From The Road
June 3, 2008 10:09 PM

Obama's Victory Speech

(CBS)
From CBS News' Maria Gavrilovic:

ST. PAUL, MINN. -- As he boarded the plane in Chicago, a visibly proud Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, already knew that he had clinched the Democratic nomination. A campaign aide emailed his victory speech shortly before taking off for Minneapolis and the first line read, “Tonight we mark the end of one historic journey with the beginning of another – a journey that will bring a new and better day to America. Tonight I can stand before you and say that I will be the Democratic nominee for President of the United States.”

On the flight from Chicago to Minneapolis, Obama and his aides brought their friends and family to celebrate the night. David Axelrod, chief strategist to the campaign described the evening as “surreal” and “extraordinary.”

“We’re going to celebrate tonight and then we’re going to wake up tomorrow and start all over again,” Axelrod told reporters. “We’re not in this simply to break a barrier; we’re in this to try and change the country.”

Obama chatted with confidant and senior adviser Valerie Jarrett on the flight as well as others, as he smiled and took quick glances at the press. Axelrod told reporters that Obama’s mood is happy but steady. “He never gets too high and he never gets too low,” Axelrod explained.

Perhaps Obama is wise to remain steady tonight because as he made his short trip to Minneapolis to claim his victory, John McCain was already taking jabs at him in a speech in New Orleans.

Obama later acknowledged that one tough chapter in the election process has closed but that an even tougher chapter is about to begin. “The journey will be difficult. The road will be long. I face this challenge with profound humility, and knowledge of my own limitations,” Obama said tonight at the Xcel Energy Center, the site of this year's Republican National Convention.

Going forward, he promised not to fight a personal battle with his presumptive Republican opponent despite expecting personal shots from McCain. “My differences with him are not personal; they are with the policies he has proposed in this campaign,” Obama said.

“The other side will come here in September and offer a very different set of policies and positions, and that is a debate I look forward to. It is a debate the American people deserve. But what you don’t deserve is another election that’s governed by fear, and innuendo, and division.”

Both Obama and his aides are looking forward tonight, and clearly have shifted their focus away from Hillary Clinton. Obama praised her tonight, saying that Clinton has “made history in this campaign” and said the lengthy primary has strengthened the Democratic Party. “Our party and our country are better off because of her, and I am a better candidate for having had the honor to compete with Hillary Rodham Clinton,” he said.

His aides believe that the process has also made Obama a stronger candidate and their staff a more formidable team. “I feel like we’re a tougher group for having gone through this exercise, and we’re very well prepared for anything our Republican friends might throw at us.”
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by omaar-101 June 4, 2008 2:33 AM PDT
Obama`s Speech was Great !!!

He was humble, gracious & respecting to his Foe, his (R) Contender, if you want to call him that.

His speech was universal and people around the World are captivated by this man.

Obama is Favored, All around the World.

He will get America`s Global Respect back, where it Belongs.

I saw Hillary Clinton`s Bitter and Ungracious & Contentious Speech and I said to my Wife, thsi Woman does not Deserve to be on his Ticket as VP, Sebelius or Veteran & (Rep.) Sen. Webb Deserves that Slot.

What a Great Speech, what a Great Coming Together of People, American People of All Colors.
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by darkmtoto-2009 June 4, 2008 3:00 AM PDT
The Victory Speech by Barrack Obama was great and quite characteristic of his persona with he has exemplified throughout the long drawn out democratic race.
It showed the degree to which he has matured politically through the campaign and gives the republicans a glimpse of what exactly they are up against.
His speech focused on the American People as a whole whereas
Notably the speeches given by Sen. Clinton and Sen. McCaine both seemed to focus on their own campaign agendas.
Cudos Sen. Obama
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by gaby43 June 4, 2008 7:32 AM PDT
A very down to earth speech and it shows that HILLARY CLINTON is concerned by all the aspects in life, no matter how small they are. with the decision that the DNC has taken, Health, working conditions, children, third age citizens, religion, whether they are jews, catholics etc., from all ages, no matter their economical conditions, ALL CITIZENS SHOULD HAVE THE SAME RIGHTS AT THE TIME OF VOTING. She is trying to make people understand that for her respect and rights to all citizens, are the basis of a DEMOCRACY. She is fighting for that, to restore the real AMERICAN DEMOCRACY.

