Is Barack Obama really Irish?
Posted on Thursday, June 02, 2011 at 08:10 AM
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| President Obama received a hurley from Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Enda Kenny in Dublin last week |
Then, all of a sudden, people weren’t feeling so happy and peppy.
“We were just useful props in president's whirlwind electioneering roadshow,” an online headline in the Irish Independent read.
According to the paper’s writer, Carol Hunt, “Obama desperately needs the white working class to believe that he's one of them to regain their support.”
In the U.K.’s Catholic Herald, columnist William Oddie dubbed Obama’s performance in Ireland “fraudulent,” adding, “So Obama was treading on potentially dangerous ground when he seemed to appropriate an Irishness of a kind that would actually induce (Catholic) Irish Americans to vote for him in large numbers.”
What? Say it ain’t so!
You don’t think Barack Obama -- in the end, a Chicago -- – would have certain political realities in mind when he takes a trip halfway around the world, do you?
The basic argument of Obama’s critics -- or critics of the people who loved the positive vibe of the trip -- is that he played to certain stage Irish stereotypes in order to line up Irish American/Catholic votes in 2012.
That line of thinking made it over to the U.S., where righter than-right Rush Limbaugh also questioned Obama’s motives.
_______________________________________
Read More:
US blogger’s mixed comments on Obama’s Irish homecoming
African Americans inspired by Obama tracing their Irish roots in greater numbers
Michelle Obama's Irish roots traced to Irish slave owner
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“We ought to start calling him Paddy Obama -- p-a-d-d-y, Paddy Obama, the Obama of Moneygall,” Limbaugh said.
“But even the U.K. Telegraph today has a fabulous story about how ridiculous it is Obama is trying to pass himself off as an Irish guy. And when he goes to Africa, he tries to pass himself off as a Kenyan.
“And if he goes to the Middle East he tries to pass himself off as Barack ‘al-Obama.’ And if he goes down to Selma he tries to pass himself off as a guy from down the street — totally disingenuous guy.”
Limbaugh then said, “It is a campaign stop for the Irish vote. The Irish vote in this country, particularly in New York City, is plentiful. And he’s got problems. His reelect numbers are down. This is nothing more than a campaign stop for the Irish vote.”
Except that, as Trina Vargo, head of the U.S.-Ireland Alliance argued in a Huffington Post column, “There is no 'Irish vote.' Irish-Americans are Democrats and Republicans, Catholics and Protestants, and there are no galvanizing issues around which a significant number of them rally.”
All of this just makes you shake your head. Probably the most disturbing aspect of this is the suggestion by the likes of Limbaugh, but also Oddie and Hunt, is that Obama isn’t a “real” Irish American, or that he exploited his meager Irish American roots for maximum political gain.
Obama can’t catch a break. He’s not a real American, he’s not a real Irishman, he, apparently, is not a real anything!
Let’s be honest here. It’s as if a guy with roots in Africa also can’t have “real” roots in Ireland.
But don’t forget, it’s not as if JFK’s dad was right off of the boat. If the diaspora has taught us anything it’s that -- like it or not -- our definition of what it means to be Irish American is ever-changing.
Indeed, at the heart of all of this is the deep question -- what does it mean to be Irish?
Consider what Oddie had to say, “No descendant of Irish Protestants in America joins in those overblown St Patrick’s Day parades, or describes themselves as Irish-American.”
I slightly understand what Oddie is saying, in the sense that when most people talk about the Irish in America, they refer to Catholics in Boston or Brooklyn.
That said, Oddie’s statement is patently false.
As for there being no Irish vote in the U.S., again, it is true the days of Tammany Hall are gone.
And yet, there’s no denying that the Catholic vote is at least significant. And, this being America, of course the number of 100% Irish fourth generation Americans is small.
But being Irish -- just as it is for Obama -- is an important part of their heritage. To deny that is to play a really tricky game about who is “allowed” to be Irish and who is not.
In the end, I can almost guarantee Obama is at least as Irish as a good chuck of the folks who, “overblown” as it may be, line Fifth Avenue every March 17.
