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Labor Day is No Holiday for Presidential Candidates

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illinoisprogressive Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-03-07 07:08 PM
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Labor Day is No Holiday for Presidential Candidates
This article covers the candidates campaigning on Labor Day. from Hillary to Edwards to Obama and all the rest.
this part covers the Obama section. Follow the link to find your favorite.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/03/AR2007090300901_5.html?hpid=topnews



MILFORD, N.H., Sept. 3 -- As Sen. Barack Obama led a rowdy mob down the street here during a Labor Day parade, an organizer wearing a Mitt Romney pin stood on the sidewalk and stared in astonishment.

"It's going to be tough to beat that guy," he said, shaking his head, to another man with a Romney sign.

Or will it?

Obama (D-Ill.) has not picked up measurable steam in the national polls since he annouced his candidacy more than six months ago. His most obvious strength has been seen in the money he has raised and in the jaw-dropping size of the crowds he draws -- a sign of what his campaign says is its solid ground organization.

With the unofficial start of the primary season this weekend, Obama sought to sharpen the distinctions between his campaign and that of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), the Democratic frontrunner, taking swipes at the Washington establishment and the "cynical math" he implied other candidates were using to calculate a narrow victory rather than a broad consensus.

"There are those who tout their experience working the system in Washington -- but the problem is that the system in Washington isn't working for us, and hasn't for a long time," Obama said in a speech in Manchester before marching in the parade here and attending an ice cream social. "Think about it. We've been talking about the health care crisis in this country for decades. Yet through Democratic and Republican administrations we've failed to act. And you know why -- because the drug and insurance industries have spent over a billion dollars on lobbying in the past ten years alone to block reform."

He continued: "Too many in Washington see politics as a game. And that is why I believe this election cannot be about those who can play this game better. It has to be about who can put an end to the game-playing. The times are too serious, the stakes are too high."

If the Milford parade several hours later was a snapshot of how Obama is faring, it bodes well. He drew by far the loudest and most boisterous group, who grew so enthusiastic about marching that they started down the road ahead of schedule -- and were thus banished by organizers to the back of the parade line. (The second-largest group was an orderly bunch of Romney backers, followed by a loud cadre carrying signs for Sen. Chris Dodd -- though Dodd's group also included many members of his family.

The Obama crowd, with drums and brass instruments, yelled out: "Obama-oh-eight. Be a part of something great!"

At the front of his group, seven supporters -- each carrying oversized letters spelling his name, and the numbers 0 and 8 -- walked in formation and cheered. The woman carrying the letter "M" -- Gabrielle Grossman, 29, of Exeter -- said she had been an ardent Bill Clinton supporter in the 1990s but could not support his wife.

"I love Bill Clinton," said Grossman, who wore an "ObamaMAMA" T-shirt. "But they are the old politics and Hillary is a symbol of the old Washington." Grossman, who has a two-year-old son, was one of a handful of supporters selected to have dinner with Obama on Monday night. Between that and walking with him in the parade, she said, it was one of the best days of her life.
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