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Retired banker Charles Lewis of Evanston, Ill., urged Obama to run for president, even though others said it was too early in Obama’s career. (Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff)

Obama’s rapid rise to eminence

He’ll make his speech in Denver Thursday as the first African-American to win his party’s nod.

By Peter Grier and Alexandra Marks  |  Staff writers/ August 27, 2008 edition

Reporter Peter Grier lists the things he thinks Sen. Barack Obama should do when he gives his nomination acceptance speech.

Reporter Peter Grier


Washington and Denver – Barack Obama has risen from obscurity to fame as fast as – maybe faster than – any major party presidential nominee in modern times.

Eight years ago he was nobody from nowhere, nationally speaking. Fresh off defeat in a congressional primary, Senator Obama wasn’t even a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles. He drifted through L.A.’s Staples Center like an afterthought, watching most of the speeches on TV.

Now he can see history approaching. On Thursday, he’ll step in front of a roaring crowd at Denver’s Invesco Field as the first African-American to win his party’s nod. To his supporters, that will be a turning point in its own right – the kind of moment you make your children watch, so that in later years they can say they remember.

“Yes, he’s come up fast, but not fast enough for me,” says Sally Shaheen Joseph, a convention delegate from Flint, Mich., and retired mother of five.

But velocity of success does not necessarily equate to victory in November. Obama may be famous for his orations to large crowds, but in his acceptance speech he will still be introducing himself (via television) to the largest audience he’s ever talked to in his life.

That’s a tough order. To be successful, he may need to do more than prove he can deliver applause lines to 80,000 people primed and ready to cheer.

“The thing he needs to do is humanize himself, so voters see him as a person instead of a mythical figure,” says Darrell West, director of governance studies at the Brookings Institution.

If they’d seen Obama eight years ago, those voters would not have confused him with, say, Zeus. He’d lost his 2000 bid to unseat incumbent Democratic Rep. Bobby Rush by a margin of 2 to 1.

As a junior state senator, Obama still had some electoral status. But according to the scenes he paints in his memoirs, he was an outsider on the national Democratic stage, someone who could barely get in the door at the convention venue – literally.

Charles Lewis met him a few years afterward. Lewis – an Illinois investment banker, now retired – says he’d heard good things about a little-known state senator who was thinking of running for the US Senate.

Mr. Lewis and his wife invited Obama to lunch. They were impressed.

“It was hard to imagine that five years from then he’d be running for president, but it was also immediately apparent that he was a very unusual guy in intellect, temperament, and worldview,” says Lewis, who is now on Obama’s finance committee.

By 2004, Obama was coming up. He’d won the Democratic primary to fill an open US Senate seat from Illinois, and his initial GOP opponent dropped out due to allegations of questionable personal behavior. A campaign appearance with Sen. John Kerry led to an invitation to deliver the keynote speech at the Democratic convention in Boston.

The rest is history. He did well on the national stage and won in November, while Kerry lost.

Since then “he’s risen incredibly fast,” says Mr. West of Brookings.

Like Ronald Reagan in 1980, Obama this year has benefited from a grass roots political revolt, says West. In 1980, Reagan surfed a wave of antigovernment feeling all the way to the White House. In 2008, Obama, as an outsider candidate, benefited from a similar wave of antiwar feeling among Democrats and a general desire for government change, says the Brookings analyst.

But prior to his election, Ronald Reagan had served as governor of California for eight years, and he’d traveled the country, speaking on politics, for decades. Perhaps the only recent president whose political ascent was as fast as Obama’s was Dwight Eisenhower, according to Kenneth Collier, an associate professor of political science at Stephen F. Austin State University, in Nacogdoches, Texas.

Of course, at the time he began his political career, Eisenhower was already world famous, having helped win World War II.

Jimmy Carter had served as a governor of a small state, but at the time of the 1976 Iowa caucuses he was still seen as “Jimmy who?”

“Some people travel a quick path from outside Washington to the White House,” says Mr. Collier. “Remember, part of George Bush’s original electoral appeal was his ‘outsider’ Texas status.”

( More politics stories )

Comments

1. lucy | 08.27.08

Listen up folks…he’s not 1/2 black,
he’s just too GREEN…and ineligible to run if in fact
he is not a natural-born citizen. So with that said….
we VOTE McCain all the way let’s just do this and get it over
Please! It’s simple and it the best for the USA.
GO MCCAIN

2. Kevoh | 08.27.08

LMAO Nobama will never win.

3. John | 08.27.08

Obama Camp need to write more of this kind of stories. It moves peopel…to hope, love,… These stories make me know Obama very well in the begning and I’m his passionate supporter now.

Yes we can

4. Sean | 08.27.08

If anyone isn’t a natural born citizen, it’s McCain. He was born in Panama, remember? He’s only “American” because his parents are US citizens (jus sanguinis vs. jus soli). This same issue came up with Goldwater over 40 years ago. How conveniently some forget and I wasn’t even born yet!

Any way you slice it this is an historical election - a literal African American running against someone born outside the United States. No wonder McCain is softer than most Republicans on immigration reform; there are many who would otherwise consider him less than American under “normal” circumstances.

5. Rionn Fears Malechem | 08.27.08

Lucy,
It’s John McCain who wasn’t native-born, and may be ineligible to run. Panamanians didn’t have US citizenship. I believe you’re confusing the candidates. Barack Obama was born in Hawai’i, which was a state even in 1961.
Ion

6. Patrick in Kentucky | 08.27.08

Congratulations Barack Obama. You have made history.

The naysayers who swallow the McCain smears hook line and sinker are no different from those who supported Nixon to the end.

Obama will bring intelligence and competence to the White House. Remember what that might look like? I know it’s difficult under Bush and the Republicans but that’s what he brings. It’s time for wisdom and integrity to be returned to the White House.

7. shirl | 08.27.08

Obama is the right leader for the 21st century for our beloved country. A senior citizen, I have watched with horror as the Bushies and now the McBushies have driven the US further and further into calamity. We have squandered our wealth and worse our honor and reputation; we have mortgaged our grandchildren’s future; and our men and women are maimed and killed for a war we should not have entered. Please, dear fellow citizens, work with our better angels and turn the stained page over to a different politics and a better world. Stop already with the McSlime demonization of a good man and of good Americans and throw the scoundrals out.

8. lucy | 08.27.08

Hey, Rionn-F-M word is out since Obama said last night as he introduced Joe Biden that he was born and raised in KENYA by a single Mother…so what ya think about that ya all. Check the internet and see what ya find girly it is now everywhere….but you just keep your tunnel vision….works for you?
This is really going to be some fun for all of the above and drinks for everyone….on me!

9. Deb | 08.28.08

Lucy maybe that is the problem…too much drinking not enough reading of the facts. Senator Obama was born in Hawaii. His FATHER was born in Kenya. Obama did not travel to Kenya until he finished college and after his father died.
While they lived in Hawaii, after his father left them, Barack lived with his mother (a single mom) who received food stamps to make ends meet.
Please get your facts right if you are going to commentate.

10. Sea Ration | 08.28.08

To quote the famous newscaster Dan Rather, “All hat, no cattle!” That describes Obama.

11. bob | 08.28.08

what is wrong with everyone. Obama sucks

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