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Barack Hussein Obama - Person of the year 2012 |
Twenty-seven years after driving from New York City to Chicago in a
$2,000 Honda Civic for a job that probably wouldn’t amount to much,
Barack Obama, in better shape but with grayer hair, stood in the
presidential suite on the top floor of the Fairmont Millennium Park
hotel as flat screens announced his re-election as President of the
United States. The networks called Ohio earlier than predicted, so his
aides had to hightail it down the hall to join his family and friends.
They encountered a room of high fives and fist pumps, hugs and relief.
The final days of any campaign can alter the psyches of even the most
experienced political pros. At some point, there is nothing to do but
wait. Members of Obama’s team responded in the only rational way
available to them — by acting irrationally. They turned neckties into
magic charms and facial hair into a talisman and compulsively repeated
past behaviors so as not to jinx what seemed to be working. In Boca
Raton, Fla., before the last debate, they dispatched advance staff to
find a greasy-spoon diner because they had eaten at a similar joint
before the second debate, on New York’s Long Island. They sent senior
strategist David Axelrod a photograph of the tie he had to find to wear
on election night: the same one he wore in 2008. Several staffers on Air
Force One stopped shaving, like big-league hitters in the playoffs.
Even the President succumbed, playing basketball on Election Day at the
same court he played on before winning in 2008.
But now it was done, and reason had returned. Ever since the campaign
computers started raising the odds of victory from near even to
something like surefire, Obama had been thinking a lot about what it
meant to win without the lightning-in-a-bottle quality of that first
national campaign. The Obama effect was not ephemeral anymore, no longer
reducible to what had once been mocked as “that hopey-changey stuff.”
It could be measured — in wars stopped and started; industries saved,
restructured or reregulated; tax cuts extended; debt levels inflated;
terrorists killed; the health-insurance system reimagined; and gay
service members who could walk in uniform with their partners. It could
be seen in the new faces who waited hours to vote and in the new ways
campaigns are run. America debated and decided this year: history would
not record Obama’s presidency as a fluke.
Cover Photograph by Nadav Kander for TIME
So after his staff arrived, he left his family in the main room of
the suite and stepped out to talk with his three top advisers, Axelrod,
political strategist David Plouffe and Jim Messina, his campaign
manager. He wanted to tell them what this victory meant, because it was
very different the second time. “This one’s more satisfying than ’08,”
he said. “It wasn’t just about what I was going to do as President. It’s
what I’ve done.” In the end, the outcome would not even be very close,
and this realization was sinking in, unleashing something, dropping a
shield he had been carrying for a long time. Over three days in
November, the man known for his preternatural cool won re-election and
cried twice in public. And then, trying to find meaning in a tragedy in
Connecticut, he did it again, all but breaking down in the White House
Briefing Room.
In mid-December, as Obama settles into one of the Oval Office’s
reupholstered chairs — brown leather instead of Bush’s blue and gold
candy stripes — the validation of Election Day still hovers around him,
suggesting that his second four years in office may turn out to be quite
different from his first. Beyond the Oval Office, overwhelming
challenges remain: deadlocked fiscal-cliff talks; a Federal Reserve that
predicts years of high unemployment; and more unrest in places like
Athens, Cairo and Damascus. But the President seems unbound and gives
inklings of an ambition he has kept in check ever since he arrived at
the White House to find a nation in crisis. He leans back, tea at his
side, legs crossed, to explain what he thinks just happened. “It was
easy to think that maybe 2008 was the anomaly,” he says. “And I think
2012 was an indication that, no, this is not an anomaly. We’ve gone
through a very difficult time. The American people have rightly been
frustrated at the pace of change, and the economy is still struggling,
and this President we elected is imperfect. And yet despite all that,
this is who we want to be.” He smiles. “That’s a good thing.”
Bjarne Jonasson for TIME
The Campaign Team: David Simas ran Obama’s opinion-research team, including focus groups; Stephanie Cutter managed the daily effort to defend Obama and dismantle Romney; David Axelrod, co-author of the Obama campaign story, oversaw the entire strategy from Chicago; Jim Messina, the campaign manager, designed, built and ran the whole campaign from scratch; Jim Margolis, the TV adman, relentlessly bombarded swing-state airwaves for months; Jeremy Bird, the grassroots organizer, created a smarter, larger Obama army than in 2008
Two years ago, Republicans liked to say that the only hard thing
Obama ever did right was beating Hillary Clinton in the primary, and in
electoral terms, there was some truth to that. In 2012 the GOP hoped to
cast him as an inspiring guy who was not up to the job. But now we know
the difference between the wish and the thing, the hype and the man in
the office. He stands somewhat shorter, having won 4 million fewer votes
and two fewer states than in 2008. But his 5 million-vote margin of
victory out of 129 million ballots cast shocked experts in both parties,
and it probably would have been higher had so much of New York and New
Jersey not stayed home after Hurricane Sandy. He won many of the
toughest battlegrounds walking away: Virginia by 4 points, Colorado by 5
and the lily white states of Iowa and New Hampshire by 6. He untied
Ohio’s knotty heartland politics, picked the Republican lock on Florida
Cubans and won Paul Ryan’s hometown of Janesville, Wis. (Those last two
data points especially caught the President’s interest.) He will take
the oath on Jan. 20 as the first Democrat in more than 75 years to get a
majority of the popular vote twice. Only five other Presidents have
done that in all of U.S. history
There are many reasons for this, but the biggest by far are the
nation’s changing demographics and Obama’s unique ability to capitalize
on them. When his name is on the ballot, the next America — a younger,
more diverse America — turns out at the polls. In 2008, blacks voted at
the same rate as whites for the first time in history, and Latinos broke
turnout records. The early numbers suggest that both groups did it
again in 2012, even in nonbattleground states, where the Obama forces
were far less organized. When minorities vote, that means young people
do too, because the next America is far more diverse than the last. And
when all that happens, Obama wins. He got 71% of Latinos, 93% of blacks,
73% of Asians and 60% of those under 30.
