Endorsing Obama

Re: Paul Volcker, Former Fed Chairman, Endorses Obama (Update3)

<font size="5"><Center>Dodd Endorses Obama</font size><font size="4">
Gives Clinton a Gentle Nudge, Out</font size></center>

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Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) and Sen. Christopher Dodd (Conn.) during their
news conference today in Cleveland, where Dodd endorsed Obama, his
former rival, in the Democratic presidential race. (AP)

Washington Post
By Alec MacGillis
February 26, 2008


CLEVELAND -- In issuing his endorsement of Barack Obama here this morning, Chris Dodd made abundantly clear -- in the most decorous and senatorial of terms, to be sure -- that he believes it is getting near time for the Democrats to call it a race.

"This is a moment of unity in our country, a time when we need to come together as the Democratic Party and get behind a candidacy that expresses the hopes, aspirations and ambitions of million and millions of Americans," he said, standing beside Obama in a hotel function room. Dodd added: "I don't want a campaign that's only divisive. But there is a danger of it becoming that, not because the candidates want it to, but too often the advisers and consultants, others are seeking that divisiveness.... It is devastating in the longer term."

Asked directly, Dodd denied that he was urging Hillary Clinton to quit the race. But he added a warning against any harshly negative attacks in the final week before the crucial March 4 primaries here and in Texas -- a warning that comes as Clinton's campaign is giving indications that it is in the midst of launching a final assault on Obama, at tonight's debate and beyond.

"I want to offer a cautionary note to the campaigns and the people around them: Be careful this week, we have good people running, we have remarkable people running in these two candidates, and I know the temptation of campaigns, beyond the ability of the candidates themselves to control it, can get out of control. We have witnessed a little bit of that here, and I'm worried about it," Dodd said. "We're on the brink of a great victory [in November], and I don't want to see us lose that opportunity because of mistakes made or divisiveness."

Obama accepted the endorsement with lavish praise for the tone of Dodd's campaign and his emphasis on issues such as civil liberties and education. Dodd, whose own candidacy never took off, joked that he had expected a year ago that around now he would be picking up Obama's endorsement for his own campaign. And he was candid about having, until not so long ago, regarded the 46-year-old first-term senator as a bit of a whippersnapper.

"I'll admit that I was skeptical, like many others, as to whether or not this new face in American politics could do all the things he desired to do," Dodd said. But he said he had come around to supporting Obama after observing more of him on the campaign trail and in the Senate, and after seeing the energy he is generating among young voters, which Dodd said reminded him of his own reaction to John F. Kennedy four decades ago, when that president inspired him to join the Peace Corps.

"The question has always been the same: 'Yes, but is he ready?' Since that time, he's been poked and prodded, analyzed and criticized, called too green, too trusting, too lofty. And through all that, he's already won half of our nation's states in primaries and caucuses, and the votes of more than 10 million Americans, showing judgment, grace and poise in the process," Dodd said. "He's ready to be president."

Dodd, the first former 2008 Democratic candidate to endorse Clinton or Obama, dismissed a challenge from a reporter who asked him to reconcile the endorsement with criticisms his campaign made of Obama last fall, when it ridiculed some of Obama's statements on foreign policy as betraying his inexperience in world affairs. "We can flyspeck every statement being made over course of the campaign," Dodd said.

Asked what precisely had changed his mind about Obama during the campaign, Dodd cited Obama's address to Detroit automakers about the need to improve fuel efficiency. But the other reasons he gave for coming around on Obama actually preceded the campaign: He said he had been impressed by Obama's questions during Condoleezza Rice's confirmation hearing in 2005, impressed that the veteran Indiana Republican Dick Lugar had chosen Obama as his Democratic partner on nuclear proliferation issues, and impressed at Obama's work on ethics reform legislation, which Dodd said showed "courage."

It is unclear how much campaigning Dodd will do on Obama's behalf, though Dodd, a fluent Spanish speaker, mentioned the possibility of traveling to Texas for him.

The International Association of Fire Fighters, which endorsed Dodd late last year and also has long-standing ties with the Clintons, has no plans to transfer its backing to Obama, a union spokesman said.

