WASHINGTON DC (By Adam Nagourney,
NYTimes) November 5, 2008 —
Barack
Hussein Obama was elected the 44th
president of the United States on
Tuesday, sweeping away the last
racial barrier in American politics
with ease as the country chose him
as its first black chief executive.
The election of Mr. Obama amounted
to a national catharsis — a
repudiation of a historically
unpopular Republican president and
his economic and foreign policies,
and an embrace of Mr. Obama’s call
for a change in the direction and
the tone of the country.
But it was just as much a strikingly
symbolic moment in the evolution of
the nation’s fraught racial history,
a breakthrough that would have
seemed unthinkable just two years
ago.
Mr. Obama, 47, a first-term senator
from Illinois, defeated Senator John
McCain of Arizona, 72, a former
prisoner of war who was making his
second bid for the presidency.
To the very end, Mr. McCain’s
campaign was eclipsed by an opponent
who was nothing short of a
phenomenon, drawing huge crowds
epitomized by the tens of thousands
of people who turned out to hear Mr.
Obama’s victory speech in Grant Park
in Chicago.
Mr. McCain also fought the headwinds
of a relentlessly hostile political
environment, weighted down with the
baggage left to him by President
Bush and an economic collapse that
took place in the middle of the
general election campaign.“If there
is anyone out there who still doubts
that America is a place where all
things are possible, who still
wonders if the dream of our founders
is alive in our time, who still
questions the power of our
democracy, tonight is your answer,”
said Mr. Obama, standing before a
huge wooden lectern with a row of
American flags at his back, casting
his eyes to a crowd that stretched
far into the Chicago night.
“It’s been a long time coming,” the
president-elect added, “but tonight,
because of what we did on this date
in this election at this defining
moment, change has come to America.”
The focus shifted quickly on
Wednesday to the daunting challenges
facing the president-elect, with his
supporters offering sober
reflections of what lies ahead.
“We’re in deep trouble,” said Rep.
John Lewis, a Georgia Democrat and
leader in the civil rights movement,
on NBC’s Today show.
“We’ve got to get our economy out of
the ditch, end the war in Iraq and
bring our young men and women home,
provide health care for all our
citizens,” Lewis said. “And he’s
going to call on us, I believe, to
sacrifice. We all must give up
something.”
Mr. McCain delivered his concession
speech under clear skies on the lush
lawn of the Arizona Biltmore, in
Phoenix, where he and his wife had
held their wedding reception. The
crowd reacted with scattered boos as
he offered his congratulations to
Mr. Obama and saluted the historical
significance of the moment.
“This is a historic election, and I
recognize the significance it has
for African-Americans and for the
special pride that must be theirs
tonight,” Mr. McCain said, adding,
“We both realize that we have come a
long way from the injustices that
once stained our nation’s
reputation.”
Not only did Mr. Obama capture the
presidency, but he led his party to
sharp gains in Congress. This puts
Democrats in control of the House,
the Senate and the White House for
the first time since 1995, when Bill
Clinton was in office.
The day shimmered with history as
voters began lining up before dawn,
hours before polls opened, to take
part in the culmination of a
campaign that over the course of two
years commanded an extraordinary
amount of attention from the
American public.
As the returns became known, and Mr.
Obama passed milestone after
milestone —Ohio, Florida, Virginia,
Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Iowa
and New Mexico — people rolled
spontaneously into the streets to
celebrate what many described, with
perhaps overstated if understandable
exhilaration, a new era in a country
where just 143 years ago, Mr. Obama,
as a black man, could have been
owned as a slave.
For Republicans, especially the
conservatives who have dominated the
party for nearly three decades, the
night represented a bitter setback
and left them contemplating where
they now stand in American politics.
Mr. Obama and his expanded
Democratic majority on Capitol Hill
now face the task of governing the
country through a difficult period:
the likelihood of a deep and
prolonged recession, and two wars.
He took note of those circumstances
in a speech that was notable for its
sobriety and its absence of the
triumphalism that he might
understandably have displayed on a
night when he won an Electoral
College landslide.
“The road ahead will be long, our
climb will be steep,” said Mr.
Obama, his audience hushed and
attentive, with some, including the
Rev. Jesse Jackson, wiping tears
from their eyes. “We may not get
there in one year or even one term,
but America, I have never been more
hopeful than I am tonight that we
will get there. I promise you, we as
a people will get there.” The roster
of defeated Republicans included
some notable party moderates, like
Senator John E. Sununu of New
Hampshire and Representative
Christopher Shays of Connecticut,
and signaled that the Republican
conference convening early next year
in Washington will be not only
smaller but more conservative.
Mr. Obama will come into office
after an election in which he laid
out a number of clear promises: to
cut taxes for most Americans, to get
the United States out of Iraq in a
fast and orderly fashion, and to
expand health care.
