Obama says N.C. win is victory against division
MSNBC.com, 05/06/08
Obama: ‘We’ll change this country together’
May 6: After a victory in North Carolina, Sen. Barack Obama tells supporters that “Americans are looking for honest answers about the challenges they face.”
RALEIGH, N.C. - Barack Obama called his North Carolina primary win on Tuesday a victory against the “politics of division and the politics of distraction.”
The Illinois senator claimed a strong victory in the Southern state to steady a campaign rocked by missteps and a hard-charging rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Obama told North Carolina supporters in Raleigh that he was able to overcome negative politicking that is all about scoring points and not about solving problems. He said Americans “aren’t looking for more spin; they’re looking for honest answers.”
With his wife Michelle looking on, Obama savored his victory in North Carolina and called attention to claims by the Clinton campaign that the North Carolina race would be a “game-changer.”
“But today, what North Carolina decided is that the only game that needs changing is the one in Washington, DC.,” said the first-term Illinois senator.
MSNBC.com, 05/06/08
Obama: ‘We’ll change this country together’
May 6: After a victory in North Carolina, Sen. Barack Obama tells supporters that “Americans are looking for honest answers about the challenges they face.”
RALEIGH, N.C. - Barack Obama called his North Carolina primary win on Tuesday a victory against the “politics of division and the politics of distraction.”
The Illinois senator claimed a strong victory in the Southern state to steady a campaign rocked by missteps and a hard-charging rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Obama told North Carolina supporters in Raleigh that he was able to overcome negative politicking that is all about scoring points and not about solving problems. He said Americans “aren’t looking for more spin; they’re looking for honest answers.”
With his wife Michelle looking on, Obama savored his victory in North Carolina and called attention to claims by the Clinton campaign that the North Carolina race would be a “game-changer.”
“But today, what North Carolina decided is that the only game that needs changing is the one in Washington, DC.,” said the first-term Illinois senator.
Obama said it appeared Clinton had won in Indiana, the only other state voting on Tuesday, and acknowledged there were “bruised feelings on both sides” in the marathon fight for the Democratic nomination. “Each side desperately wants their candidate to win.”
Still, he said, “This fall, we intend to march forward as one Democratic Party, united by a common vision for this country.”
“We can’t afford to give John McCain the chance to serve out George Bush’s third term,” he said.
Obama’s team had expected to win comfortably in North Carolina — after all, that’s one reason they held their election-watch party here. But they also hoped for a come-from-behind win in Indiana. An Obama win in both states could have derailed Clinton’s comeback chances.
Obama’s forces sought to make as much as possible of the Obama victory in North Carolina, while turning their attention to upcoming contests in Oregon, West Virginia and Kentucky. He was returning to Chicago after the celebration.
Answering charges that he was having trouble winning in big states that will be important in the general election, Obama characterized his North Carolina win as “a victory in a big state, a swing state, and a state where we will compete to win if I am the Democratic nominee for president of the United States.”
North Carolina is the nation’s 10th largest state in population.