Dodd said he had called Hillary Clinton last night to inform her of his decision. "These are not comfortable conversations," he said. "These are not easy things to do... I believe [Hillary and Bill Clinton] have made significant contributions to our country and I believe very deeply and sincerely this morning that Hillary Clinton will continue to make a significant contribution to our nation in the years to come. But it is now the hour to come together."

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/02/26/dodd_gives_clinton_a_gentle_pu_1.html
 
Russell Simmons Endorses Obama

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Russell Simmons Endorses Obama</font size></center>



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Russell Simmons speaks at a news conference in New York February 28,
2006, about the Smithsonian National Museum of American History's
decision to add items from Hip Hop culture to the permanent collection.
(Reuters.)


Washington Post
By Darryl Fears
March 3, 2008

The gospel of Sen. Barack Obama might not have opened up the heavens, as Sen. Hillary Clinton sarcastically suggested in a recent speech, but it apparently opened the eyes of one of her self-described friends and supporters, Russell Simmons. The music mogul, entrepreneur and staunch yoga practitioner endorsed Obama over the weekend.

"I see him as a different kind of candidate," Simmons said, echoing a refrain that is repeated over and over by converts to Obama's political message. "I see him as more of a spiritual inspiration, as much as a politician. The idea that other people are experiencing a change in themselves. I see that as an important part of the process."

A day before two decisive Democratic primary votes in Texas and Ohio, the question is not what Obama can do for Simmons. It's what Simmons can do for Obama. Simmons is the third richest man in hip-hop, with a net worth of more than $300 million, behind the rappers-turned-music-executives Jay-Z and Sean "P. Diddy" Combs. Young black voters have turned out in droves to cast ballots for Obama -- and Simmons could inspire even more.

Obama's campaign said Simmons will jet to Cleveland tomorrow to make appearances at a barber shop, a community college, a public housing complex, and a favorite stop of both Democratic candidates, a local high school.

But first, Simmons "dropped some knowledge," the hip-hop term for divulging previously unknown nuggets of information. "I did hear that the Obama camp got a call from Sean Combs," Simmons said. "I did hear from 50 Cent's camp that he didn't know about Hillary anymore."

What does that mean? He won't say. And Combs and 50, a.k.a., Curtis James Jackson III, couldn't be reached for comment. Combs and Jackson have been politically active in the past. Four years ago, Combs led a now defunct get out the vote effort for youth called "Vote or Die!"

Jackson wore one of the effort's red, white and blue T-shirts.

But with 80 percent of the primary already over, there's more die remaining than vote for those who didn't cast ballots in Simmons' hometown of New York. A legion of black celebrities have already stumped hard for Obama, including rapper/singer Wyclef Jean, CSI:NY star Hill Harper, actress/model Kerry Washington, singers John Legend and Usher, and most notably, Will I.Am, whose star-studded "Yes We Can" video take on Obama's catch phrase was recently followed up by a second.

So why did Simmons wait until now? "It was a long process," Simmons said. In a kind of twisty, topsy-turvy way, he explained: "I've known the Clintons before they were in Harlem. I had a great...I'm still in their camp. I'm just endorsing Sen. Obama. A lot of people feel that way. I'm happy she's my senator. I think she'd be a good president. I think Obama would be a better president."

Simmons' ex-wife, model Kimora Lee Simmons, owner of the Baby Phat clothing line, has endorsed Clinton, saying she likes the way a woman inspires the couple's two daughters.

"I have known Hillary for many years and have seen her work passionately on many issues, including poverty, education, and prison reform," Kimora Lee Simmons said. "As a mother, I have learned that you must lead with your head, not just your heart, and I'm confident that Hillary will be the President to bring our country together and deliver a brighter future for all Americans."

At the Hip-Hop Summit that circulates across the nation, artists and the people who buy the music -- white youngsters, mostly -- say they are concerned about the Iraq war and the ideological roadblocks in Congress. Black fans are deeply concerned about what they consider to be unequal justice against their community in the criminal justice system.

Simmons, who helped organize the summit, took note of an Obama speech on prison reform. "I'm compassionate and smart enough to know these first time offenders can be made better and can come back to the community rather than be in a jail culture. There are a lot of issues like that, the way he speaks to them."

