Showing posts with label 2008 election. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2008 election. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 04, 2012

Iowa Promises



In his usual dishonest remarks about President Obama,  Romney cited candidate Obama's surprise victory statement after the Iowa caucuses in 2008 as a litany of promises made and broken.  This video from that statement exactly four years ago proves Romney very very wrong.  The only hope that hasn't yet materialized to some extent is a nation less divided.  That's still to come, and if it comes at all, it will be with President Obama.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

These Are Our Leaders?

Now that we've had the official versions, several new 2008 campaign books are dishing the dirt. The provisos and cautions about one such book in this New York Times piece probably should be applied to others as well, but at least some of this high level gossip and revelations for a purpose (political or/and personal) has the ring of truth.

And it's about almost everyone: John (and Cindy) McCain, Sarah Palin, John and Elizabeth Edwards, Hillary and Bill Clinton. In addition to the above-cited piece, there's tidbits here , and here, and here, and here. To name a few.

The name conspicuous by its absence is Obama. Only friction between the presidential and VP campaigns has been reported.

But the stuff reported about the others--some of it tracking with stuff I read before, some just with my intuitions about these people--makes you wonder about the kind of people our current system insists on as political leaders. That as well as the latest self-serving craziness from Michael Steele and most of what we know about other GOPer leaders.

The only solace is that the sanest one of the bunch got elected President.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Father of His Country

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I've mentioned before the fascination children seem to have with Obama, and I've posted campaign photos of him with children before. But now that he's President-elect, he has become even more of a father figure, to even more children. It's a role that suits him. In the first photo he's with his two daughters and (I assume) their friends, and we've seen many pictures recently in which he is holding on to his Chicago life as a father. The other photos are from the campaign--apart from the baby-kissing tradition, there is a visible affection. Anyway, I thought I'd post these before I archive my campaign photos.

Sunday, November 09, 2008

One More Electoral Map

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I couldn't resist this electoral map, for two reasons: first, for those of us who are somewhat geographically challenged, it fills in the names of the states. Second, notice that Missouri is now white, and no longer called for McCain. That's because there are only a few thousand votes separating McCain and Obama, and provisional ballots are still being evaluated and counted. The odds still favor McCain, but it's still not settled.

Friday, November 07, 2008

Keepsake: November 4, 2008



A 10 minute video of election night coverage by Jed.

A New America

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North Carolina was called for Obama on Thursday, almost completing the electoral map. There's still that white space--one district with one electoral vote in Nebraska, that apportions them that way--which looks like it too will be Obama's. Missouri, colored pink, has votes still to count. Even so, Obama won in every region, including the battlegrounds of Florida and Ohio, Pennsylvania and Colorado, Nevada and New Mexico, and the formerly very Republican states of Virginia and Indiana. Meanwhile, Democrats picked up another Senate seat with a close election in Oregon just decided. Senate elections still to be determined in Minnesota, Alaska and Georgia. There's suspicion of vote counting irregularities in Alaska and Georgia, definitely affecting the Senate races, but in the case of Georgia, maybe the presidential, too. So far the electoral vote count is Obama 364, McCain 178. Obama has more than 52% of the popular vote, to McCain's 46%, but the total number will change as votes continue to be counted. Update: The Omaha, Nebraska electoral vote has been called for Obama. His total is now 365.

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

This Awesome Night (in Chicago)

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The Obama Victory celebration in and around Grant Park in Chicago, with something like a quarter million celebrants. There were also spontaneous celebrations in Times Square and in front of the White House.

This Awesome Night (2)

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in Sydney (Australia), Rockerfeller Center and Harlem, NY; and Obama, Japan.

This Awesome Night (I)

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In (top to bottom) Philadelphia, Athens (Greece), Baltimore and North Carolina.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

PRESIDENT-ELECT BARACK OBAMA

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The future has a chance.

Day of Hope and Change

Of all the videos I've seen during this campaign, this is my favorite. I love how the music starts a little uncertain, a little off the beat, but builds as ordinary people talk about why they got involved in the Obama campaign. It's the last two and a half minutes I will watch and listen to before I head to the polls today to cast the proudest vote of my life.

The Day of Decision

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On his last full day of campaigning, Barack Obama spoke before thousands in Jacksonville, Florida; Charlotte, North Carolina; and before 90 to 100,000 in Manassas, Virginia. He will speak in Indiana on Election Day, while hundreds of thousands of Obama volunteers, financed by three million Americans, work one more long, hard day to get out the vote. Because the polls don't elect anybody. Every vote counts.

The Day Has Come: Vota Obama!


There are several Obama music videos around that make use of that great old song, La Bamba. This one is my favorite--with a great guitar solo. This should get you dancing out of the house and down to the polls. If you're still uncertain where you are supposed to vote, go to the vote for change site and find out.

