Author Topic: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread  (Read 45131 times)

Soul Crusher

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Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« on: March 23, 2011, 06:48:51 PM »
How fitting for my 50,000th post.  How can we possibly deny our glorious leader a second term?


















George Whorewell

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #1 on: March 23, 2011, 07:56:38 PM »
I hate America and white people. And so can you! Obama-Qaddafi 2012-- Authentic Bannana Republic Politicians Seeking Equality For America!

Soul Crusher

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #2 on: March 23, 2011, 08:03:56 PM »

Soul Crusher

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #3 on: March 23, 2011, 08:05:28 PM »

Soul Crusher

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #4 on: March 29, 2011, 08:06:06 AM »
Obama visits Studio Museum tonight
March 29th, 2011 10:17 am ET .
Jennifer Eberhart NY Art Examiner


 

Tonight, the President of the United States will be visiting Harlem in an effort to fundraise and garner more enthusiasm for his political agenda.  The events will be hosted by the Democratic National Committee.

Obama will first attend a fundraising dinner, for $30,800 per plate, at the new restaurant Red Rooster.   The restaurant is owned by celebrity chef and Harlem resident Marcus Samuelsson, who was also a guest chef at Obama’s first presidential dinner.  The restaurant, which “reflects the roots of American cuisine”, is located at 310 Lenox Avenue.  Tonight’s event is said to raise $1.5 million for Obama’s campaign.

After the dinner, the president heads to the Studio Museum a few blocks away to meet with about 125 special guests, as a “thank you” to his supporters.  Thelma Golden, director and chief curator of the museum, and one of the most influential African Americans in the art world today, will certainly be there to welcome the commander-in-chief.  The museum is located at 144 West 125th Street.

At a time of financial crisis throughout the country, when many have lost their jobs or even their homes, President Obama is looking to bring hope back to the community that once supported him so ardently.  This visit to Harlem will be a key factor in the president’s future bid for re-election.
.
By Jennifer Eberhart NY Art Examiner.Jennifer is a Canisius College graduate with a dual degree in art history and in communication studies. She has always been an avid art enthusiast,...
Read more




http://www.examiner.com/art-in-new-york/obama-visits-studio-museum-tonight

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #5 on: March 29, 2011, 08:33:20 AM »
'Obama will first attend a fundraising dinner, for $30,800 per plate, at the new restaurant Red Rooster.'

EVERYONE does this shit.

All the dems, all the repubs.  you act like shit is breaking news.

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #6 on: March 29, 2011, 08:34:54 AM »
I wonder how many people will get locked in the clset tonight over there. 

Dos Equis

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #7 on: March 29, 2011, 10:44:38 AM »


I didn't like everything I heard, but do remember this speech and thought he was an intriguing candidate.  This is a prime example of how you have to get past a good speech and see where a person stands on the issues. 

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #8 on: March 29, 2011, 11:15:18 AM »
Obama heads to New York for fundraising and interviews
By Perry Bacon Jr.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/44/post/obama-heads-to-new-york-for-fundraising-and-interviews/2011/03/29/AF67NzuB_blog.html




Less than 24 hours after delivering a major policy address on Libya, President Obama will shift to another role of a modern president: fundraiser-in-chief.

Obama will spend Tuesday night at two different fundraising events in Harlem. The first, at 6 p.m, is billed as a “small dinner and discussion,” with Obama at Red Rooster, a new restaurant run by Marcus Samuelsson, a chef who cooked at the state dinner Obama hosted for the prime minister of India in 2009. (Check out the restaurant’s menu.)

About 50 guests are expected, according to sources, and they will have donated to the Democratic National Committee $30,800, the yearly maximum. An hour later, Obama will attend a “thank you reception” for a larger group of past donors at the Studio Museum, an art center in Harlem. The reception is not a fundraiser, but the president is likely to encourage these donors to give when he ramps up his reelection effort.

