Two days after the historic election of Barack Obama, we met at the Rolling Stone offices in New York with two of America's most perceptive political observers. Peter D. Hart, known for his nonpartisan poll for NBC News and The Wall Street Journal, has conducted public-opinion research for 30 governors and 40 U.S. senators, from Hubert Humphrey to Ted Kennedy. David Gergen, director of the Center for Public Leadership at the Kennedy School at Harvard, has served in the White House as a senior adviser to presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan and Clinton.
What was the single biggest key to Obama's
victory?
PETER D. HART: The core he stimulated within the
electorate — African-Americans, Latinos, young voters,
first-time voters. He ran better than two-thirds in all of those
groups, and 95 percent with African-Americans. He took what had
been a confined electorate and changed it. In doing so, he put into
play states that Democrats never thought they could win —
Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada, Indiana and North Carolina, as well
as Ohio and Florida.
DAVID GERGEN: The key, in my judgment, was that
early on, Obama forged a strategy for victory, assembled a team
around that strategy, and executed the best-organized and most
brilliant campaign we've seen in American politics since John
Kennedy in 1960. Essential to that strategy was the building of a
new coalition. What we now see is the emergence of a possible
majority that could bring dominance to the Democratic Party for
some years to come. We've had a long period of Republican dominance
in the country. Republicans have won seven out of the last 10
presidential elections, and they built much of that success around
what was often called the Reagan coalition. Now Obama has built
what could be an Obama coalition. Peter's absolutely right in
identifying the millennial generation, the African-American
community and Latinos as the driving forces behind this new
coalition. It also includes women, suburban voters and others who
have been traditional parts of the Democratic voting bloc. These,
to me, are the new drivers.
Let's talk about a couple of those constituencies. The
youth vote — what role did it play? Was it big enough to
really make a difference?
HART: It made a huge difference. Remember: When we
talk about the youth vote, we're talking about all 50 states. It's
not like the evangelical vote or an ethnic group that is located in
one particular area. Youth voters — coast to coast, border to
border — turned to Obama in numbers that are just hard to
fathom. They were drawn to him from day one, and it was a
connection that was as psychological as it was issue-driven. This
is somebody who spoke their language, who understood the times and
who provided a direction that they wanted to see the country go in.
Gore carried young voters by two points. Kerry carried them by
about nine points. Obama carried them by 34 points.
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.