Obama: Raise your hand if you’re sure
Urban League President Marc Morial, and veteran journalist George Curry (a former Post-Dispatch writer decades ago, and old friend of yours truly) got the choice — and occasionally harrowing — jobs of, respectively, presiding over and moderating Friday’s presidential forum.
(Please note the mother ship already has an AP account of the forum online, which will be replaced in Saturday’s paper by my longer version. It WON’T include any of this account, which delves into some of the more humorous, or behind-the-scenes, aspects of the forum.)
The event got started on time, but there was some re-arranging of candidates because Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton was “running late,” a league representative said as she notified the press.
The candidates were to appear in alphabetical order: Clinton, former Sen. John Edwards, then Rep. Dennis Kucinich, then Sen. Barack Obama.
Kucinich and Clinton switched. (Note the other two big names retained their 2nd and 4th positions.)
Kucinich predictably went after the Iraq War, which he opposes. “We can’t wait until this presidential election to get out of Iraq,” Kucinich said.
But he particularly grabbed the audience’s attention when he talked about his early life as the oldest in a Catholic family with seven children. Always tight for money, the family always rented — never owned — their home.
By the time he was 17, the family had lived in 20 places. Kucinich also observed that he had several uncles who had ended up in prison, doing time.
As a result of his hard-knock life, Kucinich said he understand the importance of groups like the Urban League.
Edwards’ speech focused heavily on how “the system is rigged” by the corporate interests controlling the federal government. What was intriguing to some observers was that many of those seated in the front row of the forum theater were corporate executives, many of them from firms underwriting the forum or other aspects of the League’s four-day conference.
Edwards’ best-received line: If he’s sworn in, he’ll “ask Americans to be patriotic about something other than war.”
A little bit of time had to be killed after Edwards, before Clinton took to the stage. (Curry told the audience to talk amongst themselves, then alerted the crowd a minute later that the necessary delay would be a lot shorter than expected. Clinton had arrived.)
Clinton also was allowed to go over the 20-minute time restriction (the red light was flickering) for a few minutes to get her points across. (Kucinich and Edwards stuck to the limits.)
“I’m whipped up about this!” Clinton shouted, as she continued her address, which focused almost solely on the problems facing young black men.
She got the crowd whipped up as well, which cheered her enthusiastically as she ended her tour on stage. (She got fewer questions, because of her longer address.)
Clinton’s last line: “Let’s go out and make it happen!”
Then Obama walked on. And (borrowing a famous movie phrase) he had the predominantly African-American crowd at hello.
Obama largely stuck to his campaign themes — and he, like Clinton, got extra time. Obama got an extra 10-15 minutes, adding that he deserved it because he’d gotten on stage 45 minutes late (a subtle jab at her tardiness.)
But it was Obama’s ad-libs that really got the crowd.
As in…when Morial asked him, as he did the others, what Obama would do first on Jan. 20, 2009, if he was elected president.
The others had offered policy answers. Obama raised his hand as if he were being sworn in.
The audience loved it.
That pose also fit in with arguably Obama’s most artful reply.
When Morial asked him how he’d deal with the nation’s race issue, Obama replied, “The day I’m inaugurated, the country looks at itself differently.”


Obama’s right about the country looking at itself differently the day he’s inaugurated. However, it won’t be looking at race. It will begin to realize we’ve elected a committed socialist to the highest office in the land.
To be fair, the same thing could be said about the election of either Hillary or Edwards.
Ignorance is bliss with some.
A socialist is one who believe that all property and wealth should be subject to controll by the community, state and governement.
Economically speaking, the belief that all businesses that produce goods etc…should be by state and worker owned.
Ones screaming Socalists are not much different than the late obsesssed J. Edgar Hoover who screamed everyone who disagreed with his positions were Communists.
Either you are one who is very wealthy and is having unfounded fear and anxiety over losing something, or,
Someone who will be affected personally, such as a salesperson in the group and individual healthcare insurance business where much wealth is being created for salesmen, insurance executives, etc…or
just someone who is just plain blind and foolish.
By the way MercMan,
We Americans are such hypocrites, aren’t we? Our government, both state and federal already practice many socialist ideals, don’t we?
Hey, Walker, get it right! If you want to spend $6.8 billion a MONTH on the war in Iraq to find WMDs and keep Americans safe … I mean, fight the terrorists responsible for 9/11 … I mean, depose Saddam because he “tried to kill my daddy” … wait, that’s not right - I mean, introduce Democracy to Iraq, then you’re a “CONSERVATIVE” PATRIOT.
If you want to spend a fraction of that amount each YEAR on tangible domestic benefits like education or health care that will really help people in THIS country, then you’re an EVIL SOCIALIST!!!
Let the Bush-backers say what they want. The twenty-something percent who approve of his job performance won’t be nearly enough in 2008.
How come you didn’t hi-lite Ladue lawyer Kevin O’Malley giving a fundraiser for Obama the other day, including his home address like you do for the Republicans.
My column on Thursday dealt with the Obama fundraiser, among others. I had been unable to confirm the identity of the host before my Wednesday deadline, so I didn’t include O’Malley’s name. If I had confirmed it, I would have included it. And I NEVER include the address of the host or hostess, only the town. And I did have that.