will tell us something about Obama鈥檚 priorities.