Pausing, he thought about how his friend Hillary Clinton might take this: "I hope I still have a friendship with her that's lasting beyond this choice, not just a friendship but a working relationship. I hope we get past it."

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/03/03/russell_simmons_endorses_obama.html
 
Richardson Endorses Obama

<font size="5"><center>
Richardson Endorses Obama
</font size></center>


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By PATRICK HEALY
Published: March 21, 2008

Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico, who sought to become the nation’s first Hispanic president this year, plans to endorse Senator Barack Obama for the Democratic nomination on Friday at a campaign event in Oregon, according to an Obama adviser.

Mr. Richardson, a former congressman and energy secretary in the Clinton administration, dropped out of the Democratic race in January after finishing behind Mr. Obama and Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in the first nominating contests in Iowa and New Hampshire.

Since then, both Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton have aggressively courted Mr. Richardson for his endorsement. Mrs. Clinton had also deployed her husband, and Mr. Richardson’s former boss, to seek the governor’s political support; former President Bill Clinton watched the Super Bowl in February with Mr. Richardson, and both Clintons had spent time on the phone trying to persuade him to back her candidacy.

In a statement explaining his endorsement, which was provided by the Obama campaign early Friday morning, Mr. Richardson hailed Mr. Obama’s judgment and ability to be commander-in-chief — qualities that Mrs. Clinton has called into question in recent weeks on the campaign trail.

“I believe he is the kind of once-in-a-lifetime leader that can bring our nation together and restore America’s moral leadership in the world,” Mr. Richardson said in the statement. “As a presidential candidate, I know full well Sen. Obama’s unique moral ability to inspire the American people to confront our urgent challenges at home and abroad in a spirit of bipartisanship and reconciliation.”

Mr. Richardson based his candidacy in large part on his strong opposition to the war in Iraq and on calls for an immediate and total withdrawal of American troops from Iraq. Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton both support a steady but carefully paced withdrawal of troops; Mr. Obama, however, was an early, consistent opponent of the war, while Mrs. Clinton voted in 2002 to authorize military action in Iraq and supported the war in its first years.

As a governor, Mr. Richardson is a super-delegate who would have a vote in the nominating contest if neither Mr. Obama nor Mrs. Clinton ends the primary season in June with a lead in the delegates amassed during the 2008 primaries and caucuses. Mr. Obama now has an overall lead of 148.5 delegates, according to an analysis by the New York Times; a candidate needs 2,024 to win the Democratic nomination.

Moreover, as the nation’s only Hispanic governor, Mr. Richardson could become a champion for Mr. Obama among Hispanic voters, who have been a key voting bloc for Mrs. Clinton in the primaries thus far. And his endorsement is also notable because he is a friend and admirer of Mrs. Clinton, and was widely viewed as a possible running mate for both her and for Mr. Obama.

Mr. Richardson served as ambassador to the United Nations under Mr. Clinton, and has also worked as an official and unofficial troubleshooter for the government on foreign policy issues and crises, drawing on his extensive contacts overseas such as with leaders of North Korea.

“There is no doubt in my mind that Barack Obama has the judgment and courage we need in a commander in chief when our nation’s security is on the line. He showed this judgment by opposing the Iraq war from the start, and he has show it during this campaign by standing up for a new era in American leadership internationally,” Mr. Richardson said in his statement.

In a prepared statement, Mr. Obama said:

“Whether it’s fighting to end the Iraq war or stop the genocide in Darfur or prevent nuclear weapons from falling into the hands of terrorists, Gov. Richardson has been a powerful voice on issues of global security, peace and justice, earning five Nobel Peace Prize nominations.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/21/us/politics/21cnd-endorse.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
 
Re: Richardson Endorses Obama

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Governor Bill Richardson of New Mexico called Senator Barack Obama at a debate in Des Moines,
Iowa, in Dec. 2007.

`
 
Re: Richardson Endorses Obama

Maybe this will put Obama back on message.
I know that loud "Ouch" I heard this morning was Hillary.
 
