[NYTr] Herbert & Rothschild on Obama Date: Mon, 7 Jan 2008 04:12:09 -0600 (CST) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit sent by Ed Pearl - Jan 5, 2008 The New York Times - Jan 5, 2008 http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/05/opinion/05herbert.html The Obama Phenomenon By BOB HERBERT Manchester, N.H. The historians can put aside their reference material. This is new. America has never seen anything like the Barack Obama phenomenon. I was surprised all day Thursday, before the results of the Iowa caucuses were in, by the apparent serenity of the Obama forces here in New Hampshire. The stakes were enormous, but the campaign staff members and volunteers seemed as cool as the candidate. The students, veterans, middle-aged moms, retirees and others working steadily to make Barack Obama president seemed to accept as fact that the country is ready for profound change and that their job is to help make it happen. "We've been busy knocking on doors, making phone calls, inputting data and basically just spreading hope," said Kathryn Teague, a 19-year-old who has taken a year off from Keene State College to work in the campaign. There is no longer any doubt that the Obama phenomenon is real. Mr. Obama's message of hope, healing and change, discounted as fanciful and naC/ve by skeptics, drew Iowans into the frigid night air by the tens of thousands on Thursday to stand with a man who is not just running for president, but trying to build a new type of political movement. By midnight, Joe Biden and Chris Dodd had been chased from the race; John Edwards was all but literally on his knees; and the Clintons were trying, for the umpteenth time, to figure out how to remake themselves as the comeback kids. Shake hands with tomorrow. It's here. Senator Obama's victory speech was a concise oratorical gem. No candidate in either party can move an audience like he can. He characterized his stunning victory as an affirmation of "the most American of ideas - that in the face of impossible odds, people who love this country can change it." Mr. Obama has shown, in one appearance after another, a capacity to make people feel good about their country again. His supporters want desperately to turn the page on the bitter politics and serial disasters of the past 20 years. That they have gravitated to a black candidate to carry out this task is - to use a term I heard for the first time this week - monumentous. The Clintons, especially, have seemed baffled by the winds of change. They mounted a peculiar argument against Senator Obama, acknowledging that voters wanted change but insisting that you can't achieve change by doing things differently. Senator Hillary Clinton has had a devil of a time trying to cope with the demand for change while shouldering the legacy of an administration that defined the 1990s. Barack Obama has none of that baggage. But for all the talk of change, it's just one of the factors driving the Obama phenomenon. The simple truth is that hardly anyone - in politics, in the news media or anywhere else - realized what an extraordinary candidate Senator Obama would turn out to be. He's smart, hard-working, charismatic, good-looking and a whiz at fund-raising. He has an incandescent smile, but it's not frozen in place. He seems authentic. When he laughs, you have the feeling it's because something is funny. People are lining up to believe in him. He has the easy demeanor (in a long, lanky frame) of someone who's comfortable with himself. Even when he fires up a crowd, he doesn't get too hot. He has the cadences that remind you of King but the cool that reminds you of Kennedy - John, not Robert. If the Clintons are going to stop Mr. Obama, they need to do it now. If he wins the New Hampshire primary Tuesday, the news media will go nuts and he will head toward the Jan. 19 caucuses in Nevada and the Jan. 26 primary in South Carolina (where half the voters are African-American) with incredible momentum. I expect that African-Americans, under those circumstance, would view his campaign with almost religious fervor. All those questions about whether he's black enough would be history. Mr. Obama would be perceived by many as within striking distance of the presidency, and there will be very few blacks in favor of stopping that train. However this election turns out, Mr. Obama can be credited with a great achievement. He has drawn tons of people, and especially young people, into the political process. More than anyone else, he has re-energized that process and put some of the fun back into politics. And he's done it by appealing openly and consistently to the best, rather than the worst, in us. [VCorrection: Sometimes your fingers dance too quickly over the keyboard. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was killed on April 4, 1968, not April 3, as I wrote earlier this week.] *** The Progressive - Jan 4, 2008 http://www.progressive.org/mag_wx010408 Obama's Day in Iowa By Matthew Rothschild Obama owned all the excitement, even before the tallies. I was in Dubuque, Iowa, with my 18-year-old daughter, Katherine, an Obama supporter. We arrived at 3:30 in the afternoon, and proceeded to the local headquarters of Obama, Edwards, and Clinton. A couple dozen volunteers, young and old, staffed the phones at Obama's. Of all three, it was the only one that had a diverse staff. A young black man from Milwaukee greeted us. A middle-aged black woman from Chicago sketched pictures at a table. A Native American man from Arizona kept urging people to shut the sticking door when they entered. The white press person told me everything was off the record. But then he pointed me to Representative Jan Schakowsky of Illinois, who was visiting the office with her husband, Robert Creamer, the author of "Listen to Your Mother, Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win." "Barack is the one, and the only one, who is right for this time," she said. "He really