COLUMBIA, S.C., Dec. 12, 2007

Hope Is Spreading Among Obama's Fans

Washington Post: Candidate's Message, Rising Numbers Are Turning Skeptics Into Believers

  • Play CBS Video Video Standing "O"vation

    Oprah Winfrey campaigns for Democratic Sen. Barack Obama, hoping to give him an edge over Sen. Hillary Clinton as they are neck and neck in the polls. Dean Reynolds reports.

  • Video Climate Change: Obama

    In a CBS Evening News special series, "Primary Questions," Katie Couric asked Sen. Barack Obama whether he is concerned about global climate change.

  • Video Obama Buoyed By Oprah

    They Call It O-mentum: with Oprah At His Side, Barack Obama Begins To Chip Away At Hillary Clinton's Lead. Dean Reynolds reports.

  • Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., his wife Michelle, left, and Oprah Winfrey wave to the crowd at the end of a rally in Manchester, N.H., Dec. 9, 2007.  (AP)

  • Photo Essay Barack Obama

    A look at the life and meteoric rise of the president-elect.

  • News Tools Campaign Calendar

    The latest list of primary and caucus dates as states continue jockeying for position.

From Our Partner:
(Washingtonpost.com)  This story was written by Jose Antonio Vargas.


Change. The word on which Sen. Barack Obama has staked his candidacy. A word that's peppered in all of his speeches and plastered around any Obama event. A word that attracts and enthralls and, in some cases, challenges. Change? What's going to change? Are voters going to change?

Melissa Green, 45, a native South Carolinian, has continually thought about it. Months before Obama came to Columbia with Oprah Winfrey, Green's son, 17-year-old Trenton, the senior class president of Lakewood High, pushed her to get to know Obama. Then she read Obama's book, "The Audacity of Hope," and started closely following his campaign.

And change was on her mind Sunday afternoon as she arrived at Williams-Brice Stadium, fresh from St. John AME Church, where she is pastor, to watch Obama and Winfrey share the stage. Their audience of nearly 30,000 -- huge for a primary campaign -- was an ocean of mostly black faces like hers but also many white ones.

"I'd never seen a crowd like that here before, ever, in a political rally," Green says.

And that powerful little word -- change -- still was on her mind Monday morning as she got up in her home in the rural, mostly black town of Rimini, about 50 miles southeast of Columbia, on her way to teach at Manchester Elementary in nearby Pinewood.

She had planned to back Sen. Hillary Clinton. She wanted to vote for a winner; that seemed to be Clinton. She worried that perceptions of race would derail Obama's campaign, if not sooner, then surely later. But Sunday got her thinking. And Monday, she put her fears aside and declared herself "changed," saying, "I'm settled on Obama now."

Obama, of course, isn't the only candidate selling change. They all do. Clinton bills herself as a "change agent"; at least that's what her husband calls her. If either Obama or Clinton wins the nomination, the change that's really certain is that some kind of glass ceiling -- of gender or race -- will be broken.

But the political season's a-changin', and for now it's changing in Obama's favor. As spring turned to summer and then to fall, the race for the Democratic presidential nomination seemed less like an actual race and more like the coronation of another Clinton. Her lead in the national polls was commanding; less so, but still largely solid, was her dominance in the early voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire.

At one point here in the Palmetto State, Clinton held a double-digit lead over Obama. And in a state where more than half of Democratic voters are black and nearly a third are black women, Clinton, for a time, was the candidate of choice among African Americans.

No more.

A Mason-Dixon poll on Sunday of South Carolina Democrats shows Clinton leading Obama 28 to 25 percent, well within the five-point margin of error, and Obama leading Clinton among blacks 37 to 21 percent. With polls in Iowa showing a three-way race among Clinton, Obama and former senator John Edwards, and Clinton's lead over Obama narrowing in New Hampshire, South Carolina's Democratic primary on Jan. 26 is proving all the more crucial.

"The tide has turned, the momentum has shifted to his direction. You can feel it, you can feel it in this state, you can definitely feel it among black folk in this state," says state Rep. Gilda Cobb-Hunter, a fixture of South Carolina politics for more than 15 years. For months she's remained neutral in the race but now leans toward Obama.

"Look, black folk had to fight, had to fight hard, to get a vote in the ballot box. We're pragmatic," Cobb-Hunter continues. "For a while black folk here in the South couldn't imagine that white folk would ever vote for a black man. But white America can. And black America is realizing that."

"Oprahpalooza," as the weekend-long caravan was quickly dubbed, turned out to be the campaign event of the year, eclipsing the Clintons' first dual appearance on the campaign trail at the Iowa State Fair in July. Not only because of the sheer vastness of the crowd, but also because of its symbolism, in light of America's ugly racial history.

Here was Winfrey telling us about one of her "favorite things" -- and for the first time it's a presidential candidate and his name is Barack Obama.