That last number is the one Obama revels in most. When he talks about
the campaign, he likes to think about the generational shift the
country is going through on topics like gay marriage — an issue on which
he lagged, only to reverse himself last spring. He connects it to the
optimism he felt as a young man, the same thing he always talks about
with staff in the limo or on the plane after visits with campaign
volunteers. “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward
justice,” reads one of the quotes stitched into his new Oval Office rug —
an old abolitionist cry that Martin Luther King Jr. repurposed while
marching on Selma, Ala. Obama believes in that, and he believes he is
more than just a bit player in the transition. “I do think that my eight
years as President, reflecting those values and giving voice to those
values, help to validate or solidify that transformation,” he says, “and
I think that’s a good thing for the country.”
Few experts predicted two years ago that Obama would be busy writing
his second Inaugural Address. Pre-election polling showed depressed
enthusiasm among young people and Latinos, for example, amid soaring
interest among white evangelicals and the elderly. But the poll
questions did not account for Obama’s secret weapon: the people who
don’t much care for politics. A sizable chunk of the President’s most
ardent backers don’t admire either party yet think Obama is somehow
above it all, immune to all the horse trading and favor mongering that
politics entails. These voters aren’t political in the cable-TV sense of
the word. But in 2012, they stuck by Obama. In the last month of the
Obama campaign’s voter registration, 70% of those signed up were women,
minorities or people under 30.
The President feels a responsibility to advance the values he sees
reflected in the changing electorate. Of the nearly 66 million people
who pulled the lever for him, Obama says, “The choice that they made was
less about me and more about them, more about who they saw themselves
to be.” It’s a lovely sentiment for a winner, but even if Obama’s right,
the question now is, Who exactly do they want to be? And can Barack
Obama take them there?
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Bjarne Jonasson for TIME
The Geek Squad: from left: Harper Reed, the chief technology officer, tweeted “My boss is awesome” after Obama won; Dan Wagner, the chief analytics officer, oversaw a team of number crunchers five times the size of the 2008 group; Dylan Richard engineered much of the software behind the campaign; Andrew Claster used analytics to develop new ways of targeting and predicting voter behavior
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The election that Obama won, as he has said repeatedly, was in the
end a choice, not a referendum. He proved to be a better option than
Mitt Romney, who was an imperfect candidate by most measures. On the
issues, Obama did not fare quite as well. While 51% of voters in exit
polls in 2008 said they wanted the government to do more, only 43% said
so in 2012, and Obamacare still polls badly.
But Obama doesn’t see his legacy in terms of an ideological imprint,
like Ronald Reagan’s claim that “government is the problem” or Bill
Clinton’s admonition that the “era of Big Government is over.” He says
he just wants smarter government and a set of results that he can claim
as he leaves office in early 2017: “That we had steered this ship of
state so that we once again had an economy that worked for everybody,
that we had laid the foundation for broad-based prosperity and that
internationally we had created the framework for continued American
leadership in the world throughout the 21st century.” Recent history and
current headlines suggest he will fall short of achieving all those
goals. But if he succeeds, it wouldn’t be the first time this leader
beat expectations.
Since the moment Obama arrived on the national scene in 2004, the
very idea of leadership has been under assault. Many of the old
institutions that once anchored the American Dream have been bled of
public confidence. Banks, Big Business, the news media and Congress all
polled at or near record lows during his first term. Obama himself was
the target of uncommon vitriol, but he has somehow managed to keep the
public’s faith.
To understand how he kept his job, the best place to start is where
he did. In early 2011, David Simas, a former registrar of deeds in
Taunton, Mass., who had become a senior White House aide, switched on
what might be called one of the largest listening posts in U.S. history.
For months on end, two or three nights a week, Simas and his team
secretly gathered voters in rented rooms across the swing states, eight
at a time, the men separated from the women. The Obamans poked at their
guinea pigs’ animal spirits, asked for confessions and played
word-association games. (Among swing voters, Democrat often elicited
Barack Obama, and Republican would yield words like old and backward.)
Live feeds of the focus groups were shown on computer screens at
campaign headquarters in Chicago. The first discovery Simas made held
the keys to the kingdom. “Here is the best thing,” he said of Obama when
he went back to home base. “People trust him.”
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