Exactly what is controversial about Michelle Obama?
It has become accepted that the wife of the Democratic nominee for president, Barack Obama, is controversial. Pundits referred to her as such during coverage of the Democratic National Convention's first night.
Much energy was spent Monday night telling her story, which didn’t sound controversial at all. She grew up on the south side of Chicago in a working class family, achieved her way to college at Princeton and then Harvard, and returned to Chicago and worked as an attorney, which is where she met her future husband. She was his supervisor.
Eventually, she turned away from that lucrative law career and returned to her neighborhood to do community service work. She married Barack and they have two children, girls, who appeared on the stage with their mother Monday night.
A recent Wall Street poll showed that 29 percent of voters had a negative view of Michelle Obama. To be fair, 38 percent had a positive view of her. Both her positive and negative numbers were higher than Cindy McCain, the wife of the GOP nominee for president.
Michelle Obama is more of a public figure than Cindy McCain. She campaigns for her husband and generally says what’s on her mind. As Newsweek reported, “She isn’t the traditional Stepford booster, smiling vacantly at her husband and sticking to a script of carefully vetted blandishments.”
She’s blunt and formidable. Maybe that’s the controversial part. The Newsweek piece went on to explain that Michelle Obama is very competitive and wants to win, but doesn’t want a say in policy. And she’s not seeking public office herself. On Monday night, she said she wants to be her husband’s wife and her kids’ mother. Not much of a dustup there.
Maybe this perception as a controversial figure came about as a result of political opponents, who are trying to sell the idea that she doesn’t love her country. She was reduced to having to declare her patriotism several times Monday night.
That’s because during a Feb. 18 campaign speech in Wisconsin she said that for the first time in her adult life she was proud of America. She later apologized for the comment and said she meant that she had a renewed pride in her country.
Nevertheless, opponents pounced on the gaffe and sought to exploit it with the narrative that she, along with her husband and the family’s former reverend, isn’t fond of America. Even Cindy McCain, who generally stays out of the political fray, piled on.