It was the most influential woman in pop culture vouching for a man who could possibly be elected president. And both are black. But what's unanswered is whether Oprah's crossover racial appeal -- apparent from her media empire -- will bolster a campaign already pushing a racially transcendent message.

To witness the Oprah-Obama show up close as it traveled from heavily white Des Moines to heavily black Columbia was to see that crossover appeal at work. Surely, voters don't support Obama only because he's black, the same way Clinton's followers don't root for her only because she's a woman. Yet never before has a black candidate appeared to have such a strong shot at winning a party's nomination.

This is the moment when black and white voters in these early voting states are poised to answer some hard questions: Are we over race, that still uncured boil on America's psyche? Are we ready to break from our racial and racist past?

"I don't see race when I see Oprah, I don't see race when I see Barack," says Concetta Morales, 47, an Italian American who grew up in Long Island and moved to Des Moines in the late 1980s.

Over dinner at a Thai restaurant, Morales meets with Beverly Ellis, 62, a longtime friend. An hour or so earlier on Saturday in Des Moines, the two attended the Obama rally together with some friends. "I'm not going to lie, Oprah was part of the reason," says Morales, who subscribes to O magazine. The group was undecided before Saturday's event; Morales, for one, has been torn between Obama and Clinton for months. But watching Winfrey and Obama at Hy-Vee Hall might have cinched the deal.

"She's omnipresent, her magazine, her show, the books she recommends. She's so cross-cultural, so beyond partisanship," says Morales, a local artist and muralist. "Her supporting Barack means that she trusts his values."

Adds Ellis, a retired elementary school teacher whose parents are Polish immigrants: "I've been looking at Joe Biden and I've been looking at Barack Obama. When I think of Obama, I think of someone who's a change agent, someone who can lead change. Not just from the status quo in Washington -- you know, lobbyists having too much pull -- but from our history, our racial history."

Jason Jones couldn't believe the crowd downtown on Saturday afternoon. "I don't think Iowa was prepared," says the 24-year-old high school social studies teacher, a transplant from Kansas City, Mo. And he couldn't believe what he read and reread on the Dec. 2 front page of the Des Moines Register. Obama led the newspaper's latest poll.

Obama? Over Clinton? In Iowa?

"I don't want to come off like I don't have faith in America, but I seriously thought that Hillary Clinton had a better chance being the first woman president than Barack Obama being the first black president," says Jones, who is black.

"But after Saturday, I've told a couple of my friends, 'Obama really has a shot at this. He could really make this happen.' "

From Biden, Jones has switched to Obama.

The past, as William Faulkner once observed, never really dies in the South. It's somehow always vividly, brazenly alive. It wasn't until 2000, after years of protest from the black community, that the Confederate flag atop the South Carolina statehouse was taken down.

James Thompson, who's 63 and black, remembers a time when, right there on Highway 17 in Charleston, a service station had three bathrooms: one for white females, another for white males, and another for "coloreds," male and female.

Elizabeth Montgomery, who's 55 and white, remembers the first black kid she'd ever seen in her school, Kingstree High. His name was Thomas and "he was very quiet and very shy and kept to himself." She was afraid to approach him, she said. What would people say?

Thompson and Montgomery, both Obama supporters, attended Sunday's rally in Columbia. Both came because of Obama, not Oprah -- "though Oprah," Thompson says, "is icing on the cake."

Montgomery, of Pawleys Island, has been cheering for Obama since the night she watched him give the keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention in 2004. Standing in the living room, eyes fixed on her TV, she wept as she listened.

"There's not a liberal America and a conservative America -- there's the United States of America," he said. "There's not a black America and white America and Latino America and Asian America; there's the United States of America." Montgomery, an elementary school teacher, was sold. Sunday's rally was her sixth time volunteering for Obama events.

At first Thompson, a retired credit administrator from GM, supported Clinton, but the more he heard about Obama, and the more he heard Obama speak -- on TV, on the radio, talking about Iraq, education, health care -- the more he admired him. Seven years ago, when President Bush was first inaugurated, Thompson watched the ceremony on television at his Greenville home. He sat with his only grandson, 5-year-old Jamal, on his lap.

"I told him he could be the president of the United States if he so desired. The sky's the limit. Anything is possible."

And now, there's Obama.

"Imagine," says Thompson, "they're calling him the future president of the United States. Imagine."

© 2007 The Washington Post Company
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
Add a Comment See all 123 Comments
by eddie1515 December 15, 2007 3:33 PM EST
Help Unite The Republican Party.....Nominate Hillary Clinton "08"
Reply to this comment
by kevzgrl December 15, 2007 12:40 PM EST
"Hillary Clinton has run her whole campaign on the accomplishments of her husband."
Posted by dinslc

Accomplishments my foot! What accomplishments? NAFTA?

