By Andrew Cline on 6.30.08 @ 12:08AM
Obama treats supporters as props.
It would seem a terrible place to hold a large political rally:
an elementary school soccer field in a remote New Hampshire town of
1,700 people, a town so inconvenient to access that no one can
remember the last time a presidential candidate visited, or if one
ever had. And in fact, it was a terrible place to hold a large
political rally.
Unity, N.H., is not just small, it's small and out-of-the-way.
The town has no major roads, just winding country ones. It has a
single school, the elementary school, no large retail center and no
parking. It is an hour and a half from the nearest sizeable
airport, and hotels for traveling press are nowhere to be found.
Who in the world would hold a political rally for several thousand
people here? Barack Obama would.
Unity might be one of the worst towns in America in which to
hold a major political rally, but symbolically it was ideal for the
Obama campaign. Where better to have Hillary Clinton join Obama on
stage in a display of party loyalty, showing her supporters that
there are no hard feelings for her loss to Obama and urging them to
work hard to make him President, than in a town named Unity, where
in the New Hampshire primary in January the vote for Obama and
Clinton was evenly split -- 107 apiece?
For the attendees, the choice of location would be a nightmare.
For the Obama campaign, a campaign based entirely on symbolism, it
was perfect.
Because there really is no parking at all in Unity, N.H., the
campaign had to bus attendees in from nearby Claremont, an old
industrial city, and Newbury, a resort town. Yet the campaign
didn't limit the number of guests to a total that would be easy to
truck in and out in a short time, which proved to be a real problem
when the thunderstorm hit.
OBAMA AND CLINTON supporters arrived in Claremont as early as 6
a.m. for the 1 p.m. event. Many were from nearby Vermont. Some
traveled hours to get there, from as far as Massachusetts. They
waited at the parking lot (a local race track) until almost 11
a.m., took a 15-minute ride to the elementary school, then had to
stand in line to get through the security bottleneck. (The Secret
Service had set up metal detectors and was duplicating your typical
airport security checkpoint.)
As it did during the primary, the Obama campaign went to great
lengths to separate the media from the crowd, deliberately making
it difficult for reporters to interview attendees. The media were
separated from the crowd this time by a metal fence put up by the
campaign. The press was corralled like cattle into a segregated
portion of the field and was not let into the public section. The
only exception was to get refreshments. Reporters were allowed to
go straight to the concession stand and back, provided they agreed
to go with an escort from the campaign. No escort, no
refreshments.
I confronted the staffer in charge about this. She told me three
times that it was for "security." When I asked her to explain what
that meant, she repeated that it was a Secret Service mandate and
it was out of her hands. That was a lie. I asked the Secret Service
and was told that they didn't care one way or another; the order to
keep the media separate from the public came from the campaign, not
them.
It was a hot day, nearly 90 degrees, and there was no shelter.
There was a single refreshment tent, where hot dogs, burgers, and
water were being sold. By the time the speakers came out, several
elderly women had already taken shelter under their "Unite for
Change" signs. Even as the band played protest songs (what
Democratic Party rally is complete without Neil Young?), some
children had to be carried out, and people reported later that
several elderly attendees had fainted or were about to.
OBLIVIOUS TO THE CONDITIONS, the Obama campaign arranged for six
speakers (including Clinton and Obama) that burning afternoon. The
state's two Democratic members of Congress, Carol Shea-Porter and
Paul Hodes, kicked things off, followed by U.S. Senate candidate
Jeanne Shaheen, Gov. John Lynch, and Ken Hall, the "honorary mayor
of Unity."
With so many speakers, the campaign might have vetted the
speeches to make sure each made different points. Instead, everyone
save Hall, a Republican, gave almost the exact same speech. And
that includes the headliners. Remove the personal references, and
the speeches delivered by Clinton and Obama could have been given
by any random Democrat running for any random office.
The crowd, however, seemed to enjoy the talking-point speeches.
When Clinton asked for party unity, saying "we are one party" and
urging her supporters to back Obama, the crowd erupted in cheers
and applause. The only remarkable aspect of any speech that day was
the number of times Clinton made a point of telling her supporters
to vote for Obama for president. She could have given vague
instructions to support Obama the individual, without mentioning
the office, or the Democratic nominee. But she chose to say she
supported him for president. The crowd seemed to pick up on that,
and there were cheers every time she said it.
Before the event, I approached groups of women to ask which
candidate they supported in the primary and whether they backed
Obama with any reservations. To a person they all said their
support for Obama was unequivocal. The Clinton supporters said they
had no reservations at all and were happy to support the nominee.
One, however, said that if there really were a significant number
of Clinton supporters who would not back Obama in the fall, they
wouldn't have made the effort to come to Unity that day.
She was correct, with the exception of a pair of Clinton
supporters who parked themselves in front of the CNN cameras and
defiantly waived Clinton signs. The two booed when Clinton asked
her supporters to back Obama, and they tried to interrupt Obama's
speech, but they weren't loud enough. That odd couple aside, the
crowd was unified in support for Obama. And not even being stranded
in a thunderstorm by the event's poor organization was enough to
change their minds.
ABOUT 10 MINUTES after Obama and Clinton left the stage, the rain
began. It started softly, but the clouds unloaded a few minutes
later, before the first bus had even made it to the parking lot.
The absence of a main road, and the presence of so many steep
hills, forced the bus drivers to take longer routes back in the
rain, as the police directing traffic wouldn't let them go the
shortest route. As the 15-minute one-way trip to the parking lot
turned into a more than 20-minute trip, thousands of attendees
stood in the downpour awaiting their bus.
I made it out early. Later in the afternoon I spoke with someone
who had been stranded at the site for several hours. Only after
people began cursing the staff and some senior citizens were in
obvious need of revival did the campaign start handing out free
bottled water to the soaked, overheated guests. The campaign even
held buses so some dignitaries could get out first.
It had become apparent by the end of the day that the campaign
really hadn't given any thought to the comfort of the people it had
bused in. They were nothing more than props, hauled in and out of
this tiny town to serve as a backdrop for the media event (and
campaign commercial?) the campaign had dreamed up.
The poor folks who gave up an entire day of their lives to see
this event got sunburned, dehydrated, then soaked all so Obama
could have his symbolic unification rally in this remote town.
It was also ironic that the campaign that has made so much out
of promising the swift and orderly withdrawal of U.S. troops from
Iraq could not even manage an exit strategy for Unity, N.H.
But, hey, what's the suffering of a few thousand people if it
serves the greater cause of getting Barack Obama elected
president?
topics:
Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Iraq