can be a uniter, not just across race lines. He can bring Republicans, progressives, and Independents together to really move an agenda to realign us. He will be our first 21st century President. He will change the narrative of the United States around the world and make it possible to even hope for a peaceful century." I asked her whether she wasn't tugged in the direction of Hillary Clinton. "As someone who always supports women candidates, of course I've thought about that," she says. "But Barack is the one who can actually make progressive change happen and a women's agenda happen." We then went to Edwards's headquarters just two blocks away in downtown Dubuque. The sign on the door said: "Not Paid for by PACS or Washington Lobbyist Money EVER. "Only one candidate has never taken a dime from PACs or Washington lobbyists." About ten people, all white, were working the phones under signs that said, "Call Like a Champion Today." The "door knock goal" was 2,900, and they had reached 2,000. The "phone call goal" was 6,544, and they had reached 5,000. "Edwards will keep fighting for the middle class, economic justice, and corporate power," said Peter Rickman, the volunteer state organizer. "This is bigger than one man." Three miles away, at Clinton headquarters in a little strip mall, the sign on the door read: "Hillary-Turn Up the Heat." Inside the signs stressed, "Strength and Leadership" and "Give 'em Hill," and "Help Make History." Of the dozen people there, all white and mostly women, not many were working the phones. Penni Secore came to Iowa from AFSCME in Milwaukee. "We've chosen Hillary because she's always had a commitment to working for union people," she says, adding that "Hillary was overwhelmingly supported by the membership." Was Hillary going to win Iowa? "Of course, by a point or two," Secore said. It didn't look that way the minute we got to Carnegie- Stout Public Library as the caucus in Precinct 19 was just getting going. Four years ago, this caucus had 77 voters. This year, there were 219, with more than 50 first-timers. Most of these were for Obama, and many of them were young. "It warms my heart," said Kaye Hess, the Obama precinct captain. "It's so unusual to see young kids here. I've never seen this before, and I've been in politics 5,000 years." "He's the change everyone's looking for," said Nick Saenz, a white 22 year old. Sheree Omoyi, a black 34 year old, was there for Obama because he had met her 11-year-old son at Lincoln Elementary School. She said he told her: "I like him! Mom, you've got to support Obama." Carol Dunlap, a white 49 year old, was also there as a first-timer for Obama: "I like what he has to say and how he says it. He seems honest. And he doesn't seem like a know-it-all like other people." Ruby Sutton, a 70-year-old African American woman was there with her daughter Kathy, 48. "He'll make some changes we need," Sutton said. "I'm a social worker, and I see a lot of needs. He's committed, and he's not afraid." Dr. John Whalen, 60, a white pathologist, said he liked Obama because he was "looking for a new beginning. I still have idealism at 60," he said. Phillip Wilson, a 36-year-old African American, applauded Obama's stance on the Iraq War. "When it was almost unpatriotic to oppose the war in Iraq, he stood up," Wilson said. "A lot of people didn't have the heart. He's got a different type of leadership." Many of the Clinton supporters, overwhelmingly white, wanted an old type of leadership-Bill's. Barb Fisher, 70, cited Hillary's experience "and her husband's experience." Pam Thorpe, 45, mentioned Hillary's stances on education, the environment, and health care. "I'm a midwife," she says. But she, too, cited Hillary's husband. "If she has Bill as a backup, that's an asset." Cathy Morley, 41, said, "Quite honestly, I support her because she's a woman. And she's got Bill behind her, and his know-how there." Other Clinton supporters stressed the woman factor. "Go women," said Katie Morley, Cathy's daughter, 23. "Women get things done," said Sandi Juergens, 65. It was her first caucus. Marcos Rubinstein, 56, is Dennis Kucinich's statewide Iowa coordinator. "We put our main efforts in New Hampshire," he says, bemoaning the candidate's lack of financial resources. Carla Osborne, 60, wore a Kucinich button. "He's the only one who speaks from the heart. He doesn't pull any punches, and I like everything he says." Asked who she would support if Kucinich did not reach the 15% threshold needed in the caucus, she said: "I can't think of anyone else. I came in here for Kucinich and I'm going to stay with Kucinich." The initial tally was Obama 89, Clinton 46, Biden and Edwards 18, Richardson 9, Dodd 7, Kucinich 6. Each campaign had one representative address the crowd. The Edwards man stressed that he "speaks best for middle America. He's been a champion for us. He's a genuine nice guy, and he will not accept any lobbyist money." Clinton's rep said she was "the number one choice in education and health care, and she has a relationship with over 100 world leaders. On Day One, we'll be respected, and she will stand up for us every single day." But the most moving speech was by the young white man who stood up for Obama. "Over the last six years, we've seen our country shift to places that are dangerous and scary and against what we stand for," he said. "Obama has the judgment to move the country forward, to shift our perspective and the perspective the world has of us. Just look at his name: Barack Hussein Obama." The final tally was Obama 100, Clinton 49, Edwards 34, Biden 33. Just before we left, I saw Carla Osborne, the staunch Kucinich supporter. She, too, ended up voting for Obama. * ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us Our main website: http://www.blythe.org List Archives: http://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ Subscribe: http://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================