Obama Faithful Shocked In NH, But Still Loyal

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Obama Faithful Shocked In NH, But Still Loyal stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS


First Posted: 01- 8-08 11:37 PM   |   Updated: 03-28-08 02:45 AM

I Like ItI Don’t Like It
Barack Obama Nh Loss

A sense of shock and disappointment pervaded Sen. Barack Obama's campaign on Tuesday night, as an expected easy victory in New Hampshire turned into a tense primary battle and ultimately a gut-wrenching loss to Sen. Hillary Clinton.

Aides and attendees were despondent throughout the night, up until the moment when Obama addressed the crowd. Moments earlier it had been announced that he had lost the primary contest to Clinton.

"A few weeks ago, no one imagined that we would accomplish what we did here tonight in New Hampshire," Obama said. "For most of this campaign we were far behind, we always knew our climb would be steep. But in record numbers you came out and spoke for change."

The hopeful rhetoric did not match the shock felt by much of the crowd. On the eve of the election Obama held a 9-percentage point lead over Clinton, 39 to 30, in the trusted CNN/WMUR-TV poll. The Clinton campaign, moreover, had begun floating the idea that it would be comfortable with a close second place finish. There was even talk of the New Yorker skipping the next two primary battles -- in Nevada and South Carolina -- in favor of focusing on the bigger, later states.

By the end of the evening, the roles had seemingly been reversed. As the Clinton crowd thunderously cheered on its winning candidate, those who had gathered to celebrate Obama were left listening to a concession speech. Obama applauded Clinton for her well fought victory and mainly stuck to his campaign message. He took on his New York opponent just once, and subtly, declaring:

"We've been warned against offering the people false hope. But in the unlikely story of America there has never been anything false about hope. For when we have faced down impossible odds... generations of Americans have responded with a simply creed that sums up a spirit of a people. Yes we can. Yes we can. Yes we can."

The crowd screamed those three words back at him.

Even early in the night the disposition at the Obama headquarters was tense. The first election results to trickle in showed the Illinois Democrat trailing Clinton. Aides to the senator offered an optimistic outlook - he had trailed early in Iowa as well, the youth vote would come in late, the polls were over-pronounced, etc - but many fidgeted frantically on their BlackBerry's and rapidly refreshed their websites, scanning for the most up-to-date results. Still, those close to the senator maintained that he would sneak by.

Story continues below
advertisement

As the evening progressed, any glimmer of good news became a catalyst for roars from the crowd. "Ready to go, fire it up," they chanted, as they had all week. But, privately, skepticism mounted.

"I expected him to be up by 10 percentage points," said Deb Bamford, a resident of nearby Dover. "I'm no longer confident. Maybe the media got it wrong. I was undecided up till the moment I voted. And I chose Obama because I wanted to go with a winner... Maybe I got it wrong."

Inside the press room, there was a curious buzz. For days, the Illinois Democrat had impressed and amazed journalists with the crowds he drew (in the thousands) and the speeches he gave. Following his big win in the Iowa caucus, conventional wisdom held that he would repeat the feat. But as the night progressed the prospect of a last minute upset by Clinton crept into the consciousness of the gaggle. Leads to stories required revision.

So what happened? There are multiple theories. Stu Rothenberg, of the Rothenberg Political Report, noted that Clinton received as much, if not more, support from voters who were as angry at the Bush administration as Obama. With Sen. John Edwards receiving less support in New Hampshire than in Iowa, it seemed likely that Obama would pick up his votes. But, as Rothenberg noted, the opposite may have been true.

"It's possible that Edwards's collapse may have helped Hillary - not Obama, as I would have assumed," said Rothenberg. "I have to wonder - with Edwards failing, why wouldn't the other "change" candidate benefit? Obama apparently didn't, while Clinton won downscale voters who might have found Edwards's message appealing."

Blame was also laid at the feet of the media and the pollsters, many of whom had crowned or predicted an Obama victory well before the first vote was cast.

"What happened to Democrat pollsters and exit polls?" asked John McLaughlin, a veteran Republican pollster who works on Fred Thompson's presidential campaign. "Was this like Helms 90 where voters wouldn't admit they were voting for Helms over Gantt?"

Obama, in his speech, offered no excuses or explanations for what had transpired. Sensing, perhaps, the disappointment of the crowd, he instead offered thanks for their support. "The reason our campaign has always been different," he said, "The reason we began this improbable journey almost a year ago is because it is not about what I will do as president, it is about what you, the people who love this country, the citizens of the United States of America can do to change it... That's what this election is all about. That's why tonight belongs to you."