Harlem is historically known as a center of black culture both in New York and nationally, but the events are not aimed principally at African Americans but major donors overall. Longtime Democratic donors say Obama needs to woo the big money elite of his party, some of whom have felt annoyed by his occasional bashing of big business as well as Obama’s limited outreach to donors over the past two years.

Obama held similar events in Washington this month, and the man he has tapped to be his campaign manager, Jim Messina, has been meeting Democratic donors across the country.

“It’s a different climate” than in 2008, said one longtime Democratic party donor. “The donor community has been disengaged from the White House.”

The donor outreach is only the end of a long Tuesday for Obama in New York. After he arrives this afternoon, the president will hold individual interviews with ABC, CBS and NBC that will be aired on their evening news programs as he tries to explain his Libya policy.

The president is constantly interviewed by individual outlets, but this full blitz is unusual, although he did it early in 2009 after Thomas A. Daschle’s surprise withdrawal as the nominee for Secretary of Health and Human Services because of tax problems, and later that year to push his health-care bill.

Obama will also attend a event at the Union Nations to dedicate a building in honor of Ron Brown, the longtime Democratic party official who was serving as Secretary of Commerce in the Clinton administration until he died in a plane crash in 1996.

At the Brown event, Obama is likely to praise the United Nations for coming together on a resolution and military action in Libya.


By Perry Bacon Jr.  |  11:51 AM ET, 03/29/2011


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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #9 on: March 29, 2011, 12:53:11 PM »
This is a prime example of how you have to get past a good speech and see where a person stands on the issues. 

More palin bashing.  give it a break already.

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #10 on: March 29, 2011, 01:05:36 PM »
I'm surprised how silent you hve been on her lately.   

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #11 on: March 29, 2011, 01:54:53 PM »

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #12 on: March 31, 2011, 08:21:07 AM »
Updated: Thu., Mar. 31, 2011, 8:56 AM 
Obama's donors
Last Updated: 8:56 AM, March 31, 2011


http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/obama_donors_ZsyQXeYy1wmjgdlLKUYaNJ



Posted: 1:53 AM, March 31, 2011

The guest list was top secret for President Obama's $30,000-a-head Harlem fund-raiser the other night. But sources tell us that those who helped raise more than $1 million for Obama included financier Orin Kramer of Boston Provident, New York State Democratic Committee Chairman Jay Jacobs with wife Mindy, Chelsea Piers president Tom Bernstein, and Evercore Partners' Ralph Schlosstein and wife Jane Hartley. Also there: White House adviser Valerie Jarrett and Rep. Charlie Rangel, who did not have to pay.

Dos Equis

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #13 on: April 03, 2011, 09:51:20 AM »
Obama re-election announcement
By: CNN National Political Correspondent Jessica Yellin

WASHINGTON (CNN) - President Barack Obama plans to send supporters a text or e-mail message with a video announcing his intention to run for re-election, multiple Democratic sources tell CNN.
The message could come as early as Monday morning. The sources say his campaign team also hopes to file papers with the Federal Election Commission Monday to launch his 2012 re-election campaign.

The timing of the announcement and the filing could change depending on outside events. The White House is closely watching negotiations on Capitol Hill over the 2011 spending bill, which must be resolved this week to avoid a government shutdown.

This would come more than a week before the president hosts his first re-election fund-raiser in Chicago on April 14. These Democrats say no public event is planned because the White House wants to downplay the announcement and minimize the political distraction.

The president is making his campaign official slightly earlier than is typical for an incumbent so he can get a jump on fund-raising in a season that's likely to shatter all records. Obama’s team has been asking campaign bundlers to raise $350,000 each, no easy task since campaign finance laws limit gifts to $2,500 per donor. Two sources tell CNN the campaign team hopes that in total their bundlers will raise $500 million, leaving the campaign to raise another $500 million and amass a record-breaking $1 billion war chest.

