From The Road
January 1, 2008 8:40 PM

One Poll Lifts Obama Campaign Spirits

(CBS)
From CBS News National Correspondent Dean Reynolds, who's covering the Obama campaign

There is nothing like some good poll numbers to turn on -- or even turn around -- a campaign.

Barack Obama's run for the White House was sputtering just days ago. He was thrown back on his heels when the crisis in Pakistan threatened to expose him as a foreign policy neophyte compared to the steady hand image cultivated by Hillary Clinton. There was all sorts of talk about a "surge" by John Edwards.

Obama was drifting. His aides were making comments that suggested a loss was on its way.

One stressed the big crowds Obama was drawing, though big crowds were drawn by George McGovern in the last weeks of the ill-fated campaign against Richard Nixon. Mike Dukakis drew throngs to his appearances but they did not translate into victory in the polls.

Another aide complained about soft-money contributions going to Edwards and being used to flood Iowa television screens with pro-Edwards commercials. His campaign chairman spoke to reporters about Obama's future "viability."

Those are the kind of things losers say. Frontrunners never complain. They have the sun in the morning and the moon at night and couldn't care less what their opponents are doing.

Obama cared a lot about what his opponents were doing. He laced his speeches with attacks on Clinton and Edwards, even naming them, which crosses some imaginary line in political discourse.

But then, with the campaign bracing for another setback, came the Iowa Poll published by the Des Moines Register, the most influential paper in the state.

In an instant, frowns turned to smiles at Obama headquarters. Suddenly, once-sullen campaign officials were in a back-patting mood around reporters they had shunned 24 hours earlier. A fund-raising letter based on the polling numbers was mass-mailed 30 minutes into the New Year.

In Sioux City, a New Year's Day crowd of several hundred turned away from bowl games and came out to see Obama in temperatures that hovered near zero. Bigger crowd in Council Bluffs Tuesday night, again with temperatures as cold as a third place finish on Thursday.

Obama 32 percent. Clinton 25 percent. Edwards 24 percent. For the Obama campaign, that had a very nice ring to it.
Tags:
Obama ,
iowa ,
poll
Topics:
Barack Obama
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by obamagrls-bf January 2, 2008 4:16 AM EST
the Change will be as soon as obama wins presidential contest..as the worlds sees americans respect individuals with tallent .. not race ... OBAMA will win and perhaps it would be the most defining moment in american politics after indipendence.... why should weelect members from Bush and Clinton family for 20 yrs .. 20 yrs is too costly... vote and give a chance to Obama.. before the election he is popular all over world not only USA... vote for change and be sure u never be disapointed .. Obama is a leader by far ...
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by drbob10001 January 2, 2008 4:12 AM EST
Barack Obama has always had the momentum in this election, and it will shine through when he wins the Iowa caucuses. We finally got a poll which accurately measures it by calling independents and cell phone users, in addition to the democratic party establishment. Bravo for the Des Moines Register for tuning in to reality.
Voters reached by this poll are eager to show up to rallies because they are excited by the possibility change from the same old ''you vs them'' bitter politics of the Clinton 90''s or the would be Edwards'' class-warfare divisive 2000''s. These voters will be just as eager to caucus for Obama and stand up as leaders for a new direction in America. Iowans who caucus for Obama are courageous Americans who should be proud of the positive difference they will make for all of us.
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by PulSamsara January 2, 2008 3:49 AM EST
Interesting...


I''m voting for Barack Obama.


It''s time for America to Rise and Shine again.
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by oscar19861 January 2, 2008 3:20 AM EST
I believe that that poll will not be predictive of what will happen Thursday, unless it is a self-fulfilling prophecy phenomenon.

Edwards has the edge, and should win, which will shock everyone, including Edwards.
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