A sense of shock and disappointment pervaded Sen. Barack Obama's campaign on Tuesday night, as an expected easy victory in New Hampshire turned into a tense primary battle and ultimately a gut-wrenchi...
A sense of shock and disappointment pervaded Sen. Barack Obama's campaign on Tuesday night, as an expected easy victory in New Hampshire turned into a tense primary battle and ultimately a gut-wrenchi...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
211
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 (4 pages total)
- ystasino I'm a Fan of ystasino 2 fans permalink

WTF is oprah when we need her lol!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 AM on 01/09/2008

if i hated america...i would pray that either a snide corporate shill mormon snake oil salesman...or a crazed tortured senile vietnam vet in the acute stages of PTSD. or a born again christian evangelical from the confederate state of arkansas (i felt safer when the openly called themselves the KKK and paraded around in sheets and pointy hoods burning crosses) or a psychologically abused and cheated on spouse of a notorious philanderer was elected president. and what would it matter? we have already elected a man in the final stages of alzheimers and dementia to the office...and the current oval office buffoon is the idiot that the village of crawford texas is famous for.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 AM on 01/09/2008

I was discouraged by today's outcome, but Obama's speech tonight, while obviously it won't receive the same press as Hillary's victory was better than any I've seen yet.

This narrow loss isn't so bad, it means there is a fight. they get to "sell" their messages. despite the public polls, both candidates are at or above where they were about 4/5 days ago. let's not forget that. Clinton outhustled Obama. that's clear. He needs to reach out to women. he needs to get specific. But he also need to stay on message. And he needs to kick butt in the future debates. Because his speech tonight, her victory steeled my resolve to see him as our next president.

I think he needs to answer more questions. his last minute strategy obviously didn't work. he did it in IOWA, he needs to keep doing it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 AM on 01/09/2008
- ystasino I'm a Fan of ystasino 2 fans permalink

Soap opera females flocked to Billary in the last day.

Pollsters sent independents to McCain and and kept the anti-Hillary vote at home.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 AM on 01/09/2008
photo

That was not a convincing win for Billary.
The margin was still too close.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 AM on 01/09/2008

Jean Shaheen played this state like a fiddle and the Clinton field campaign did a lot of hard work, put a lot of feet on the ground, good old fashioned politics...the pundits were wrong, it's that's simple and along with the national broadcasters and Ms Huffington, they just ran off the cliff like a stampeding herd of animals with no mind of their own. You get what work for, not (necessarily) what wish for. It takes years, even decades, not mere months.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:21 AM on 01/09/2008
- jake1az I'm a Fan of jake1az 3 fans permalink

We let the last guy get on the job training we don't have the time to do it again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 AM on 01/09/2008
- SanityNow I'm a Fan of SanityNow 17 fans permalink


A 15 point swing in 24 hours ?????

Was NH touch screen voting by any chance?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 AM on 01/09/2008

Fasten your seat belts children, the Boomers are about to take you on the ride of your life...you're going to learn a lot about politics, American style...try to remember what you learn and cheer up, you have plenty of years ahead you, just not this year. Hillary not only can, but will win this election and American will chart new course we can all be proud of soon! There's plenty of room in this tent for everyone:))

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 AM on 01/09/2008

This is disappointing to us that believe in Obama. But it may be a good thing. It's not clear what happened but what is sure that the majority of the party as well as independents prefer someone other than Hillary. If Edwards would withdraw there wouldn't be much of a race and Hillary would be gone.

I suspect that the press's predictions of a run a way for Obama kept his supporters at home, got the concerned Clintonians out, and moved more independents to the Republican race where again wrongfully predicted by the polls and the press, Romney looked like he was having a resurgence. Romney has no real support.

We have a fight on our hands now, but we will win South Carolina and Nevada.

The crap that Bill and Hillary pulled the last days, playing the Rovian fear call. "Watch out these are perilous times, we can't have someone inexperienced in the job". Yeah Right. A one and half term Senator who got her job because of her husbands' success.

She may be elder democratic female candidate, but she is not the candidate that can win this election and she is as bought and sold as any politician with the possible exception of Bushie.

Nothing good comes without struggle and if Obama had run this could have happened later. Now it's his turn and America is going to get the idea. In the end, if the country is smart they will not repeat the same mistake of putting the same old group of people back in the White House.

YES WE CAN.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 AM on 01/09/2008
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 (4 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect