POWDER SPRINGS, Ga. (AP) – Asked by a voter about accusations of flip-flopping, Democrat Barack Obama dismissed the notion Tuesday that he has been shifting stances on Iraq, guns and the death penalty to break with his party’s liberal wing and court a wider swath of voters.
“The people who say this haven’t apparently been listening to me,” Obama said in response to a question at a town-hall style event.
Obama blamed criticism from “my friends on the left” and “some of the media” in part on cynicism that ascribes political motives for every move candidates make. “You’re not going to agree with me on 100 percent of what I think, but don’t assume that if I don’t agree with you on something that it must be because I’m doing that politically,” he said. “I may just disagree with you.”
The Illinois senator was responding to a question from a self-described “reformed Republican.”
“You had an interesting week off being accused of flip-flopping, which is mostly nonsense,” the man said. He then asked Obama to restate his Iraq position, and Obama used the opportunity to dispel the idea he had changed his stances on a range of issues.
Since wrapping up the Democratic nomination last month, Obama has voiced positions that break with the Democratic Party’s left and have seemed at times to shade his own past positions on a range of subjects. He’s drawn criticism from some liberal Democrats who question his loyalty and from Republicans who accuse him of flip-flopping.