Re: Richardson Endorses Obama

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Consider these:
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(1) Governor Richardson claimed he was the most experienced democrat in the presidential race;

- He endorsed the candidate whom everyone insists is the least experienced candidate.​

(2) Governor Richardson was Bill Clinton's Energy Secretary; was appointed U.S. Ambassador by Clinton; watched this past Super Bowl with Bill Clinton; and hired Monica Lewinsky, after the scandal broke, when some claimed the job offer was a payoff to Lewinsky; [hide]http://www.aim.org/media-monitor/bill-richardson-caught-in-clinton-undertow/[/hide]

- Governor Richardson broke with the Clintons to endorse Obama.​

(3) Richardson said on CNN today, some of Bill Clinton's advisers remarks that his endorsement of Barack Obama didn't mean much; and that Bill Richardson only has any influence in Texas and with Hispanics

- Heard that before ??? - how about Bill Clinton's reference to Jesse Jackson after Obama's win in South Carolina???

- Interestingly, Bill Richardson said, unfortunately, those are the tactics of Bill's advisers; and he is "tired of them"

Some things to think about.

QueEx
 
Re: Richardson Endorses Obama

<font size="4">
Consider these:
</font size>


(1) Governor Richardson claimed he was the most experienced democrat in the presidential race;

- He endorsed the candidate whom everyone insists is the least experienced candidate.​

(2) Governor Richardson was Bill Clinton's Energy Secretary; was appointed U.S. Ambassador by Clinton; watched this past Super Bowl with Bill Clinton; and hired Monica Lewinsky, after the scandal broke, when some claimed the job offer was a payoff to Lewinsky; [hide]http://www.aim.org/media-monitor/bill-richardson-caught-in-clinton-undertow/[/hide]

- Governor Richardson broke with the Clintons to endorse Obama.​

(3) Richardson said on CNN today, some of Bill Clinton's advisers remarks that his endorsement of Barack Obama didn't mean much; and that Bill Richardson only has any influence in Texas and with Hispanics

- Heard that before ??? - how about Bill Clinton's reference to Jesse Jackson after Obama's win in South Carolina???

- Interestingly, Bill Richardson said, unfortunately, those are the tactics of Bill's advisers; and he is "tired of them"

Some things to think about.

QueEx

You bring up some interesting point, brothera.
 
OBAMA endorsement: Pennsylvania SENATOR Bob Casey

Bob Casey to endorse Obama, join bus tour

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By Thomas Fitzgerald

Inquirer Staff Writer
Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey plans to endorse Sen. Barack Obama for president today in Pittsburgh, sending a message both to the state's primary voters and to undecided superdelegates who might decide the close race for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Dan Pfeiffer, deputy communications director for the Obama campaign, confirmed that Casey would announce his support during a rally at the Soldiers and Sailors Military Museum and Memorial and that he would then set out with the Illinois senator on part of a six-day bus trip across the state.

The endorsement comes as something of a surprise. Casey, a deliberative and cautious politician, had been adamant about remaining neutral until after the April 22 primary. He had said he wanted to help unify the party after the intensifying fight between Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.

"There are few stronger advocates for working families in Pennsylvania than Sen. Casey," Pfeiffer said.

By coming out for Obama, Casey puts himself at odds with many top state Democrats - including Gov. Rendell, Rep. John P. Murtha and Mayor Nutter - who are campaigning for Clinton.

The endorsement also comes at a crucial time for Obama, who has been trailing Clinton in Pennsylvania polls by double-digit margins but who also has bought at least $1.6 million worth of television advertising statewide in the last week, more than double Clinton's expenditure.

Obama strategists hope that Casey can help their candidate make inroads with the white working-class men who are often referred to as "Casey Democrats." This group identifies with the brand of politics Casey and his late father, a former governor, practiced - liberal on economic issues but supportive of gun rights and opposed to abortion. (Obama favors some gun-control measures and backs abortion rights.)

Obama badly lost the white working-class vote to Clinton in Ohio and Texas on March 4, keeping the outcome of the fight in doubt amid questions about whether he could appeal to a group of voters that has often strayed from the party in presidential elections.

Since then, Obama has been stressing economic issues important to the middle class more often than his calls to reform politics. His campaign's recent TV ads in Pennsylvania also feature blue-collar imagery.

