FEATURE Obama Picks Up Steam
He can float like a butterfly, but can he sting like a bee?
by MARC AMIGONE

Friday
January 4th, 2008, the day after the Iowa caucus, every news channel on
television is talking about Barack Obama. Commentators on Fox
News are debating whether or not Oprah won the election over the other
candidates, Chuck Norris is on screen with Mike Huckabee, and everyone
is showering Barack Obama with praise. What his supporters have
been waiting for all along is finally happening. People are starting to
believe in Barack Obama.
He's been there all along, nipping at the heels of Hillary Clinton,
narrowly edging Jon Edwards and the rest of the democratic field, but
in the weeks approaching the nation's first primary, he caught
fire. His relentlessly hopeful message of "change" resonated with
the people of Iowa, something the whole country eagerly awaits.
The Democratic Party has been waiting for a candidate like Barack Obama
and so has the media. Ever since his speech at the 2004
Democratic convention as a newly elected senator from Illinois, his
name was connected to this election. After John Kerry and Al
Gore, the democrats felt the same "urgency of now" Martin Luther King
channelled into Barack Obama and decided they couldn't trot out another
boring, bland candidate even though Obama was short on
experience. Doubters cared less about experience every day
Obama's camp preached their idealist message, and Iowa bought it hook
line and sinker.
On the news hour with Jim Lehr, the sound cut out during a round table
discussion, and the producers cut to Barack Obama's victory
speech. He talked about kids, senior citizens, and republicans
who have all taken a new interest in politics because of him. His
powerful, passionate, eloquent delivery stood in sharp contrast to
Hillary Clinton's distressed, worried, nagging voice trying to fend off
the effects of a crushing defeat, and Jon Edwards' glowing ebullience
after finishing second.
Obama's timing couldn't have been better. The media went from
doubting him and questioning his experience to praising him
lavishly. Now Obama is taking the lead in New Hampshire, and
America is inching closer and closer to its first African-American
President. With every poll that shows his lead is growing, to
every talking head gushing over him, Obama picks up more and more
steam. All he needs to do now is not screw it up.
The media would be more than happy to rain on his parade much of the
same way they pounced on Howard Dean's mishap in 2004. Every
channel on television might be singing his praises for the next two
weeks, but the nomination is far from his. Any number of things
could happen to derail his hopes, but Obama doesn't appear to be
worried. It's almost as if he's been expecting it all
along. His genuine, calm, level-headed, self-posessed demeanor
hasn't wavered, and it doesn't look like it will be tested anytime
soon.
|