According to these sources, the president has made calls to top donors and conference calls are planned this week to supporters and key Democratic groups. Vice President Joe Biden is already planning to be in New Hampshire Monday and will meet with key supporters in that crucial early voting state. For the past few weeks, Jim Messina, who will manage the campaign, and Patrick Gaspard, executive director of the DNC, have been flying around the country meeting with frustrated donors working to get them re-engaged.

So far no Republican contenders have formally announced. But these days the likely Republican presidential contenders are making endless visits to key early voting states and meeting with supporters across the country.

One top Democrat says, "The Republicans are out there day in and day out beating up on the president - they're basically running without filing. So to say we're going first isn't totally fair." This person adds, "No one wants to start running now. The president is engaged in the country, this is about getting (campaign) staff up and running."

Additionally, top Democrats say two former White House staffers are likely to set up a third-party outside spending group. Former Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton and Sean Sweeney, former aide to then-Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, have been approached by Democratic donors who are concerned about countering the influence of Karl Rove and the Koch brothers in the upcoming 2012 election.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/04/02/obama-re-election-announcement/#more-152608

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #14 on: April 03, 2011, 10:06:17 AM »
Oh great.  Obama 2012 "it could have been worse". 

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #15 on: April 03, 2011, 10:11:07 AM »
I will be moving to Bermuda (no taxes) if he wins in 2012. 

Hugo Chavez

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #16 on: April 03, 2011, 10:31:08 AM »
I hate America and white people. And so can you! Obama-Qaddafi 2012-- Authentic Bannana Republic Politicians Seeking Equality For America!
This could possibly be the most clueless thread ever, nice avatar btw...

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #17 on: April 03, 2011, 10:33:04 AM »
I support Barack Obama and the steadfast, unfaltering and not the least bit hypocritical stances he takes on a variety of issues. For example:

BERMAN: Obama’s selective outrage
President backs freedom for some but not for others

By most objective standards, President Obama’s Libya speech can be considered a success. After weeks of comparative silence, the president’s address - delivered on March 28 before the National Defense University - was as spirited a defense of America’s decision to intervene forcefully in Libya as any we have seen to date. So much so, in fact, that it raised eyebrows in many quarters. “Serious question,” one foreign policy observer asked wryly on Twitter in the wake of the president’s remarks. “Who did the neocons have to trade to get Barack Obama on their team?”

Indeed, with his newfound emphasis on humanitarian intervention, pro-democracy activism and the use of force, Mr. Obama these days sounds a great deal like his predecessor. Upon closer inspection, however, the similarities break down. The George W. Bush administration, in its 2003 national security strategy, boldly proclaimed a “forward strategy that favors freedom” - an idea that subsequently served as the cornerstone of its ambitious effort to remake the Middle East. The approach of the current White House, by contrast, can be described more accurately as supporting freedom for some, but not for all.

Take Mr. Obama’s contention, articulated in his Libya speech, that “when our interests and values are at stake, we have a responsibility to act.” A nice sentiment, to be sure, but a deeply problematic one, especially given that the Libyan scenario isn’t unique - quite the contrary, in fact. The brutality of Col. Moammar Gadhafi’s regime is commonplace in a region riddled with authoritarian governments and repressive juntas. Yet Washington, under Mr. Obama, has shied away from taking up the issues of these iniquities in other corners of the Middle East. Nor has it weighed in decisively in favor of the anti-regime stirrings in many of those same places.

Iran is a case in point. Recent weeks have seen a resurgence of the widespread grass-roots protests that erupted within the Islamic republic following President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s fraudulent re-election in June 2009. Unlike in the past, Mr. Obama has responded positively to these developments and taken a stand in support of Iran’s opposition forces. In his latest message, commemorating the Persian New Year, the president told the Iranian people in no uncertain terms that he supported their “freedom of peaceful assembly and association; the ability to speak your mind and choose your leaders.”

But that appears to be where the administration’s endorsement ends. At least so far, there is little indication that Mr. Obama’s support is anything other than notional - or that his government is prepared to commit any real political, economic or military resources in support of the cause of freedom within Iran.

