Obama: I Am ‘Outraged’ and ‘Angered’ By Wright’s Comments
Barack Obama campaigns Tuesday in Winston-Salem, N.C., where he firmly rejected Rev. Jeremiah Wright's statements to The National Press Club the day before. (AP Photo)
Barack Obama, declaring “that’s enough,” denounced Tuesday as “appalling” and “ridiculous” comments made in the last few days by his former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr.
In a press conference in North Carolina, the Illinois senator used his strongest language to date to condemn Wright’s controversial sermons, which have remained a burden to his campaign since they became national news more than a month ago. Wright spoke Monday at The National Press Club in Washington, D.C.
“I am outraged by the comments that were made, and saddened over the spectacle that we saw yesterday,” Obama said.
“The person I saw yesterday was not the person that I met 20 years ago. His comments were not only divisive and destructive, but I believe they ended up giving comfort to those who prey on hate,” he said.
Click here to read the transcript of Obama’s remarks on Wright Tuesday.
Wright capped off a weekend-long set of public appearances at the Press Club, returning to the spotlight and casting an unwanted shadow over Obama’s campaign. Wright used the appearance to taunt reporters, criticize his country’s foreign policy and claim the furor surrounding his sermons was an attack on the black church. He also suggested that Obama only distanced himself from Wright out of political posturing.
Obama said he was particularly “angered” by that suggestion.
“If Reverend Wright thinks that that’s political posturing, as he put it, then he doesn’t know me very well — based on his remarks yesterday I may not know him as well as I thought either,” Obama said.
Shortly after the Wright controversy broke, Obama condemned his pastor’s sermons but still kept him at an arm’s length, saying Wright was “like family” and he could no more “disown” him than his own grandmother. Wright officiated at his wedding, and one of his sermons was the inspiration for the title of his book “The Audacity of Hope.”
But Tuesday, as he was still struggling to shake Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primary, Obama put as much distance as possible between him and his former pastor.
He disputed characterizations of Wright as his mentor, saying: “He was never my spiritual adviser, he was never my spiritual mentor — he was my pastor.”
He said he is still a member of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago but noted the controversy “obviously has put strains on that relationship.”
While still praising the church, Obama presented a rebuttal to Wright’s most controversial statements, arguing some of the key points that have made Wright a target of such scrutiny.
“All it was was a bunch of rants that aren’t grounded in truth,” Obama said of Wright’s Press Club performance . “And I can’t construct something positive out of that.”
Wright repeated his argument Monday that the United States brought terrorism upon itself by committing like acts overseas, and he did not back down from a claim that the U.S. government was responsible for afflicting the black community with HIV.
“But when he states and then amplifies such ridiculous propositions such as the U.S. government somehow being involved in AIDS; when he suggests that Minister (Louis) Farrakhan somehow represents one of the greatest voices of the 20th and 21st century; when he equates the U.S. wartime efforts with terrorism, then there are no excuses,” Obama said Tuesday. “They offend me, they rightly offend all Americans and they should be denounced, and that’s what I am doing very clearly and unequivocally here today.”
Obama also disputed Wright’s argument that he is weathering an attack on the black church.
“I did not view the initial round of sound bites that triggered this controversy as an attack on the black church. I viewed it as a simplification of who he was, a caricature of who he was. And more than anything, something that piqued a lot of political interest. I didn’t see it as an attack on the black church,” he said. “The sad thing is that although the sound bites as I’ve stated I think created a caricature of him … Yesterday I think he caricatured himself, and that was as I said, that made me angry but also made me sad.”
With two high-stakes primaries approaching May 6 in Indiana and North Carolina, Obama also stressed that Wright has no link whatsoever to his campaign. Obama is seeking to rebound from a nearly 10-point loss to Clinton in the Pennsylvania primary a week ago.
“Moving forward, Reverend Wright does not speak for me, he does not speak for my campaign,” he said, adding “I cannot prevent him from continuing to make these outrageous remarks.”
He continued, “I want to use this press conference to make people absolutely clear that obviously whatever relationship I had with Reverend Wright has changed as a consequence of this. I don’t think that he showed much concern for me.”
“What Reverend Wright said yesterday directly contradicts everything that I have done during my life,” he said.
Democratic strategist Steve Murphy told FOX News that Obama’s statements Tuesday should play a positive effect on his campaign.
“People are going to say that Barack Obama should have done this a long time ago, but what’s important in a political campaign is that you have done the right thing, and I think most Americans would agree that Barack Obama now has done that,” he said.





Honestly, I think Obama handled the Wright situation as good as anyone could. McCain should’ve done the same thing with Hagee, but he’s living in Fantasyland and thinks the 25% of America who are CAtholic will forget this.
I think Wright’s latest rants and Obama’s rejection of them are all staged, because it gives Obama the opportunity to distance himself from Wright to save his campaign.
The only thing Obama is outraged about is Rev. Wright telling the truth about how things really are and Obama is scrambling like crazy to distance himself. Rev. Wright, as radical as he is, is the only one being completely honest about who he is and what he believes in. Obama just wants votes and is willing to sell his soul to be our next president.
So, let’s say, for the sake of argument, that he does become our next president. What will he be willing to sell then? I can tell you this, I do NOT want to find out. He needs to go.
The story here is that a young politically ambitious Illinois politician felt it would be advantageous to his career to align himself with a large activist black church, the
very popular far left Chicago machine (Ayers, Resko) to promote himself up the ladder
as fast as possible. IT WORKED. But now its backfiring because he didn’t realize that
the average American doesn’t believe in the left Chicago polititics. I really don’t
think that Obama is an American hater or agrees with those ideas but when you
sell your integrity (for advantages) you have to pay the piper at some point .
White woman or black man it all leads to the presidential winner Mccain.