Other state Democrats who support Obama include Reps. Patrick Murphy and Chaka Fattah, and former Lt. Gov. Mark Singel.

Casey sees Obama as an "underdog" in the campaign who sacrificed at the beginning of his career to be a community organizer "in the shadows of the closed steel mills in Chicago," said a source close to Casey who is familiar with the endorsement decision but was not authorized to speak publicly about it.

The source, reached by The Inquirer yesterday, said that Casey was also impressed with how Obama had stood up to the pressures of the campaign, including recent attacks over the racially incendiary remarks of his former pastor.

Casey's decision was also personal, motivated in part by the enthusiasm his four daughters - Elyse, Caroline, Julia and Marena - have expressed for Obama, the source said. "He thinks we shouldn't be deaf to the voices of the next generation."



http://www.philly.com/philly/news/n...ob_Casey_to_endorse_Obama__join_bus_tour.html
 
Re: OBAMA endorsement: Pennsylvania SENATOR Bob Casey

This is good news. As I understand it, Casey might be attractive among older catholic democrats which is the same group that has gone with Hillary in the past. Hopefully Casey can bring some of those over to the Obama column.

QueEx
 
Conservative Republican Catholic scholar endorses Obama

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Conservative Republican Catholic scholar endorses Obama</font size></center>


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Douglas Kmiec

Associated Press
March 28, 2008

One of the nation's top conservative Republican Catholic legal scholars has endorsed Democratic Senator Barack Obama for president.

Constitutional law professor Douglas Kmiec , who served in the Reagan administration and in Mitt Romney's presidential campaign, says he believes Obama can unite the country and inspire Americans to overcome racial and religious divisions.

Kmiec supports the Catholic teaching that abortion is a grave moral evil, but also considers the war in Iraq to be a life issue. Kmiec says the church was troubled by arguments for a "pre-emptive war" that has proven costly in both lives and treasure.

Kmiec, former dean of the Catholic University law school, now teaches at Pepperdine University.


http://www.wbir.com/news/national/story.aspx?storyid=56105&provider=gnews
 
Re: Conservative Republican Catholic scholar endorses Obama

<font size="4">
Here is an article Douglas Kmiec wrote and
published in Slate on February 13, 2008:
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<IFRAME SRC="http://www.slate.com/id/2184378/" WIDTH=750 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.slate.com/id/2184378/">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 
Re: Conservative Republican Catholic scholar endorses Obama

Bumped for the consideration of those who might consider
voting for Obama for reasons other than because he is Black

QueEx
 
Re: Richardson Endorses Obama

<font size="5"><center>Former Clinton cabinet member, and
2 ex-senators endorse Obama</font size>
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• Former Clinton Cabinet member Robert Reich
• Former Senator David Boren of Oklahoma
• Former Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia</font size></center>

Associated Press
By GLEN JOHNSON
April 18, 2008

BOSTON (AP) — Former Clinton Cabinet member Robert Reich on Friday endorsed Barack Obama over Hillary Rodham Clinton in the battle for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Two other Democratic elder statesmen, former Sens. Sam Nunn of Georgia and David Boren of Oklahoma, also said they were supporting the Illinois senator.

Reich, who served as Labor secretary under Bill Clinton, said in a blog post that "although Hillary Clinton has offered solid and sensible policy proposals, Obama's strike me as even more so."

Reich also said Obama's plans for reforming Social Security and health care have a better chance of succeeding, and his approach to the nation's housing crisis and financial market failures are sounder than the New York senator's.

Reich is a longtime friend of Bill and Hillary Clinton. He ran for governor in Massachusetts in 2002 and now is a professor at the University of California-Berkeley.

A number of other former Clinton cabinet members have endorsed Obama. New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who was U.N. ambassador and energy secretary under Clinton, endorsed former rival Obama in March despite heavy wooing by the former president. Former Denver Mayor Federico Pena, who headed the transportation and energy departments under Clinton, became a co-chair of Obama's campaign last September. Former Clinton Commerce secretaries Norman Mineta and William Daley also have endorsed Obama.

Nunn and Boren will serve as advisers to Obama's National Security Foreign Policy Team.

Nunn served as chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee from 1987-95, while Boren was the longest-serving chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.

Both fall into the moderate-conservative end of the Democratic party's ideological spectrum and gave Bill Clinton trouble during his presidency, trying to tug him to the right on issues while most congressional Democrats were leaning to the left.

Nunn, who recently flirted with his own possible White House bid, said Obama has "a rare ability to restore America's credibility and moral authority and to get others to join us in tackling serious global problems."

Boren, who recently played host to a forum on electoral alternatives, including third-party runs, said: "Our most urgent task is to end the divisions in our country, to stop the political bickering, and to unite our talents and efforts. Americans of all persuasions are pleading with our political leaders to bring us together. I believe Senator Obama is sincerely committed to that effort."

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hivLgTY7zTpYcJq-7_sZd8SoX9bwD904G5O02
 
Re: Richardson Endorses Obama

<font size="5"><center>Superdelegates Watt, Price endorse Obama</font size></center>


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Rep. Mel Watt


Charlotte Observer
LISA ZAGAROLI and DAVID INGRAM
lzagaroli@charlotteobserver.com; and
dingram@charlotteobserver.com
April 18, 2008


Two N.C. superdelegates endorsed U.S. Sen. Barack Obama for president Wednesday.

U.S. Reps. Mel Watt and David Price held a conference call to announce their decision to endorse Obama over Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York.

“Only one candidate in this election has captured this spirit of change and excitement,” Watt, a Charlotte Democrat, told reporters. “Only one candidate has marshaled this spirit of change into a movement that is completely inclusive, uniquely democratic and uniquely American. That candidate is Barack Obama.”

Price, a Chapel Hill Democrat, said Obama would be competitive in North Carolina with expected Republican nominee John McCain in November.

“He can change the equation in North Carolina,” Price said, “and I look forward to helping him do so.”

The endorsements mean Obama has the public support of six N.C. superdelegates compared to Clinton’s one - Charlotte City Council member Susan Burgess - according to the Democratic Convention Watch blog.

All the Democrats in the N.C. congressional delegation had endorsed former U.S. Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina, and until now only one had announced an endorsement of either of the two remaining candidates. U.S. Rep. G.K. Butterfield also endorsed Obama.

Watt said undecided members of the delegation are looking at how Clinton and Obama would fare here in November. “They are talking to their constituents and seeing which candidate will take North Carolina most seriously and is likely to have the prospect of winning North Carolina,” Watt said.

Price and Watt are two of the state’s most influential representatives in Washington.

Price, a former Duke political scientist, was first elected to Congress in 1986. He is the most senior Democratic congressman from North Carolina and he chairs an appropriations subcommittee.

Watt, a lawyer, was first elected in 1992. He is chair of a financial services subcommittee - a key post for his hometown - and is a past chair of the Congressional Black Caucus.

While supporting Edwards, Watt told the Observer in January that he was concerned about “whether the electorate would support an African American candidate or a female candidate for president.”

He said race is still a factor any time a black candidate is running for office, but that the country has made progress in recent years.

“I’d have to say I’m surprised - and pleasantly surprised - that Barack’s campaign has continued to build momentum, because I saw at the end of Harvey Gantt’s campaign in 1990 some movement away from Harvey,” said Watt, who managed Gantt’s Democratic campaign for U.S. Senate against Republican incumbent Jesse Helms.

“But, as I say, that was 18 years ago and this is a new day in America and I expect this to be a new outcome in North Carolina,” Watt said.

http://www.charlotte.com/119/story/583356.html
 
Re: Richardson Endorses Obama

<font size="5"><center>Philadelphia Inquirer Endorses Obama</font size><font size="4">
In Support of Barack Obama
Inspiring vision</font size></center>

Philadelphia Inquirer
Sunday, April 20, 2008

The Democratic presidential primary Tuesday presents Pennsylvania voters with a choice that is more about style than substance.

On the issues, there's scant difference between Sens. Barack Obama of Illinois and Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York. The biggest difference comes down to their styles of leadership.

Obama wants to bring about change by inspiring people to accept his vision of social justice. Clinton bills herself as the more competent leader, who knows how to effect change incrementally, due largely to her extensive government experience.

The Inquirer Editorial Board endorsed Obama before New Jersey's primary Feb. 5. Since then, the race has focused less on the subtle distinctions in the candidates' policy proposals and more on personal attacks. Before Pennsylvanians head to the polls, it's time to restate our support for BARACK OBAMA.

The 46-year-old Obama offers the better chance of rising above the partisan rancor in Washington to achieve bipartisan goals. After eight years of George W. Bush's my-way-or-the-highway rule, Obama could become the uniter that Bush never was. His campaign has attracted people of all backgrounds and political persuasions.

Throughout his career as a community organizer and state legislator and senator, Obama has pursued justice for working-class people. The recent charge that he's an elitist doesn't wash, in light of his background and his life's work.

Opponents argue that Obama isn't ready to be president. Compared with Clinton and Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona, Obama has the least amount of Washington experience. But that is likely one reason he's winning over so many voters. People crave change.

And Obama has demonstrated the resilience to bounce back from challenges in this long campaign. His speech in Philadelphia on race relations quelled the immediate political furor over his former pastor's anti-white rhetoric.

But Obama's address did more than serve his own political needs. It called on blacks and whites to consider each other's legitimate motives, and to move beyond conflicting perspectives. Turning a tempest into an opportunity for national reflection and action is a sign of leadership.

Unfortunately, Obama followed up that memorable speech with a gaffe about "bitter" small-town Pennsylvanians clinging to religion and guns. He still hasn't explained adequately what he really meant. For someone whose eloquence usually seems effortless, it was an unforced blunder that may have cost him the chance to put away Clinton here and now.

Clinton, 60, like Obama, wants to end the war in Iraq as soon as possible. Her plan for universal health care would mandate coverage for everyone; his plan doesn't go quite that far. But the policy differences between them are few. For example, both aim to roll back the Bush tax cuts for top wage-earners.

A second Clinton presidency could be as polarizing as the first one. She hasn't displayed often enough an ability to connect with voters. And her infamous Bosnia-sniper story, while overblown, did highlight the public's mistrust of her truthfulness.

Republican voters - those who haven't switched parties this spring - will find three names on the presidential ballot. But the GOP race is effectively over. JOHN McCAIN, 71, who received our endorsement in January, is the presumptive nominee. Former Gov. Mike Huckabee of Arkansas abandoned his effort weeks ago, and Rep. Ron Paul of Texas is carrying on his obscure campaign for reasons known chiefly to him.

http://www.philly.com/inquirer/opinion/20080420_Editorial__In_Support_of_Barack_Obama.html
 
Gore endorses Obama

<font size="5"><center>Gore endorses Obama</font size></center>

Associated Press
By Nedra Pickler
June 16, 2008


FLINT, Mich. (AP) — Al Gore says he is backing Barack Obama and will do whatever he can to help him get to the White House.

In a letter to be e-mailed to Obama supporters, Gore says Obama has united a movement over the past year and a half.

The former vice president also asks for donations to help fund Obama's effort — the first time he's asked members of his Web site AlGore.com to contribute to a political campaign.

Gore is one of the most popular figures in the Democratic Party, but he kept a low profile in the primary campaign. He's planning to appear with Obama at a rally in Detroit Monday night.

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gmnaFOEfLjNPmCWEdB7bv9NuDDAwD91BBKPO0
 
Re: Gore endorses Obama

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Will Gore's endorsement: Help or Hurt ???


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Re: Gore endorses Obama

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Firefighters union backs Obama</font size></center>



art.obama.firefighters.jpg

Obama spoke to the International Association
of Firefighters in March.


CNN
Assignment Editor Lauren Kornreich
August 14, 2008

(CNN) – A major firefighters union will throw its support behind Barack Obama during its annual convention in Las Vegas on Thursday.

Obama, who is on vacation with his family in Hawaii, taped a message that will be played in front of the 3,500 members of the International Association of Fire Fighters at around 2pm E.T.

The union chose to back Obama over John McCain because of the presumptive Democratic nominee’s support of collective bargaining, which gives workers the right to jointly work with their employers to negotiate hours, salaries, benefits and overall working conditions, IAFF spokesman Scott Treibitz said.