On Syria, Team Obama has done even less. After decades of Ba’athist-imposed stagnation, major pro-democracy protests are challenging the repressive regime of Bashar Assad in Damascus. A brutal crackdown has followed, with widespread reports of mounting casualties as government forces bear down on protesters in Daraa, Jassem, Latakia and other cities. White House officials, however, have taken a deferential stance toward Damascus, with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton even going so far as to insinuate that at least some in the U.S. government believe Mr. Assad to be a “reformer.”

That, of course, must be news to Mr. Assad. After dissolving his Cabinet as a sop to his political opponents, the Syrian strongman used his most recent public address, on Wednesday, not to proffer additional concessions but to rail against the international conspiracies and seditionist elements working to undermine his rule. It is a safe bet that greater violence will follow. That the Obama administration will do something about it, however, is not.

So if the president’s defense of intervention in Libya sounds inauthentic, perhaps it is because his administration plies its outrage about human rights violations and Middle East repression so selectively. If it didn’t, the pro-democracy activists in Syria and Iran, and not just Libya’s rebels, might be able to take heart as well.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2011/apr/1/obamas-selective-outrage/


Team teleprompter Obama 2012!!!!!!

Hugo Chavez

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #18 on: April 03, 2011, 10:48:47 AM »
By his actions, this is who you see Obama supporting...

The Neocons of the last decade.

The bankers.

The major corporations.

The pharmaceuticals.

The Military Industrial Complex lol...

But sadly NOT the average middle class sap working his ass off in America...

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #19 on: April 03, 2011, 02:58:41 PM »
 >:(

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #20 on: April 03, 2011, 03:24:00 PM »
Obama reelection campaign expected to tap big-money donors
By Dan Eggen and Perry Bacon Jr., Saturday, April , 6:01 PM

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/obama-reelection-campaign-expected-to-tap-big-dollar-donors/2011/03/26/AFKPO0wB_print.html




Facing an energized Republican Party and deep-pocketed conservative groups, President Obama is kicking off his 2012 reelection campaign with a concerted push for help from wealthy donors and liberal groups unbound by spending limits.

The strategy — which could begin in earnest as early as Monday with the formation of an official presidential committee — suggests a notable shift in emphasis for a president who has long decried the outsize role of money in politics.

Obama frequently points with pride to the role that smaller donors played in his 2008 election, when his campaign also openly discouraged spending by outside organizations. But now Obama finds himself seeking out the kind of big-money donations he has often criticized while encouraging independent groups to raise and spend unlimited money on his behalf.

Obama’s campaign manager-in-waiting, Jim Messina, has asked the party’s biggest supporters to raise $350,000 each this year, to be shared by Obama’s campaign and the Democratic National Committee, far higher than goals set during the 2008 cycle.

The effort could yield $140 million or more by the start of 2012, a pace likely to provide a major advantage to Obama and his party over potential GOP rivals. By comparison, Republican challenger Mitt Romney has set a minimum goal of $50 million for the primaries, though GOP strategists expect him to raise more.

The official start of Obama’s Chicago-based campaign is expected this week with an announcement to supporters and the filing of paperwork with the Federal Election Commission, advisers said. That will be followed by a whirlwind of major fundraisers scheduled later this month in Chicago, New York and California focused on both wealthy and middle-class donors.

With the 2012 presidential contest shaping up to be the most expensive political race in U.S. history, Obama last week traveled to New York to ask for help from dozens of wealthy Democrats. The first stop was the trendy Red Rooster Harlem restaurant, which played host to a 50-person, $30,800-a-head fundraising dinner for the DNC. Then it was off to the nearby Studio Museum for a thank-you reception with about 250 loyal donors, aimed at lining up support for the 2012 campaign.

“The dinner will be no more than 6 tables so that the President has time to spend at each table,” organizers noted in an e-mail message to attendees.

Senior Democratic aides say the early push among wealthy contributors makes sense given the lack of a primary race to inspire small donors. But DNC spokesman Brad Woodhouse said the campaign also will reach out to a broad group of potential contributors, including an aggressive use of Facebook, Twitter and other social media.