In a recognition of the difficult
transition he faces, given the
economic crisis, Mr. Obama is
expected to begin filling White
House jobs as early as this week.
Mr. Obama defeated Mr. McCain in
Ohio, a central battleground in
American politics, despite a huge
effort that brought Mr. McCain and
his running mate, Gov. Sarah Palin
of Alaska, back there repeatedly.
Mr. Obama had lost the state
decisively to Senator Hillary Rodham
Clinton of New York in the
Democratic primary.
Mr. McCain failed to take from Mr.
Obama the two Democratic states that
were at the top of his target list:
New Hampshire and Pennsylvania. Mr.
Obama also held on to Minnesota, the
state that played host to the
convention that nominated Mr.
McCain; Wisconsin; and Michigan, a
state Mr. McCain once had in his
sights.
The apparent breadth of Mr. Obama’s
sweep left Republicans sobered, and
his showing in states like Ohio and
Pennsylvania stood out because
officials in both parties had said
that his struggles there in the
primary campaign reflected the
resistance of blue-collar voters to
supporting a black candidate.
“I always thought there was a
potential prejudice factor in the
state,” Senator Bob Casey, a
Democrat of Pennsylvania who was an
early Obama supporter, told
reporters in Chicago. “I hope this
means we washed that away.”
Mr. McCain called Mr. Obama at 10
p.m., Central time, to offer his
congratulations. In the call, Mr.
Obama said he was eager to sit down
and talk; in his concession speech,
Mr. McCain said he was ready to help
Mr. Obama work through difficult
times.
“I need your help,” Mr. Obama told
his rival, according to an Obama
adviser, Robert Gibbs. “You’re a
leader on so many important issues.”
Mr. Bush called Mr. Obama shortly
after 10 p.m. to congratulate him on
his victory.
“I promise to make this a smooth
transition,” the president said to
Mr. Obama, according to a transcript
provided by the White House .”You
are about to go on one of the great
journeys of life. Congratulations,
and go enjoy yourself.”
For most Americans, the news of Mr.
Obama’s election came at 11 p.m.,
Eastern time, when the networks,
waiting for the close of polls in
California, declared him the victor.
A roar sounded from the 125,000
people gathered in Hutchison Field
in Grant Park at the moment that
they learned Mr. Obama had been
projected the winner.
The scene in Phoenix was decidedly
more sour. At several points, Mr.
McCain, unsmiling, had to motion his
crowd to quiet down — he held out
both hands, palms down — when they
responded to his words of tribute to
Mr. Obama with boos.
Mr. Obama, who watched Mr. McCain’s
speech from his hotel room in
Chicago, offered a hand to voters
who had not supported him in this
election, when he took the stage 15
minutes later. “To those Americans
whose support I have yet to earn,”
he said, “I may not have won your
vote, but I hear your voices, I need
your help, and I will be your
president, too.”
Initial signs were that Mr. Obama
benefited from a huge turnout of
voters, but particularly among
blacks. That group made up 13
percent of the electorate, according
to surveys of people leaving the
polls, compared with 11 percent in
2006.
In North Carolina, Republicans said
that the huge surge of
African-Americans was one of the big
factors that led to Senator
Elizabeth Dole, a Republican, losing
her re-election bid.
Mr. Obama also did strikingly well
among Hispanic voters; Mr. McCain
did worse among those voters than
Mr. Bush did in 2004. That suggests
the damage the Republican Party has
suffered among those voters over
four years in which Republicans have
been at the forefront on the effort
to crack down on illegal immigrants.
The election ended what by any
definition was one of the most
remarkable contests in American
political history, drawing what was
by every appearance unparalleled
public interest.
Throughout the day, people lined up
at the polls for hours — some
showing up before dawn — to cast
their votes. Aides to both campaigns
said that anecdotal evidence
suggested record-high voter turnout.
Reflecting the intensity of the two
candidates, Mr. McCain and Mr. Obama
took a page from what Mr. Bush did
in 2004 and continued to campaign
after the polls opened.
Mr. McCain left his home in Arizona
after voting early Tuesday to fly to
Colorado and New Mexico, two states
where Mr. Bush won four years ago
but where Mr. Obama waged a spirited
battle.
These were symbolically appropriate
final campaign stops for Mr. McCain,
reflecting the imperative he felt of
trying to defend Republican states
against a challenge from Mr. Obama.
“Get out there and vote,” Mr. McCain
said in Grand Junction, Colo. “I
need your help. Volunteer, knock on
doors, get your neighbors to the
polls, drag them there if you need
to.”
By contrast, Mr. Obama flew from his
home in Chicago to Indiana, a state
that in many ways came to epitomize
the audacity of his effort this
year. Indiana has not voted for a
Democrat since President Lyndon B.
Johnson’s landslide victory in 1964,
and Mr. Obama made an intense bid
for support there. He later returned
home to Chicago play basketball, his
election-day ritual.