Obama
Officially Nominated.
(Denver USA, Aug
27,
2008 Ceegaag Online)
Barack Obama,
claiming a prize never held by a black American, swept to
the Democratic presidential
nomination on Wednesday as thousands of national
convention delegates stood and cheered his improbable
triumph.
Former
rival Hillary Rodham Clinton
asked the convention delegates to make it unanimous "in the
spirit of unity, with the goal of victory." And they did,
with a roar.
Competing chants of "Obama"
and "Yes we can" floated up from the convention floor as
Obama's victory was sealed.
Obama was across town as
the delegates he won in the primaries of winter and spring
cast their votes. Aides left open the possibility that he
would briefly visit the Pepsi
Center to thank his
supporters, a routine event at recent
national conventions. His
formal acceptance speech Thursday night was expected to draw
a crowd of 75,000 at a nearby football stadium where an
elaborate backdrop was under construction.
Clinton's call for Obama to
be approved by acclamation — midway through the traditional
roll call of the states — was the culmination of a
painstaking agreement worked out between the two camps to
present a unified front.
Obama, 47 and in his first
Senate term, carries the Democrats' hopes of recapturing the
White House into the fall
campaign against Sen. John McCain
and the Republicans.
Inside the convention hall,
the outcome of the traditional roll call of the states was
never in doubt, only its mechanics.
"No matter where we stood
at the beginning of this campaign, Democrats stand together
today," declared Rep. Debbie
Wasserman Schultz of Florida, a former Clinton
supporter who delivered a nominating speech for Obama.
"We believe passionately in
Barack Obama's message of
changing the direction of our country," she said.
Earlier in the day, Clinton
formally released her delegates amid shouts of "no," by
disappointed supporters. "She doesn't have the right to
release us," said
Massachusetts
delegate Nancy Saboori. "We're not little kids to be told
what to do in a half-hour."
Polls showed the campaign
was a close one between Obama and McCain.
The same surveys showed a
strong desire for change after eight years of the
Bush administration, and
Obama pledged an end to the war in Iraq and a fresh economic
policy.
But even as he awaited his
nomination, there was open talk in the
convention city that his
race remained a stumbling block to winning the White House.
The convention program also
included the delegates' acceptance of Obama's choice of
Delaware Sen. Joseph Biden
as vice presidential running mate.
Biden had the marquee time spot for his acceptance speech
late Wednesday.
Former President Clinton
also had a turn at the podium, this time in a supporting
role for the man who defeated his wife in a bruising battle
for the nomination.
Obama's nomination sealed a
political ascent as astonishing as any other in recent
memory — made all the more so by his race, in a nation
founded by slave owners.
The son of a white mother
from Kansas
and a black father from Kenya whom he barely knew, he
attended college and Harvard
Law
School. In between was a turn as a $12,000-a-year community
worker on the streets of
Chicago.
He won his seat in the
Illinois Legislature in 1996. But his first bid for higher
office, a brash challenge to Rep.
Bobby Rush in an inner-city Chicago congressional
district, ended in failure in 2000.
Four years later, as a
candidate for the Senate, he dazzled with a keynote address
at the 2004 Democratic National
Convention, then won his election. He announced his
presidential candidacy a scant two years after arriving in
Washington.
With his gifts as a
speaker, his astounding ability to raise funds on the
Internet and an unmatched ground operation pieced together
by political veterans, he won the first test, the
Iowa caucuses,
on Jan. 3
Clinton rebounded to win
the New Hampshire primary
five days later, and the two were soon matched in a grueling
battle for the nomination that was not settled until the
primaries ended in June.
"The journey will be
difficult. The road will be long," he said then as he
pivoted to confront McCain.
Source: Y News
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