“Small donors, grass-roots donors, medium-sized and major donors were all part of the mix in 2008, and they will be again in 2012,” Woodhouse said. “We didn’t rely on one type of donor then, nor will we now.”

Democratic strategists say the aggressive fundraising goals are aimed in part at intimidating Republican rivals, who bested Democrats in overall political spending in 2010. The effort is expected to be bolstered by an outside group, now in the planning stages, headed by former White House aides Bill Burton and Sean Sweeney, advisers said.

“This president is quite strong, and already has a very developed list of supporters from the previous time,” said Richard Danzig, the Clinton administration Navy secretary who helped raise more than $500,000 for Obama in 2008. “He has all the advantages of being an incumbent.”

Yet the race is dogged by fears among supporters that Obama may not be able to match the historic fundraising juggernaut of 2008, when the candidate brought in nearly $750 million, much of it from small contributions solicited online. Some backers worry that a limping economy and disaffection among liberal activists and Wall Street donors could dampen Obama’s fundraising ability this time around.

“It’s a different climate,” said one longtime donor who, like many others, spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to talk frankly about the challenges facing the campaign. “The donor community has been disengaged from the White House.”

Republicans also criticize Obama for setting such lofty fundraising goals while in office: “Between the domestic and international crises currently facing the country, the president should demonstrate leadership for our country, not just his party,” said Republican National Committee spokesman Sean Spicer.

Obama’s senior advisers and many of his biggest financial supporters are optimistic, saying he should have little difficulty matching his 2008 fundraising record. At the same time, backers say, Obama will continue his efforts to limit the influence of special interests, again refusing to accept donations from corporate political-action committees or registered lobbyists. He also will urge outside groups to disclose their donors, aides said.

Peter Buttenwieser, a Philadelphia education consultant who helped raise more than $500,000 for Obama in 2008, said, “Once things get rolling and people take a look at the options, the campaign will raise all the money it needs.”

Since 2008, when Obama shattered records for online campaign donations, he has frequently cast himself as having reshaped politics by relying more heavily on average Americans than the super-wealthy. He told CNBC earlier this year that “the vast majority of the money I got was from small donors all across the country.”

That depends on the definition of “small”: About a third of the money he raised during the general election campaign did come from donors who gave $200 or less, a notably larger proportion than previous races, according to the Campaign Finance Institute think tank. But about 42 percent of the money came from donors giving $1,000 or more.

Obama also formed a group of “bundlers” who collected checks from their friends and earned special access to him and his staff, just as previous candidates of both parties had done before, and he declined public financing to avoid spending limits.

Some Democratic donors and campaign experts say the millions of middle-income people who donated to Obama three years ago may not have the motivation to give again. The 2012 campaign will lack the combination of factors that animated the 2008 contest: a fresh-faced candidate who could be the first black president; polarizing opponents like Hillary Rodham Clinton and Sarah Palin; and the eagerness of Democrats to end Republican control of the White House.

“He begins the race with the biggest donor base in presidential history, but you also have to add the dimension that it will be hard to replicate the historic nature of his candidacy,” said Anthony Corrado, a campaign-finance expert at Maine’s Colby College.

Obama also will be hobbled by rocky relations with the business community and softer support among some liberals.

“His refusal to fight Republicans or Wall Street corporations has left small-dollar donors much less inspired than in 2008,” said Adam Green at the Progressive Change Campaign Committee.

The president himself has acknowledged he may face a deficit in enthusiasm, one that he is urging supporters to overcome.

“Obviously the first time around it’s like lightning in a bottle,” Obama said at a recent DNC reception in Washington. “There’s something special about it, because you’re defying the odds. And as time passes, you start taking it for granted that a guy named Barack Hussein Obama is president of the United States. It’s not.”

Get the latest political news from PostPolitics. Follow us on Twitter and friend us on Facebook.