This is Our Moment--This is Our Time: Yes We Can


In many ways, this is the music video that showed the world that something special was happening here: the will i. am YES WE CAN. If you need inspiration for what might be long lines at the polls, see it again--and get out there and vote.

The 08 Obama Campaign's Last Video

Monday, November 03, 2008

1 Day to Change

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"Obama is the conservative in the 2008 election. The astonishing thing is that Obama is also the liberal in the 2008 election."-- Jeffrey Hart, former Reagan advisor, in endorsing Obama.
FINAL POLLS
NBC/WS Journal: Obama 51% McCain 43%
CBS poll: Obama 54% McCain 41%
Washington Post/ABC poll: Obama 54% McCain 43%
Gallups final presidential estimate: Obama 55% McCain 44%
"The trend data clearly show Obama ending the campaign with an upward movement in support..."
The USA Today/Gallup poll: Obama 53% McCain 42%
The final Pew poll predicts on election day: Obama 52% McCain 46%
Photos from Cleveland (Obama's daughter meets Bruce Springsteen), Cincinnati and Columbus Ohio, where more than 200,000 turned out all told on Sunday, and one photo from Nevada on Saturday.

1 Day to Change: We Are the Ones We've Been Waiting For


You know this one, from will i. am.

1 Day to Change: Respondele a Obama


Today's bonus Obama music video, a danceable final argument in Spanish, with English subtitles. The rhythm requires no translation. Let's dedicate it to all those Republican mamas who are going to cast a vote for Obama.

Save the World

This site is about future, and has often concentrated on the imminent threat to the planet's future: the Climate Crisis.

I haven't forgotten it in my recent concentration on Barack Obama and the presidential campaign. The peril is even more pronounced. The World Wildlife Fund (now calling itself just WWF) issued a
new report which says that the Climate Crisis is happening faster and is stronger than previously predicted by, for example, the 2007 IPCC report. Carbon is building up in the atmosphere faster than predicted.

The next president can begin building a new green economy for America, which has many crucial benefits, including addressing the causes (the Stop It part) and the effects (the Fix It part) of the Climate Crisis. Though both candidates have talked about this, only Barack Obama has made it his first priority, talked about how he would do and why it is important.

But that won't be enough. As Bill McKibben
points out, the U.S. must also be part of international agreements to address the global Climate Crisis. That's partly because there really isn't time left for the U.S. to go it alone and expect its green economy to influence other nations--when it comes to the planet as well as the nation, we're all in this together.

As McKibben says, "the world's governments are now nearing a real deadline: December 2009, when a negotiation session in Copenhagen is supposed to produce a new climate treaty, the successor to the Kyoto protocol." Again, McCain has paid lip service to the issue of global heating, but his general approach doesn't give me confidence that he will constructively negotiate and enter into a real climate treaty. I believe Barack Obama will, and I highly doubt that Al Gore would be supporting Obama and campaigning for him if he thought Obama won't.

Obama talks with credibility about returning to a respect for science, for the intellectual process in general, and a return to values of empathy and community. We're all in this together, as he often says.

John McCain is beholden to extreme right wing ideologues who won't let him lead on these issues. His VP candidate either doesn't think climate change is the result of human activity, or doesn't think it's relevant. What does that tell you about what the next four years would be like with McCain-Palin?

We all know that the world is waiting for Obama to be President. The international surveys make that clear, and Obama's short overseas tour this past summer showed that leaders are eager to work with him. America will get instant good will when he is elected, and that can mean a great deal in many areas of international importance, including the Climate Crisis and related environmental threats that require international cooperation to address.

Barack Obama has demonstrated the intelligence, grasp of issues, the temperament and the ability to inspire--all of which are necessary to addressing a crisis that is so large, so grave, so complex, so interwoven with other factors, and which will play out over so long a time.

While I have to admit I dreamed up a Barack Obama at least a decade ago, as recently as a year ago I didn't see a realistic chance that we would find such a leader in time. Well, we have found one who gives us a fighting chance, and that's all we can ask. And he's called on us to fight the good fight with him, to change the country and change the world. To me that really means, to try to save the world.

Lately, Obama has added this line to his stump speech, which has been heard by hundreds of thousands in the past few days: " We have to work like our future depends on it in these last few days, because it does."

We have to vote on Tuesday like our future depends on it, because it does.

Sunday, November 02, 2008

2 Days to Change

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The Obamas before huge crowds in Colorado, Nevada and Missouri Saturday. Barack chides McCain for his endorsement by Dick Cheney. Get out the vote efforts go into high gear everywhere. Expect our call! Election day is TUESDAY.