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'Gets My Back Up'

A Dem VP prospect weighs in on the '08 race for the nomination.

ByABC News
May 22, 2008, 6:56 AM

May 21, 2008— -- While the chattering class ponders whether John McCain's decision to play host to Charlie Crist, Mitt Romney, and Bobby Jindal is intended to distract attention from the Friday release of the Arizona senator's medical records, a Democratic veep prospect offered a theory as to why Barack Obama is struggling to win the votes of the Scots-Irish Americans who populate states such as Kentucky, West Virginia, and parts of Pennsylvania.

"We shouldn't be surprised at the way they are voting right now," said Webb in an interview with MSNBC. "This is the result of how affirmative action, which was basically a justifiable concept when it applied to African-Americans, expanded to every single ethnic group in America that was not white. And these were the people who had not received benefits and were not getting anything out of it."

Watch the interview here.

Webb, whose book Born Fighting looks at how the Scots-Irish have shaped America, said that he bristles at the suggestion that racism is behind Obama's paltry performance among this group.

"When I hear people say this is racism, it gets my back up a little bit because that's my cultural group," said Webb. "This isn't Selma, 1965."

While laying out the hurdles posed by the legacy of race-based affirmative action, Webb expressed confidence that Obama can overcome them.

"The fact that they would line up and vote this way is not so much a comment on Barack," said Webb. "I think Barack Obama is saying a lot of good things that will appeal to this cultural group in time."

Jessica Smith, a Webb spokesperson, told ABC News that Webb's reference to "in time" refers to this election cycle.

Asked if an Obama-Webb ticket might be the way to bring those two groups to the same table, Webb's spokesperson played it coy.

"I'm not going to answer that question," said Smith.

The kicker:

"If you asked me (if Chelsea would run for office) before Iowa, I would have said, 'No way. She is too allergic to anything we do.' But she is really good at it." --Former President Bill Clinton to People Magazine

On the campaign front. . .

BARACK OBAMA-- 12:00 pm ET: Attends town hall meeting with voters, Boca Raton, FL

As for the Republicans. . .

JOHN MCCAIN

-- 1:30 pm ET: Attends roundtable discussion with voters, Union City, CA

-- 6:45 pm ET: Attends rally with voters, Stockton, CA

-- 8:00 pm ET: Hold s media availability, Stockton, CA

At the White House. . .

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Barack Obama Touts Change in Iowa
Obama returns to Iowa, rallying a "spirit of change, hope and possibility." LINK

Kentucky Win: Music to Clinton's Ears
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Split Tuesday for Democrats
Hillary Clinton wins Kentucky's primary, while Barack Obama claims Oregon. LINK