Can Obama call himself Irish? Yes he can!
(Contact “Sidewalks” at tomdeignan@earthlink.net or facebook.com/tomdeignan)
52 comments
McNamara31 | Jun 02, 2011, 09:02 PM EDT
irishgenebuf Well said and true!
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peterson | Jun 02, 2011, 08:54 PM EDT
He was puting a show like he does every where else.
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Gearoid4 | Jun 02, 2011, 07:39 PM EDT
Of course Obama was mindful of the swing voters back home as he supped on that frothy pint or held that hurley in his hand for the cameras. He won't be the first or last US president to play upon their 'Irish' roots however slight. It has become almost like a pilgrimage for presidents to sally forth across the Atlantic brine to meet long-lost distant relatives dug up by indefatigable genealogists. Remember Ronnie in Ballyporeen? But we also must be mindful of the genuine links that exist between Ireland and the US in terms of a couple of hundred years of history, values and shared bloodlines.
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irishgenebuf | Jun 02, 2011, 07:30 PM EDT
President Obama has an Irish ancestor. If he had gone to England without stopping in Ireland you negative ones would be bitching about that, too. He is a polite person who returned the warmth that the Irish extended to him. He would never stoop to the negativity I see on this message board. If you negative ones are the best that Ireland and Irish-in-America have to offer, it is good that he has African blood to offset the Irish part! Take that!
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cillowen | Jun 02, 2011, 07:29 PM EDT
he's all things to all people - did you not
hear him expressing a brit ancestry - and well
he might with the fawning that went down over
their queenie.
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OBPiper | Jun 02, 2011, 06:44 PM EDT
What does a right-wing drug addicted political extremist of German descent (other than an Hussian occupier) know of Ireland?!? This is just another example of right-wing junk science. Of course, a person of African descent can also be of Irish and even other descents simultaneously. You stooped low to give this inarticulate pompous ass a forum.
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morganink | Jun 02, 2011, 06:33 PM EDT
How sad to give the likes of Rush Limbaugh so much space. Your rebuttal was on point, but came after rather a lot of bluster.
If you deny Obama any claim to being Irish, you miss the obvious mix of genealogies and ethnic heritage that characterize many Americans. And rather a lot of the "Irish" who make the news would have to surrender that claim, as well.
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pounder | Jun 02, 2011, 06:00 PM EDT
NO HE CANNOT!
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pilib04 | Jun 02, 2011, 05:42 PM EDT
Ahem, "Is Barack Obama really Irish?" Talk about misleading headline. Not one sentence about disproving President Obama's Irish Pedigree. Just another Irish Voice misleading headline.
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whiteycat | Jun 02, 2011, 02:14 PM EDT
I am glad to see that by the writers here that most of the folks reading here also know Obama dfor what he is.A Politician first last and always.
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Dompedro | Jun 02, 2011, 02:11 PM EDT
trying to recall the last election we had for President of the U.S.A. Tempus fugit. I don't recall anyone running to become the 1/16th (or less; how many "greats"go before the "grand" ?) Irish Prez. I don't recall anyone running to become the half white Prez. I don't recall the present occupier of the White House ever referring to himself as the White president.
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whiteycat | Jun 02, 2011, 02:07 PM EDT
Even more important than obamas irishness, or anything else pertaining to him, Whatever happened to that DOG who was mistakenly or cruelly condemned? Now that is worth knowing.
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Springfield9 | Jun 02, 2011, 12:58 PM EDT
Have they made him "The O'Bama Mor"? Is he the name chief? I haven't checked.
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Springfield9 | Jun 02, 2011, 12:54 PM EDT
Don't be so fast to write off the 100% Irish Americans. For years the children were taught "Keep with your own". This meant that a Kelly married a Mc Bride, Reilly, Sullivan, etc. The Irish Project on FTDNA has rolls of people who are DNA classified as Irish out to 111 genetic markers. A friend from Armagh won't take the test because he might fail! The 100% I/As just don't wear a button.
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