AP - Last time ballots were cast in New Hampshire's presidential primary, hardly anyone in the U.S. knew the name Barack Obama. Now he is a leading candidate for the Democratic nomination hoping that momentum will propel him to become the first black president. The historic nature of Obama's candidacy ...
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| Obama looks to make history AP - Last time ballots were cast in New Hampshire's presidential primary, hardly anyone in the U.S. knew the name Barack Obama. Now he is a leading candidate for the Democratic nomination hoping that momentum will propel him to become the first black president. The historic nature of Obama's candidacy and his Iowa victory over the most powerful family in Democratic politics generated an excitement about his campaign that he hoped would be difficult for rivals to counter. Obama's campaign grew into a celebrated spectacle after his win in Iowa. People lined up for blocks in towns across New Hampshire in recent days to hear him speak. Everybody loves a winner, and those who are attended often talked about the chance to see history being made. "I want to tell my grandkids about how I saw this campaign," said 22-year-old Emily Webster, among those at a rally at Dartmouth College on Thursday. One young woman attending the event fainted while Obama was onstage. The candidate held up the event for a full nine minutes while authorities attended to her, watching from the stage with a furrowed brow until she was taken out on a stretcher. Comedian Larry David, who happened to be in the crowd wearing an Obama campaign button, broke the silence by dryly remarking, "Sinatra had the same effect on people." Colin Powell, President Bush's first secretary of state, says he too is excited and impressed by Obama, telling PBS talk-show host Tavis Smiley in an interview broadcast Monday, "Let's enjoy this moment where a person like Barack Obama can knock down all of these old barriers that people thought existed with respect to the opportunities that are available to African-Americans." Six weeks ago, Hillary Rodham Clinton appeared headed for the party's nomination. Now the New York senator and her husband are trying to keep Obama's train from rolling to the nomination. Former President Clinton sniffed that his campaign is a "fairy tale." Obama's life could be described that way. It was not without hardships — his father left the family when he was 2 years old to return to his native Kenya, and Obama struggled as a fatherless black child growing up in Hawaii. "If you think about it, the odds of me being here standing before you as a presidential candidate are very slim," Obama often tells voters. "I was raised by a single mom and my grandparents, and we weren't born into money or privilege. What they gave me was love and an education and hope." He got an Ivy League education and eventually a career in politics — but he never had a serious Republican opponent. Going forward, the scrutiny and intensity will be unlike anything he's faced. Obama stopped by a polling site in Manchester, N.H., on Tuesday, shaking hands with his supporters and those holding signs for other candidates. Three burly supporters of John Edwards were beaming as they shook the front-runner's hand and wished him luck. Obama correctly calculated they were from the Steelworkers union that endorsed Edwards four months ago. "See you in the general," Obama said, hinting they would eventually be with him. ___ On the Net: Obama campaign: http://www.barackobama.com source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080109/ap_po/obama [link] | ||||
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