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Cheered by a roaring crowd,
Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois laid claim to the
Democratic presidential nomination Tuesday
By TOM RAUM and NEDRA PICKLER,
Associated Press Writers
Jun,04,2008
ST.
PAUL, Minn. - Cheered by a roaring crowd, Sen.
Barack Obama of Illinois laid claim to the
Democratic presidential nomination Tuesday night,
taking a historic step toward his once-improbable
goal of becoming the nation's first black president.
Hillary Rodham Clinton maneuvered for the vice
presidential spot on his fall ticket without
conceding her own defeat.
"America, this is our moment," the 46-year-old
senator and one-time community organizer said in his
first appearance as the Democratic
nominee-in-waiting. "This is our time. Our time to
turn the page on the policies of the past."
Clinton praised Obama warmly in an appearance before
supporters in New York, although she neither
acknowledged his victory in their grueling marathon
nor offered a concession of any sort.
Instead, she said she was committed to a unified
party, and said she would spend the next few days
determining "how to move forward with the best
interests of our country and our party guiding my
way."
Obama's victory set up a five-month campaign with
Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona, a race
between a first-term Senate opponent of the Iraq War
and a 71-year-old Vietnam prisoner of war and
staunch supporter of the current U.S. military
mission.
And both men seemed eager to begin.
McCain spoke first, in New Orleans, and he accused
his younger rival of voting "to deny funds to the
soldiers who have done a brilliant and brave job" in
Iraq." Americans, he added, should be concerned
about the judgment of a presidential candidate who
has not traveled to Iraq yet "says he's ready to
talk, in person and without conditions, with tyrants
from Havana to Pyongyang."
McCain agreed with Obama that the presidential race
would focus on change. "But the choice is between
the right change and the wrong change, between going
forward and going backward," he said.
Obama responded quickly, pausing in his own speech
long enough to praise Clinton for "her strength, her
courage and her commitment to the causes that
brought us here tonight."
As for his general election rival, he said, "It's
not change when John McCain decided to stand with
George Bush 95 percent of the time, as he did in the
Senate last year. It's not change when he offers
four more years of Bush economic policies that have
failed to create well-paying jobs. ... And it's not
change when he promises to continue a policy in Iraq
that asks everything of our brave young men and
women in uniform and nothing of Iraqi politicians."
In a symbolic move, Obama spoke in the same hall
where McCain will accept the Republican nomination
at his party's convention in September. Campaign
officials, citing the local fire marshal, put the
crowd at 17,000 inside the eXcel Energy Center, plus
another 15,000 outside.
McCain addressed a smaller crowd by design, an
estimated 600 in his audience and another 600
outside.
One campaign began as another was ending.
Clinton won South Dakota on the final night of the
primary season; Obama took Montana.
He later called Clinton to congratulate her on her
victory. When she called back, Obama reiterated his
offer to sit down at a time convenient for her,
according to his spokesman, Robert Gibbs. He said
there were no plans for a meeting on Wednesday.
Only 31 delegates were at stake in the two states on
the night's ballot, the final few among the
thousands that once drew Obama, Clinton and six
other Democratic candidates into the campaign to
replace Bush and become the nation's 44th president.
Obama sealed his nomination, according to The
Associated Press tally, based on primary elections,
state Democratic caucuses and support from party "superdelegates."
It takes 2,118 delegates to clinch the nomination at
the convention in Denver this summer, and Obama had
2,154 by the AP count.
There were more on the way, including Sen. Ben
Cardin of Maryland, whom party officials said would
make an endorsement on Wednesday.
Additionally, party leaders readied a statement
urging uncommitted superdelegates in Congress and
among the ranks of governors to state their
preference by Friday. Several officials said that
while they wanted to unify the party quickly, they
were also determined not to appear to push Clinton
out of the race, particularly since she will be
returning to the Senate once her presidential bid is
over.
Obama, a first-term senator who was virtually
unknown on the national stage four years ago,
defeated Clinton, the former first lady and one-time
campaign front-runner, in a 17-month marathon for
the Democratic nomination.
His victory had been widely assumed for weeks. But
Clinton's declaration of interest in becoming his
ticketmate was wholly unexpected.
She expressed it in a conference call with her
state's congressional delegation after Rep. Nydia
Velazquez, predicted Obama would have great
difficulty winning the support of Hispanics and
other voting blocs unless the former first lady was
on the ticket.
"I am open to it" if it would help the party's
prospects in November, Clinton replied, according to
participants who spoke on condition of anonymity
because the call was private.
Clinton's comments raised anew the prospect of what
many Democrats have called a "Dream Ticket" that
would put a black man and a woman on the same
ballot, but Obama's aides were noncommittal. "We're
not in the presidential phase here. We're going to
close out the nominating fight and then we'll
consider that," David Axelrod, Obama's top
strategist, told reporters aboard the candidate's
plane en route to Minnesota.
