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Last Updated Sep 2008


Obama Outlines His Vision for America

Democratic Presidential Nominee Barack Obama makes his acceptance speech at the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver's Pepsi Center (Photo: barackobama.com)

By Zenitha Prince
Washington Bureau Chief

DENVER (August 28, 2008) - In the glare of a world-sized spotlight, Sen. Barack Obama stood, a lone figure in a sea of 84,000 crammed into Invesco Field at Mile High, faced with a daunting task—giving a speech that would firmly define his American roots, lay out his agenda for change and offer a forceful challenge to rival Sen. John McCain and the Republican Party.

“…Next week, the same party that brought you two terms of George Bush and Dick Cheney will ask this country for a third.”

“Tonight I say to the American people, to Democrats and Republicans and Independents across this great nation—enough!” Obama declared, stunning the crowd into a moment of silence.

“This moment, this election, is our chance to keep, in the 21st century, the American promise alive,” he said. “Because next week, the same party that brought you two terms of George Bush and Dick Cheney will ask this country for a third….On Nov. 4 we must stand up and say: ‘Eight is enough.’”

In past weeks, Obama has been dogged by attacks from McCain and the GOP, who have equated him to everything from an airhead celebrity to an egotistical messiah-wannabe, and his supporters have been clamoring for a more hard-hitting response.

On Thursday, in his speech accepting the Democratic nomination for president, while Obama did not take a red meat, attack dog approach—saying he refused to descend into petty attacks against his rivals “character and patriotism”—he certainly established that he was no pushover.

“He clearly said, I’m not going to let these folks attack me and not fight back,” said U.S. Donna Edwards, D-Md., who earlier this year survived a grueling congressional race. “And I think all of us left that stadium hopeful about the future and convinced that Barack Obama will be president in January 2009.”

Throughout his speech, Obama counteracted the attacks against him and offered stark contrasts between himself and McCain.

On national security: while Obama had the foresight to oppose the Iraq war, has called for a timetable for troop withdrawal and has called for resources to be redeployed to the eradication of Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan, he said, McCain seems prepared to perpetuate a misguided war.  “If John McCain wants to have a debate about who has the temperament, and judgment to serve as the next commander-in-chief, that’s a debate I’m ready to have,” he said to loud applaude

The GOP candidate has also painted the Illinois senator as aloof and elitist, a belief that has distanced many voters. “His biggest challenge as the first African-American running for president is to convince those recalcitrant working-class Whites, those 18 million Hillary Clinton voters, those coal miners in Appalachia and farmers in Kentucky that he is on their side and really understands their issues,” said J. Terry Edmonds, former White House speechwriter for President Bill Clinton.

Obama answered that challenge with stories of his mother, who survived on food stamps and later died from cancer when her insurance wouldn’t cover treatment; and stories of his grandfather, who fought in Gen. George S. Patton's Army and his grandmother who rose from a secretary to middle management. "I don't know what kind of lives John McCain thinks that celebrities lead, but this has been mine," he said. "These are my heroes. Theirs are the stories that shaped me.”

John McCain, on the other hand, doesn’t know what happens in the lives of ordinary Americans, Obama asserted. "Why else would he define middle-class as someone making under $5 million a year?....How else could he offer a health care plan that would actually tax people’s benefits or an education plan that would do nothing to help families pay for college or a plan that would privatize Social Security and gamble your retirement?....Because John McCain doesn’t get it.”

Accused of being too intellectual, Obama also faced the task of outlining his platform in simple, direct terms. “In addition to high rhetoric, he needs to put meat on the bones and say exactly what change means,” said Edmonds. “His language has to be a mixture of the poetic and prosaic but with much more emphasis on the prosaic.”

And that’s what Obama did, spelling out his agenda to: cut taxes for 95 percent of working families and capital gains taxes on small businesses; reduce dependency on foreign oil within 10 years while investing $150 billion in renewable energy; improving sick days and family leave; reforming bankruptcy laws so that CEOs aren’t favored; invest in early childhood education and make college education affordable; resurrect foreign diplomacy and end the war in Iraq among other policies.

“He laid out a clear agenda for the country that is in a critical time and he touched on all the issues that this country will have to confront,” said John Jackson of Boston.

And for those voters who see him as a stranger, he gave a clear picture of who he is and what he stands for, said Charles Perko, 24. “They know now, and if they don’t, [it’s because] they’re not willing to listen,” said the Colorado School of Mines student.