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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #21 on: April 03, 2011, 06:28:36 PM »
Obama to announce bid for re-election, sources say
 Edited on Sun Apr-03-11 06:51 PM by underpants
Source: CNN



Washington (CNN) -- President Barack Obama plans to send supporters a text or e-mail message announcing his intention to run for re-election, multiple Democratic sources tell CNN.

The message, which might include a video that would be posted online as well, could come as early as Monday morning. The sources say Obama's team also hopes to file papers with the Federal Election Commission on Monday to launch his 2012 re-election campaign.

The timing of the announcement and the filing could change depending on outside events. The White House is closely watching negotiations on Capitol Hill over the 2011 spending bill, which must be resolved this week to avoid a government shutdown.

So far no Republican contenders have formally announced. But these days the likely Republican presidential contenders are making endless visits to key early voting states and meeting with supporters across the country.



Read more: http://www.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/04/02/obama.re.electio...

 

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Re: Official Barack Obama Appreciation & Re-Election Thread
« Reply #22 on: April 04, 2011, 04:52:14 AM »
ARE YOU FREAKING KIDDING ME?   

WWWTTTFFF????



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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #23 on: April 04, 2011, 05:03:08 AM »
Posted at 06:04 AM ET, 04/04/2011
Obama announces 2012 reelection bid (video)
By Emi Kolawole

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/44/post/president-obama-announces-2012-reelection-bid-video/2011/04/04/AFc5JLaC_blog.html?hpid=z1


For the latest news and analysis on the president’s 2012 announcement, read The Fix by the Post’s Chris Cillizza .

President Barack Obama has announced his 2012 reelection campaign bid, formally placing himself in the running for a second term. The announcement came via a YouTube video posted to the campaign website BarackObama.com.

The video features individuals professing their desire to be involved in the Obama 2012 campaign effort. “The last couple of elections we’ve had have almost been turning point campaigns,” said one participant identified as “Ed.” Another interviewee, identified as Gladys says, “I’m kinda’ nervous about it, it’s coming, here it is, 2012 — the election.”

“I just saw the energy and hope that he had for this country,” says “Mike,” “even though I couldn’t exactly vote at the time I knew that someday I’d be able to help re-elect him.”

“Unfortunately, President Obama is one person — plus he’s got a job. We’re paying him to do a job so we can’t say, ‘Hey, could you just take some time off to get us all energized?’ So, we’ve got to figure it out,” says “Alice.”

The video ends on a blue screen with white text saying, “It begins with us,” and unveiling the Obama 2012 campaign logo, which incorporates the red, white and blue “O” from the 2008 campaign.

The announcement, while not unexpected, marks the formal beginning of Obama’s run for a second term. The campaign will file formal papers today with the Federal Election Commission, allowing them to raise money towards what may be the first $1 billion campaign effort. The Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza reviews the 2008 campaign veterans set to advise the president during his second presidential run.

The video was accompanied by an e-mail message sent to Obama supporters:

Today, we are filing papers to launch our 2012 campaign.We're doing this now because the politics we believe in does not start with expensive TV ads or extravaganzas, but with you -- with people organizing block-by-block, talking to neighbors, co-workers, and friends. And that kind of campaign takes time to build.So even though I'm focused on the job you elected me to do, and the race may not reach full speed for a year or more, the work of laying the foundation for our campaign must start today.We've always known that lasting change wouldn't come quickly or easily. It never does. But as my administration and folks across the country fight to protect the progress we've made -- and make more -- we also need to begin mobilizing for 2012, long before the time comes for me to begin campaigning in earnest.As we take this step, I'd like to share a video that features some folks like you who are helping to lead the way on this journey. Please take a moment to watch:

In the coming days, supporters like you will begin forging a new organization that we'll build together in cities and towns across the country. And I'll need you to help shape our plan as we create a campaign that's farther reaching, more focused, and more innovative than anything we've built before.We'll start by doing something unprecedented: coordinating millions of one-on-one conversations between supporters across every single state, reconnecting old friends, inspiring new ones to join the cause, and readying ourselves for next year's fight.This will be my final campaign, at least as a candidate. But the cause of making a lasting difference for our families, our communities, and our country has never been about one person. And it will succeed only if we work together.There will be much more to come as the race unfolds. Today, simply let us know you're in to help us begin, and then spread the word: http://my.barackobama.com/2012

