New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd wrote on Sunday, September 13 that Wednesday's (September 9) outburst by South Carolina Republican Congressman Joe Wilson during President Obama's address to a joint session of Congress was racially motivated. As we told you earlier, gros sacs Wilson shouted, "you lie," when the president said his health care plan would not cover illegal immigrants.
Dowd writes: "What I heard was an unspoken word in the air — you lie, boy!... Wilson clearly did not like being lectured and even rebuked by the brainy black president presiding over the majestic chamber."
Liberal columnists are not alone in suggesting that any opposition to the president is race-driven. Texas Democratic Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson tells the Politico: "As far as African-Americans are concerned, we think most of it is."
And California Democratic Congressman Mike Honda adds: "There's a very angry, small group of folks that just didn't like the fact that Barack Obama won the presidency. With some, I think it is (about race.)"
But White House press secretary Robert Gibbs says to CNN: "I don't think the president believes that people are upset because of the color of his skin."
Help Wanted sacs à main
The White House is filling policy positions at two of the most important departments to the president's domestic agenda at a slower rate than elsewhere in the administration.
Despite overseeing one of the largest financial rescue plans in history, the Treasury Department has filled just 11 of 33 high-level posts requiring Senate confirmation. And just eight of the top 20 positions have been filled at the Health and Human Services Department, although it is responsible for responding to a potential outbreak of the H1N1 flu.
Only the Justice Department has had a slower rate of confirmation.