StarTribune.com
iowa010408.demanal

Home | Politically Connected | National Politics | President

Analysis: Iowa proves Obama’s general appeal

Last update: January 3, 2008 - 11:38 PM

 

WASHINGTON – Democrat Barack Obama has put to rest the question of whether a black presidential candidate can win in white America.

His victory in 95 percent white Iowa proved that he could appeal across racial lines and even draw women away from Hillary Rodham Clinton despite her push for them to make her the first female president.

Next he’ll try to build on his record in New Hampshire, which is 96 percent white.

Obama did not appeal so openly to make history as the first black to occupy the Oval Office; he rarely mentioned that he is black.

“You’ve got to have hope if you are a black man named Obama running for the presidency of the United States of America,” Obama said during a late-night campaign stop two days before the caucus. It was one of his rare mentions of what he had to overcome.
Obama’s candidacy has been dogged by questions about whether he’d be electable against a Republican.

Pressed on that during a campaign stop in New Hampshire over the summer, Obama said his race would be an asset because it would bring blacks to the polls in record numbers and give the Democrats victories in Southern states that have been voting Republican for decades.

“I’m probably the only candidate who, having won the nomination, can actually redraw the political map,” Obama said at the time. “I guarantee you African-American turnout, if I’m the nominee, goes up 30 percent around the country, minimum. Young people’s percentage of the vote goes up 25-30 percent. So we’re in a position to put states in play that haven’t been in play since LBJ.”

Lyndon Baines Johnson ran for president in 1964 and won in a landslide. But since then the South has turned into a Republican stronghold.

Obama’s prediction about black voter turnout can’t be tested in Iowa or New Hampshire, but young voters did come to the polls in larger numbers.

Under-30 turnout

Nearly a quarter of Democratic caucus-goers interviewed in the entrance poll were under 30 years old, a jump from 2004.

Obama got 57 percent of the vote from the under-30 crowd, compared with just 14 percent for 2004 vice presidential nominee John Edwards and 11 percent for Clinton.

Twenty-eight percent of Obama’s support came from the under-30 set, according to a survey of voters entering the caucuses by the Associated Press and the television networks.

Female caucus-goers

Obama also won the greatest percentages of independents, first-time caucus-goers, self-identified liberals and, most troubling for Clinton, women. Obama got 35 percent of women voters, compared to 30 percent for Clinton and 23 percent for Edwards. This despite the fact that Clinton focused her campaign on bringing fellow women to the polls.

Democratic consultant Jamal Simmons said Obama’s victory “proves that America is changing when it comes to race and politics.”

“Winning in Iowa is not winning the nomination, but is very significant,” Simmons said. “Tonight Barack Obama has made it more true that every black child in America can do whatever they want to if they work hard for it — really.”

Recent President stories

Study: Black women and Hispanics fuel record minority turnout in 2008 presidential election - January 3, 2008
Study: Black women and Hispanics fuel record minority turnout in 2008 presidential election - Nearly one-fourth of voters in last November's election were minorities, the most diverse election ever, fueled by high turnout from black women and a growing Hispanic population, an independent research group found. More

Comment on this story   |   Be the first to comment   |  Hide reader comments


Subscribe

The Whistleblower blog has moved

The Star Tribune is still blowing the whistle, but our look and location have changed. Click here to get to the new blog. If you want the actual URL, it’s www.startribune.com/blogs/whistleblower.html. Our blog posts will now be easier to search on the web site, but you’ll need to register to post a comment. In the [...]

Recent posts

Homes

Find Your Next Home

Search realtor represented & for sale by owner homes in the Twin Cities. Plus, find open house listings.

Win tickets to the Desdamona CD release show at Sauce.

Vita.mn presents the Desdamona CD release show with Alicia Wiley and Ill Chemistry at Sauce on Nov. 21.

See all contests