All Journalists and owners of TV chains and newspapers, should place this question before them. United States politics should be the mirror and example to the world, and thereby the news on politics should speak the truth, no veils, no overshadow the other candidate''s principles, because they want desperately for Obama to win. You cannot PUSH DEMOCRACY.

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by gaby43 June 4, 2008 7:37 AM PDT
All votes should be counted, like it happens in democratic countries all over the world, that is where Democracy stands.

Her speech talks about principles in life that are very important and a US citizen should guide its life on the basis of principles and ALSO teach their children the importance of respect, since a younger age and the basis of religion which forms a person since a younger age, until it becomes an adult. This makes a human being stronger and makes a country proud. TO BECOME PROUD OF THE DEMOCRACY that should exist in the United States.

That is what Hillary Clinton is demonstrating in this campaign, not only to the United States but to the world that watches her very closely: To fight to the end, UNTIL IN A DEMOCRATIC WAY WE KNOW "who is best prepared to finally become the Democrat candidate in the US elections, at the Convention in August", with NO VEILS TO COVER IT, very transparent, so as NOT TO DISCOURAGE DEMOCRATS TO LEAVE THE PARTY, because the Superdelegates did not know how to handle this situation in a very Democratic way.
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by gaby43 June 4, 2008 7:38 AM PDT
When the DNC committee voted to restore the delegations of both Florida and Michigan at the party%u2019s nominating convention, but gave each delegate only half a vote, THERE IS A QUESTION that stays in the minds of the American people and future voters. Are FLORIDA VOTERS NOW CONSIDERED by the Democrats %u201CCITIZENS OF SECOND CLASS%u201D, with the decision that the DNC has taken, in splitting in half their right to vote for Florida.
How about the other delegations representing the rest of States in the United States of America. Are they NOW considered citizens of %u201CFIRST CLASS%u201D, as they will have a complete vote at the Party%u2019s Nominating Convention. WHAT KIND OF A DEMOCRACY IS THIS, where the voice of the voters do not count. A group of 30 people (the DNC) decides what is right and what is wrong.

Also it is time for the Democratic Party AT THE CONVENTION, to accept that the DNC system does not work in a fair way, so as to represent the national vote which goes overwhelmingly to Hillary Clinton. What about the decision of voters. All voters of Hillary Clinton believe she should bring this issue to the CONVENTION, it is a right to defend the votes of Florida and Michigan citizens and maintain the PRINCIPLE OF DEMOCRACY. No veils to hide the reality in democracy.
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by gaby43 June 4, 2008 7:40 AM PDT
At this stage we believe that a lot of stories are filtered by the Obama''s staff, a generation with no principles, only with the spirit to confuse voters, with an only purpose of gain this election, no matter at what price. When we citizens look back at the past days: WE SHOULD QUESTION OURSELVES whether it was also a timely decision of Obama to leave his Christian church. To most citizens WHO HAVE A CHURCH AND FEELS STRONG ABOUT IT: think this does not sound real at all; why Obama did not leave his church INMMEDIATELY, if he is a man of principles, he should have done it inmediately and in a very discreet way. Not making it know by speaking about it on television: everything counts IN THIS ELECTIONS!!!! What about faith, church, principles that American people have; respect in these elections.

Where is Democracy going in the United States if it does not respect "principles and their citizens'' votes", that is what really counts. Hope the Superdelegates have a moment to reflect on this, and at the CONVENTION finally PUTS THE VEIL ASIDE, and speak what really concerns them, which is THE POPULAR VOTE IN THIS ELECTION, and who is the best candidate to become President of the United States of America, who can beat the Republicans.
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by jack3213 June 4, 2008 8:01 AM PDT
HIS LAST VICTORY SPEECH.
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by missglo June 4, 2008 8:09 AM PDT
He showed us why he was chosen last night. As usually it was all about Unity. Hillary is still promoting Division. And the two Do Not Mix.
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by jack3213 June 4, 2008 9:04 AM PDT
It would be "HORRIFIC" if Obama should win the general election. The supporters do not understand what they are supporting: Higher taxes, socialized government, an unsafe country with an inexperianced hypocrit, and a man who does not "get" what it means to be qualified to lead a nation at war. MCCAIN 2008.
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by afsc30574 June 4, 2008 9:35 AM PDT
Sen. Barack Obama hold''s very little appeal with Non-Democrat Whites, and less appeal for White Democrats than before the primaries. Most Americans - and I mean all races - don''t think in terms of race. We are not perfect in this, sometimes we fail; but that doesn''t change that we are fair-minded people, and that is who we are trying to be. Sen. Obama is all about race, and only about race. Not because of his skin color, but because that is who he has chosen to be. His book shows his intolerance of Whites, his demand that he be seen as a victim, and his sense of entitlement. As we hear more comments like those about "typical white pople", more Americans of all races will reject Sen. Obama''s race-based ideals.
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by hasmay-2009 June 4, 2008 10:01 AM PDT
OBAMA CONGZ BIGTIME!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I expected it.

To clinton''s supporters pls lets forget our differences, join hands and secure the white house back; ofcourse by supporting OBAMA against Mc Cain.
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by chinchin6 June 4, 2008 10:15 AM PDT
Obama speech was great. i have to give him a lot of credit, most people including myself, could not go up there and praise a person who
has just insulted you and disrepected you and your18 mil voters, I guess she is trying to
blackmail him with her clan of female voters,Hold your ground obama and send her back to NY.
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by gocubs58 June 4, 2008 10:33 AM PDT
gaby43 - You forget that in 2007 that ALL the democratic candidates - INCLUDING HILLARY, SIGNED AND SUPPORTED penalizing Florida and Michigan.
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by gocubs58 June 4, 2008 10:36 AM PDT
afsc30574 - What about Sen. Obama''s landslide victory in Iowa, a state that is 98% white? I get so sick of hearing that the white population is not supporting Obama....it''s simply SPIN, nothing more.
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by mattcat25 June 4, 2008 10:37 AM PDT
America, this is our moment. This is our time.

it''s on.
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by novelenes June 4, 2008 11:00 AM PDT
Somebody, please, tell the Obamas to stop clapping for themselves. It''s unpresidential. Leaders of countries politely wave to acknowledge an audience; they don''t join applause that began for them. Standup comics, movie stars and Celine Dion get away with it, but it''s still tacky.
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by novelenes June 4, 2008 12:12 PM PDT
Somebody, please, tell the Obamas to stop clapping for themselves. It''s unpresidential. Leaders of countries politely wave to acknowledge an audience; they don''t join applause that began for them. Standup comics, movie stars and Celine Dion get away with it, but it''s still tacky.
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by omaar-101 June 4, 2008 12:40 PM PDT
Note: Um actually its White America that DOES want him to be President, if Whites did''nt, the 13 Million Blacks in this country could''nt get him past the Front Door in Iowa let alone winning the nomination.

Barack Obama appeals to a Very Wide Demographic, that''s why he''s wining. He won handily in Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota and Iowa all Very White States.

As much as some would like to make this a Black vs White thing, it really is not.

The fact that the majority of Obama supporters are White bears that out.

Total black turnout has been 21.4% according to

www.fivethirtyeight.com

Since the black census population in the US is around 13.5 Million that means about 3 million Blacks went to the primary polls. of those, 90% voted for Barack.

That means of his nearly 18 million votes, 15.3 million were Non-Black or about 85%. Feel free to check my math.



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by omaar-101 June 4, 2008 12:43 PM PDT
Posted by novelenes: Tell Clinton to Accept Defeat, with Grace, Dignity & Self Respect.

My Bad, Its Too Late For That Now !!

Last Night, She Screwed that up as Well !!
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by PacificGatePost June 4, 2008 2:37 PM PDT
OBAMA''S DISTURBING TREND

If he wants to get to the White House, Obama needs to reverse his current trend as he heads into battle with McCain.

http://pacificgatepost.blogspot.com/2008/06/concern-for-obamas-down-trend.html


He also needs to tap Hillary for VP.

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by toldyouso12 June 4, 2008 4:34 PM PDT
He also needs to tap Hillary for VP.


Posted by james-raider at 02:37 PM : Jun 04, 2008


Save it--nobody wants the *** of the year as VP. Her on the ticket will make his campaign of change a lie--and despite the lie of friendship Hillary says--Hillary is not liked or wanted. She is divisive, she lies, she is dishonest, she reneges on promises, she changes the rules, she injects divisions about race and gender--and then there are her real negatives and liabilities.

She is a drag that he could not overcome, because based on the eternal screwww around of her on the DNC and Obama and the threat to "select her as VP or else" Obama could never articulate how he planned on reigning her in and controlling her.

The Republicans would paint him as a token and the presidency as Hillary and Bill Clinton--then you''d see all the Independents (or most) leave. After that, the GOP would replay the racist innunendo of Bill and Hill and their staff--then you''d see blacks either leave or stay home--finally Hillary would get the same votes Ferraro got when she ran with Mondale--only the faithful, which might translate into 13 to 50 electoral votes out of a possible 500+.

She killed herself long ago--now as a rotting corpse--she expects Obama and his to breathe life back into her and her debt ridden campaign. NO!!! NEVER!! If Obama does it, he truly will lose.
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by toldyouso12 June 4, 2008 4:37 PM PDT
You cannot PUSH DEMOCRACY.


Posted by gaby43 at 07:32 AM : Jun 04, 2008


Gee, Hillary should have remembered THAT before she lied and reneged on her pledges against Florida and Michigan--and she should remember it now, when she wants to force Obama to let her be on his ticket or else.
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by toldyouso12 June 4, 2008 4:42 PM PDT
afsc30574 - What about Sen. Obama''''s landslide victory in Iowa, a state that is 98% white? I get so sick of hearing that the white population is not supporting Obama....it''''s simply SPIN, nothing more.

Posted by gocubs58 at 10:36 AM : Jun 04, 2008


Blacks only make up 13% of the electorate and according to records, only about 55% of blacks eligible to vote actually voted. The majority of Obama''s support came from Whites and other nonblacks. As was shown today on Msnbc, the actual demographic breakdown shows Obama netting way more states than Hillary and most were almost all white states. He did get the majority of votes that blacks gave out but the majority of his support was from all races. Obama beat out Clinton in Iowa, Montana, Oregon, etc and came close to beating her in Indiana. Clinton carried primarily the northeast and the border states--but Pundits point out, that according to polls, Clinton could NOT carry California today if the elections were held in June as usual.
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by toldyouso12 June 4, 2008 4:44 PM PDT
Somebody, please, tell the Obamas to stop clapping for themselves. It''''s unpresidential. Leaders of countries politely wave to acknowledge an audience; they don''''t join applause that began for them. Standup comics, movie stars and Celine Dion get away with it, but it''''s still tacky.

Posted by novelenes at 11:00 AM : Jun 04, 2008


LOL. WRONG--being petty in a most glorious moment is tacky---try the big picture Sparky--everyone including the candidate and his rivals should be clapping, this was truly historic--try to let go of your petty, shallow observances--even if just for a few minutes. LOL
Reply to this comment
by toldyouso12 June 4, 2008 4:46 PM PDT
Since the black census population in the US is around 13.5 Million that means about 3 million Blacks went to the primary polls. of those, 90% voted for Barack.

That means of his nearly 18 million votes, 15.3 million were Non-Black or about 85%. Feel free to check my math.




Posted by omaar-101 at 12:40 PM : Jun 04, 2008


The black population census is approximately 32 million to date with Hispanics at over 48 million. The black population make up less than 13% of the voting electorate and if 21% of that number voted, it would have been about 6 million votes, the remaining 12+ million would be other races for Obama.
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by toldyouso12 June 4, 2008 4:53 PM PDT
Somebody, please, tell the Obamas to stop clapping for themselves. It''''''''s unpresidential. Leaders of countries politely wave to acknowledge an audience; they don''''''''t join applause that began for them. Standup comics, movie stars and Celine Dion get away with it, but it''''''''s still tacky.

Posted by novelenes at 11:00 AM : Jun 04, 2008


You are an obvious Clinton supporter so your lack of education on this issue is understandable. Here is a clue:

Obama''s platform is change by the people, for the people as in "YES, WE CAN!!!" So.. When the people clapped and congratulated him on his victory, he and Michelle returned the accolades because the victory was not his--it was theirs. Each applauded the other, because without each, this could not have happened. We know the nuance thing is hard for you to understand--guess it would be better if Obama just snapped and snarled and whined and lied and pretended to be something he is not like HRC--but then--that would not have been Obama. This was a night of Ovation, not just for him but for all who believed or wanted to believe in his message. The victory was ours--whereas HRC began by being introduced as the "next President of the United State" Nice concession speech, right up there with Bush''s "Mission accomplished" BS speech. lmao
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by chuckamok June 4, 2008 7:40 PM PDT
With Hill-Bot on the ticket, we''d get to see that wonderful Pub ad - a split screen of her describing that corkscrew landing in Bosnia, sitting on her flak jacket, then dodging sniper fire as she RAN for the limo ... and the footage of the ACTUAL event.

Man, I''m gonna miss that.

;)
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