“It is unacceptable when fire fighters do not have collective bargaining rights. But it's not just collective bargaining,” Obama said in the video. “For too long on too many issues, fire fighters have not been treated with the dignity, respect and honor you deserve."

The IAFF endorsed Sen. Chris Dodd’s ultimately unsuccessful presidential bid last August and IAFF President Harold Schaitberger campaigned with him in the early primary states. The union was also credited with giving Sen. John Kerry’s campaign a major boost in 2004.

"On every issue important to fire fighters Senator Obama is and has been in our corner," Schaitberger said. "We can't overlook Senator McCain's service to our country, but we also can't overlook his poor record on issues critical to the financial security of our 290,000 members."

Sen. Joe Biden will attend and address the convention on behalf of Obama.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2008/08/14/fire-fighters-back-obama/
 
Toby Keith praises Obama

Toby Keith praises Obama

By RYAN PEARSON, AP Entertainment Writer 2 hours, 15 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES - Barack Obama is getting praise from Nashville, courtesy of one big, patriotic country star.

Toby Keith, perhaps best known to non-country audiences for his post-Sept. 11 song "Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue," says he's a Democrat, and was impressed by the senator from Illinois.

Keith has said in the past that the 2002 song — which included lines aimed at the Taliban like "we lit up your world like the Fourth of July" — was more patriotic than pro-war.

Asked while promoting his new movie "Beer For My Horses" about the role of patriotism in the current presidential election, Keith replied: "There's a big part of America that really believes that there is a war on terrorism, and that we need to finish up.

"So I thought it was beautiful the other day when Obama went to Afghanistan and got educated about Afghanistan and Iraq. He came back and said some really nice things.

"So as far as leadership and patriotism goes, I think it's really important that those things have to take place. And I think he's the best Democratic candidate we've had since Bill Clinton. And that's coming from a Democrat."
 
Re: Toby Keith praises Obama

Strange, on this interview it sounds as if he is trashing him. Can't believe a devil either way!

Toby Keith's Glenn Beck interview on Obama(audio clip):

[WM]http://www.youtube.com/v/C6hC4GdFOYQ&hl=en&fs=1[/WM]​
 
Former Bush; Endorses Obama

<font size="5"><Center>
Scott McClellan Endorses Obama</font size>

<font size="4">Another Former Member of George W. Bush's Team
Endorses Barack Obama</font size></center>


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Washington Post
By Dan Eggen
October 23, 2008

Former White House press secretary Scott McClellan, who angered many Republicans earlier this year with a memoir criticizing President Bush, said today that he's voting for Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama.

McClellan told CNN that Obama's message "is very similar to the one that Governor Bush ran on in 2000," apparently referring to the current president's early pitch as a reformer and a moderate.

"From the very beginning I have said I am going to support the candidate that has the best chance for changing the way Washington works and getting things done and I will be voting for Barack Obama," McClellan said during the interview, which was taped for the Saturday broadcast of a new CNN show, "D.L. Hughley Breaks the News."

McClellan's endorsement marks the latest prominent Republican to defect to Obama. Former secretary of state Colin Powell last Sunday threw his endorsement behind the Illinois senator while sharply criticizing the campaign tactics of GOP candidate John McCain and his running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.

McClellan's endorsement was not a complete surprise. After publication of his best-selling book, "What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington's Culture of Deception," McClellan had hinted earlier this year that he might vote for Obama or even register as a Democrat.

McClellan, whose book outlines deep disillusionment with both Washington and the president he served, said at the time that his choice would depend largely on whether McCain or Obama ran positive campaigns.

McClellan's open criticism of Bush and other Republicans has not gone down well with his former colleagues, who have publicly described him as disgruntled and out of the loop from major White House decisions.

Bipartisanship -- or lack of party loyalty, depending on your view -- is not new for McClellan. His mother, Texas politico Carole Keeton Strayhorn, was a Democrat until the 1980s, when she switched to the GOP. Strayhorn later ran as an independent against Republican Gov. Rick Perry.


http://voices.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/10/23/mcclellan_endorses_obama.html?hpid=topnews
 
Re: Former Bush; Endorses Obama

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CNN's D.L. Hughley Gets Former Bush Spokesman,
Scott Mcclellan, to Endorse a Candidate

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