She is running her campaign on his "popularity", thats even dubious" posted by thgdriver

You are soooo right - I always thought that a woman could make just as good a president as a man (and in some cases, better) but not THIS woman. She is running scared right now, and she SHOULD be. Anyone who BELIEVES her lame-a-ss "those statements were not authorized and I knew nothing about them" crapola in regard to the mud her campaign staff are throwing at Mr. Obama, please step to the rear of the bus and jump out the window. She KNEW they were doing it, she KNEW they were going to say it on national TV and all her backpedaling now is about as convincing as Richard Nixon''s "I am not a crook" comedy routine. Take some time to research Mr. Obama''s record, and his accomplishments for Illinois and for the US since he became Senator. He has done a H-ell of a lot more in a few short years than Billary will ever accomplish.
Reply to this comment
by mudrose-2009 December 14, 2007 12:01 PM EST
i just do not want osama, oh i mean obama, to get the nomination
Posted by bdrlnt4rl

It''s all up to President Soros. He''ll keep it pretty even between Osama and Billary. She hasn''t a pray, neither does he. Don''t be suprised if the third azzhold rises up, Soros likes these games. They''re all in his pocket, including Harry and Pewlosi.
Reply to this comment
by bdrlnt4rl December 14, 2007 11:49 AM EST
i just do not want osama, oh i mean obama, to get the nomination
Reply to this comment
by mudrose-2009 December 14, 2007 11:48 AM EST
I think the Billary should not only get the jitters, I think she should contract leprosy. It''ll look good on her.
Reply to this comment
by rowdytexan2 December 14, 2007 4:08 AM EST
Hillary, get your guts together and fight like the strong woman you are! The bast/ards have tried to take you down for years! A strong competent woman scares the beejeesus out of them, and they''ll be waiting like vultures for any misstep, every man jack of them!

Obama doesn''t have the ability or the power base to turn this country around. He''s not ready YET!

Joe Biden has passed more bi=partisan legislation in the Senate than all the other candidates put together. I don''t hear anybody promoting all the good work he''s done! So don''t tout to me Obama''s legislation like he''s the ONLY one qualified!
Reply to this comment
by rowdytexan2 December 14, 2007 3:59 AM EST
Posted by bobmarisol at 02:50 PM : Dec 13, 2007

"The greater goal was rescue 25 million people from an evil dictatorship and to establish freedom in the middle east."

Bull! The idea was to go into Afghanistan, march across Iraq, and then into Iran, put a pipeline across the middle east and control the oil.

How naive can you be?

The Iraqi''s were better off with Saddam Hussein! He was the ONLY thing that kept the religious fantatics stable in that country. And he fostered many good programs for his people. Those people are NEVER going to live in democracy because they don''t want to. They want to live as a secular country. And their sects have been fighting to decide which one will reign supreme for hundres of years. Right now they don''t even have running water! And all those women the US proclaimed were liberated and got to vote are now being beheaded for not wearing a scarf on their hair and are being made to turn in their weapons after being trained by the US to be policewomen.

Now, you want to tell me we''ve LIBERATED THOSE PEOPLE?

No, we don''t want to run away! We want to do what''s right for the Iraqi''s and for the US. And that is to get out of their business and let them run their country.

And believe me, we will, just as soon as Mr. Bush and Cheney get those oil contracts signed, we''ll be out of there faster than you can whistle Dixie!
Reply to this comment
by dinslc December 14, 2007 3:24 AM EST
Obama has held elected office for 11 years. Obama sponsored over 820 bills while serving in the Illinois senate (from 1996-2004). He authored the most sweeping ethics reform bill passed into law in over 20 years. He sponsored a law enhancing tax credits for low-income workers, negotiated welfare reform and increased subsidies for child care. Obama also led the passage of legislation mandating videotaping of homicide interrogations, and a law to monitor racial profiling by requiring police to record the race of drivers they stopped.
In 2002 Obama spoke out publicly against the war in Iraq, and proceeded to accurately predict the quagmire of Iraq. Obama was elected to the United States senate in 2004. In his first year he authored 152 bills, and co-sponsored another 427. These included the Coburn-Obama government Transparency Act of 2006 (signed into law by Bush), The Lugar-Obama initiatives (working with republican, Richard Lugar) aimed at nuclear non-proliferation and conventional weapons threat reduction. He is one of only 2 lawmakers sponsoring a campaign finance reform bill that currently sits in the senate. There are 890 bills in Obama%u2019s name since he entered the Senate. He has Cosponsored 1096. Obama currently serves on the Senate Committees for Foreign Relations; Health, Education, Labor and Pensions; Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs; and Veterans'''' Affairs. He has a degree in International Relations, a Law degree, and taught constitutional law for 10 years.

Reply to this comment
by hissteps4u December 14, 2007 3:18 AM EST
Zoot you have to work on that reverse physiology stuff your a bit lacking in facts and ability LOL
Reply to this comment
by hissteps4u December 14, 2007 3:18 AM EST
Zoot you have to work on that reverse physiology stuff your a bit lacking in facts and ability LOL
Reply to this comment
See all 123 Comments

Exclusive Webshow

Author Thomas Friedman on Obama's Afghanistan plan and the war on terror. Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: