It was disappointing when President Obama zipped in and out
of New Orleans last week without so much as a touch-and-go
landing on the coasts of Mississippi and Alabama.
But was it surprising? Or were we naive to think that Barack
Obama would do anything other than follow the political
dictum that says you reward your supporters and punish, or
at least snub, your opponents?
Let's face it: States don't get much redder than
Alabama and Mississippi, with our Republican governors and
U.S. senators who are highly regarded within the GOP.
We didn't support Obama in 2008, and I wouldn't
look for him to carry either state next time.
Louisiana is a red state, too, although one of its senators
is a Democrat. But New Orleans is a creature unto itself,
with a wildly diverse population led by an African-American
Democrat as mayor.
And, frankly, New Orleans is the darling of the national
Democratic Party, in large part because the Crescent City
was treated so shabbily by the Bush administration after
Hurricane Katrina.
The hard truth probably is that Obama's staff, knowing
he was going to be in College Station on Friday for a forum
with former President George H.W. Bush, decided it would be
conven-
ient to schedule Obama's first presidential visit
Thursday to the central Gulf Coast.
The staff probably picked New Orleans because their man
could score more political points and photo ops there than
in Biloxi or