McCain's criticism of Obama referred to a vote last
year in which the Illinois senator came out against
legislation paying for the Iraq war because it did
not include a timetable for withdrawing troops. At
the time, Obama said the funding would give
President Bush "a blank check to continue down this
same, disastrous path."
Obama previously had opposed a deadline for troop
withdrawal, but shifted position under pressure from
the Democratic Party's liberal wing as he maneuvered
for support in advance of the primaries.
Bill Burton, a spokesman for Obama, responded
tartly. "While John McCain has a record of
occasional independence from his party in the past,
last year he chose to embrace 95% of George Bush's
agenda, including his failed economic policies and
his failed policy in Iraq. No matter how hard he
tries to spin it otherwise, that kind of record is
simply not the change the American people are
looking for or deserve."
The young Illinois senator's success amounted to a
victory of hope over experience, earned across an
enervating 56 primaries and caucuses that tested the
political skills and human endurance of all
involved.
Obama stood for change. Clinton was the candidate of
experience, ready, she said, to serve in the Oval
Office from Day One.
Together, they drew record turnouts in primary after
primary — more than 34 million voters in all,
independents and Republicans as well as Democrats.
Yet the race between a black man and a woman exposed
deep racial and gender divisions within the party.
Obama drew strength from blacks, and from the
younger, more liberal and wealthier voters in many
states. Clinton was preferred by older, more
downscale voters, and women, of course.
Personality issues rose and receded through the
campaign:
Clinton's husband, the former president, campaigned
tirelessly for her but sometimes became an issue
himself, to her detriment.
And Obama struggled to minimize the damage caused by
the incendiary rhetoric of his former pastor, the
Rev. Jeremiah Wright, an issue likely to be raised
anew by Republicans in the fall campaign.
Obama's triumph was fashioned on prodigious
fundraising, meticulous organizing and his theme of
change aimed at an electorate opposed to the Iraq
war and worried about the economy — all harnessed to
his own gifts as an inspirational speaker.
With her husband's two White House terms as a
backdrop, Clinton campaigned for months as the
candidate of experience, a former first lady and
second-term senator ready to be commander in chief.
But after a year on the campaign trail, Obama won
the kickoff Iowa caucuses on Jan. 3, and the
freshman senator became a political phenomenon.
"We came together as Democrats, as Republicans and
independents, to stand up and say we are one nation,
we are one people and our time for change has come,"
he said that night of victory in Des Moines.
As the strongest female presidential candidate in
history, Clinton drew large, enthusiastic audiences.
Yet Obama's were bigger. One audience, in Dallas,
famously cheered when he blew his nose on stage; a
crowd of 75,000 turned out in Portland, Ore., the
weekend before the state's May 20 primary.
The former first lady countered Obama's Iowa victory
with an upset five days later in New Hampshire that
set the stage for a campaign marathon as competitive
as any in the past generation.
"Over the last week I listened to you, and in the
process I found my own voice," she told supporters
who had saved her candidacy from an early demise.
In defeat, Obama's aides concluded they had
committed a cardinal sin of New Hampshire politics,
forsaking small, intimate events in favor of
speeches to large audiences inviting them to ratify
Iowa's choice.
It was not a mistake they made again — which helped
explain Obama's later outings to bowling alleys,
backyard basketball courts and American Legion halls
in the heartland.
Clinton conceded nothing, memorably knocking back a
shot of Crown Royal whiskey at a bar in Indiana,
recalling that her grandfather had taught her to use
a shotgun, and driving in a pickup to a gas station
in South Bend, Ind., to emphasize her support for a
summertime suspension of the federal gasoline tax.
As other rivals fell away in winter, Obama and
Clinton traded victories on Super Tuesday, the Feb.
5 series of primaries and caucuses across 21 states
and American Samoa that once seemed likely to settle
the nomination.
But Clinton had a problem that Obama exploited, and
he scored a coup she could not answer.
Pressed for cash, the former first lady ran
noncompetitive campaigns in several Super Tuesday
caucus states, allowing her rival to run up his
delegate totals.
At the same time, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.,
endorsed the young senator in terms that summoned
memories of his slain brothers while seeking to turn
the page on the Clinton era.
Merely by surviving Super Tuesday, Obama exceeded
expectations. But he did more than survive, emerging
with a lead in delegates that he never relinquished,
and he proceeded to run off a string of 11 straight
victories.
Clinton saved her candidacy once more with primary
victories in Ohio and Texas on March 4, beginning a
stretch in which she won in six of the next nine
states on the calendar, as well as in Puerto Rico.
It was a strong run, providing glimpses of what
might have been for the one-time front-runner.
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