Obama’s policies and life experiences spoke directly to their experiences, said several attendees, including Joanne Maniche, who grew up with a single mother like Obama did. “Barack is everyman,” she said. Beside her stood Christine Yancey, who, with tears streaming down her face, said that like Obama, she had to fight insurance companies to get her mother hospitalized and treated for lymphoma. “That hit home to me,” said Yancey, who urged Obama on like a church mother on Sunday morning during his speech. “I know he understands the pains of the working-class community.”

However, it was Obama’s reference to the 45th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech—a risky move some thought, since it could prove too overtly racial—that really moved the crowd.

In cadences that flowed like a finely timed waltz, Obama referenced King’s words during the historic March on Washington, conjuring a vision of ordinary citizens—in this age—from all creeds, races and backgrounds working together to rebuild a nation whose promise had been a source of hope to so many.

“And as I looked around the stadium I saw African Americans, I saw Latinos, I saw Whites who had some doubts about their country over the past four years—money spent in the war, the lives lost, what happened with [Hurricane] Katrina—and saw people once again proud to be Americans,” Jackson said. “And, if a campaign can restore that, imagine what four years in the White House can do.”

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My nephew, Logan, was born in March of 2007; just about a month after Barack Obama announced his candidacy for the Democratic Presidential nomination. I desperately want to use his 17 months on the planet as a metaphor for this 2008 primary season. But I won’t. Instead, I will simply say that after hearing Barack Obama’s acceptance speech, I slept like Logan. My sister tells me that last night, Logan watched the entire speech, mesmerized. He hasn’t really gotten into TV so it rarely holds his attention, but last night he pointed at the screen, talked and looked back at her and my brother-in-law and smiled. I’d like to think that in looking at the face and eyes of the man that would dare to be president, Logan saw the same bright future that I and his parents hold for him and his sister, Ryann. When Logan fell asleep, he was grinning ear-to-ear and so were we. I slept like Logan last night, not because I think Barack Obama has this election in the bag. Indeed, quite the contrary. The Obama campaign and its allies will have to work even harder because, as Obama made clear in his speech, the 2008 election is not just a competition for the White House, but is more importantly and more lastingly a competition for the hearts and minds of the American people and our way of life. Last night, in just under 40 minutes, the improbable reality that the Democrats could very well win this thing became very real for a lot of Bush Republicans. They will not take this laying down. I slept soundly, despite the fact that I know that the Rove machine will redouble its efforts and that the McCain campaign will seek to galvanize the too many people in our Nation, who are reliably swayed by their fear and prejudice, their self-interests, and their out-dated world views. That they, in sharp contrast to Barack Obama, will appeal to the basest of instincts that inspire a narrow-minded cronyism and simple unwillingness to truthfully engage the real threats to American security that has destroyed our moral authority in global arena. I spoke to many of my friends and family and they also reported sleeping well last night, despite knowing that there is so much to do and so little time to do it. With the stakes so high it would seem natural like-minded Democrats, Independents and Republicans committed to Obama election would feel anxious about making the personal commitments necessary to conduct massive voter registration drives, raise tons of money, volunteer thousands of hours to go door-to-door canvassing and being a part of a Get Out the Vote effort like no one has ever seen in electoral history. And yet, millions of us went to bed with a smile on our faces because for the first time in a very long time we stopped holding our breath. We relaxed because once again, the Barack Obama campaign demonstrated in Obama’s speech and throughout the Democratic Convention, the temperament, judgment and leadership needed to win this election. We just have to believe and follow. Not a hard thing to do on the 45th Anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. We slept because our candidate is ready. And we are ready. No more preparation is needed. It was time for a good night’s rest because in the morning, the real work begins. Mary L. Washington, Ph.D. Baltimore City

From:
8/29/2008 4:31:39 PM

I live in the State of Arizona. That's just 2 of the reasons why I volunteer for the DNC and vote for Barack Obama! JustBTru in AZ
From:
10/10/2008 5:50:58 PM

Did Senator Obama mention Dr. Martin Luther King's name. I'm aware that John Lewis spoke, etc, etc. I'm also aware that Senator Obama used some of Dr. King's phraseology, but I'm not sure whether I heard him mention his name and a more direct reference to Dr. King's speech, impact on his life, etc. It seems as though I heard him refer to "the Preacher." Was that Dr. King. How can I get a copy of the full text of the speech. Thank you.
From:
8/30/2008 6:19:27 AM