Thank you,

Barack

Paid for by Obama for America

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #24 on: April 04, 2011, 05:10:06 AM »

Obama launches reelection campaign
By: Jennifer Epstein
April 4, 2011 05:31 AM EDT

www.politico.com

 
 
President Barack Obama launched his reelection campaign Monday morning with a web video posted on his website.

“It Begins With Us” features a series of supporters from around the country explaining why they support the president, but does not include Obama’s voice or any new film footage of him.

“This campaign is just kicking off,” the front page of BarackObama.com says. “We’re opening up offices, unpacking boxes, and starting a conversation with supporters like you to help shape our path to victory. 2012 begins now, and this is where you say you’re in.”

Reports over the weekend set the drumbeat for the official launch, which came soon after 5 a.m. on the fourth day of the fourth month, symbolic for the 44th president.

An official filing with the Federal Election Commission is expected to come Monday so that Obama can begin fundraising for his campaign. His first official fundraiser is scheduled for April 14 in his hometown of Chicago. Two more are set for the following week, in San Francisco and Los Angeles, with ticket prices ranging from $25 for young adults — “Gen44” — to $2,500 for VIPs.

Though the president’s voice isn’t heard in the announcement, it does come across in an email message sent to his mailing list Monday morning.

“We’re doing this now because the politics we believe in does not start with expensive TV ads or extravaganzas, but with you — with people organizing block-by-block, talking to neighbors, co-workers, and friends,” he says, explaining why the launch is coming more than 19 months before Election Day. “And that kind of campaign takes time to build.”

“So even though I’m focused on the job you elected me to do, and the race may not reach full speed for a year or more, the work of laying the foundation for our campaign must start today,” Obama continues in the written message. That includes fundraising for what could be the first-ever $1 billion campaign.

Former White House deputy chief of staff Jim Messina is Obama’s campaign manager and has set up shop in Chicago at One Prudential Plaza, overlooking Grant Park, where Obama gave his election night victory speech.


Summoning the grassroots supporters who helped elect Obama in 2008, the two-minute video is an exercise in covering the bases, with backers young and old. Four of the five people featured in the video come from battleground states, the fifth is a college student from New York.

“We’re not leaving it up to chance, we’re not leaving up to, ‘oh, the incumbent,’” a woman identified as Gladys, of Nevada, says. “It’s an election that we have to win.” Video footage shows her in a kitchen with three kids.

“Unfortunately, President Obama is one person,” says Alice from Michigan. “Plus, he’s got a job. You know, we’re paying him to do a job so we can’t say, ‘hey can you take some time off and get us all energized?’ So we better figure it out.”

There’s also an appeal to disaffected supporters.

“I don’t agree with Obama on everything, but I respect him and I trust him,” Ed from North Carolina says, echoing the views of some who backed Obama in 2008 but haven’t been happy with his performance in the White House.

And Obama makes his own outreach pitch in his email. “We’ve always known that lasting change wouldn’t come quickly or easily. It never does,” he says. “But as my administration and folks across the country fight to protect the progress we’ve made — and make more — we also need to begin mobilizing for 2012, long before the time comes for me to begin campaigning in earnest.”

“There are so many things that are still on the table that need to be addressed. And we want them to be addressed by President Obama,” Gladys says.

“I had this perception that politics was all show, it’s all sound bytes. But politics is how we govern ourselves,” Katherine from Colorado says. “At the grassroots level, it’s individuals talking to other individuals and making a difference.”

“It begins with us,” the screen says as the video closes, segueing into the same “O” logo with a rising American flag that Obama used throughout the 2008 campaign, before zooming out so that the “O” becomes part of “2012.”
 
 
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