From apathy to action: Barack Obama's grassroots movement to mobilize and inspire the American public
|
"It is really the groundswell of everyday people converting adoration into action who are making this campaign such an exceptional, overwhelming, and unexpected success. "
|
"We are here today because the country calls us, we are here today because history beckons us, we are here today because we face a series of challenges as significant, as daunting as any generation has faced.” –Barack Obama, Oakland, California, March 17, 2007 No experience, no chance. Right? Wrong! Breaking all the unwritten rules along the road to the Oval Office and truly forging a path of his own (trailblazing, really), it is the junior Senator from Illinois who is winning over the American people and making history with his refreshingly candid and eloquently forthright political style. Fueled as much by an adoring public as by the man himself, this Cinderella story of political and quite possibly Presidential proportions is sweeping the nation off its feet in a firestorm of inspiration and excitement not seen since perhaps the likes of JFK and the grassroots movements of the 1960s. Barack Hussein Obama announced his candidacy for President of the United States on Saturday, February 10 in Springfield, Illinois to a crowd of over 15,000 enthusiastic supporters who came out to demonstrate their adoration in person, despite a wind-chill factor that plunged temperatures well below zero. The weather in Oakland wasn’t quite as severe (sunny and 70s), but the turnout for Obama’s St. Patrick’s Day rally here was no less dramatic. A picture of multiculturalism, much like Barack himself, an exuberant Bay Area crowd of more than 12,000 people encompassing all ages, races, and walks of life descended on Oakland’s Frank H. Ogawa Plaza outside City Hall. A deluge of support and a wild success, to say the least. And while the numbers alone are impressive—15,000 in Springfield, 20,000 in Austin, and 12,000 to as many as 30,000 in Oakland, by one estimate—it is really the groundswell of everyday people converting adoration into action who are making this campaign such an exceptional, overwhelming, and unexpected success. |

If you're interested in reading excerpts from the rally, for both Ron Dellums and Barack Obama, check out this piece on the California Progress Report site. You've got to scroll down a bit to reach the excerpts, but they're there. Enjoy.
http://www.californiaprogressreport.com/2007/03/obama_in_califo.html
And to view all my Oakland Obama rally photos, go to http://flickr.com/photos/risamay/sets/72157600012005654/ and feel free to make use of the images for your own purposes, so long as you abide by the Creative Commons license specified.
Cheers,
Marisa
This is hilarious.. as other "headlining" candidates are having crowds of 500-1000 people, Obama is having 30,000 at a standard meet. This is great news for his campaign, and I couldn't be happier for him for his success. I've even spotted one of my own favorite Barack Obama t-shirts at a NYC concert for him. Barack's got it right... putting the power back with the people is a very strong campaign that you can't oppose.
PS, your flickr stream is broken I think...
Pardon me, I would like to correct an inaccuracy related to my wife and I, and Sacramento For Obama in your article. All credit goes to Anthony Bergen, Kim Mack and Gayland Morris for getting the "Sacramento For Obama" starship into orbit. The formerly Republican couple the author spoke of was my wife and I. Yes we belong to Sacramento For Obama, and yes we were recognized by Craig Schirmer, the Obama campaign representative. However, it was for switching parties to support Senator Obama's presidential candidacy only.
Thanks for the kind words though.
Erik Paterson
Sacramento For Obama
Ah. I misheard. Thanks for clarifying, Erik! And I think it's so awesome that you and your wife switched parties to support Obama's presidential candidacy.
Cheers,
Marisa
Beyond the war, Obama addressed the urgent need of the next U.S. President to see to it that real progress and change is also made in regard to issues of the economy, a living wage, better schools, a stronger infrastructure, national healthcare, and more
Its a good thing he said that, effectively distancing himself from opponents who want a bad economy, poor citizens, sh*tty schools, no healthcare and less. :)
I like Barack. We'll see if he has the political prowess to make it through the primaries. I liked (now Democratic National Chair) Howard Dean, and all it took to end his run was a yell.
LOL, Olivebeard.
To clarify, in calling for an end to the war in Iraq Obama suggested that the money presently being funneled to fund this ill-begotten war would (and should) be better spent at home on our own problems and issues ... like improving the economy, offering Americans a real living wage, a better public school education, etc. He was very clear that the mountains of money being spent overseas in Iraq are to the detriment of America itself, at home.
Cheers,
Marisa