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Obama Campaign Announces Launch Of Women For Obama

Obama Campaign Announces Launch of Women for Obama
Barack and Michelle Obama Roll Out Women for Obama Today

Chicago, IL- Barack and Michelle Obama  today launched “Women for Obama”  in their hometown of Chicago.    Following an event at the Chicago Hilton, Barack Obama hosted a conference call with women across the country to officially launch the group.

“My husband is a man who understands the struggles of women and families.  While he has seen and heard about these struggles from me, he was also raised in a household of strong women who struggled and sacrificed to help him achieve his dreams,” said Michelle Obama.  “This campaign believes in the women of this country and envisions a government that doesn’t just encourage women to dream big, but to know that they have the support and the resources to pursue those dreams.  I want that for my daughters.  I want that for your daughters.  And I want that for this country.”

“This group of women is what this campaign is about—transforming this nation and giving our daughters and our sons a world that’s a little more hopeful and a little less mean than the one we have today,” said Barack Obama.  “Whether you’re a mother or a father or an aunt or an uncle, we all believe that our daughters have the same chance as our sons and that they should be respected the same and have the same chances to be whatever they want to be.”

Women for Obama is a nationwide grassroots organization that will work from the bottom up to engage women in Barack Obama’s campaign to change this country.

Posted by Mike on April 16, 2007 | Permalink

Obama FEC Filing With Summary

Final tally of Obama grassroots support is in: 104,000 donors, $24.8 million primary raised, $18.2 million in primary dollars in bank

Chicago, IL- The Obama for America campaign today reported to the Federal Election Commission that in the first quarter it raised a total of $25.8 million from 104,000 individuals.  Of that money, $24.8 million is for use in the primary, and $18.2 million remains in the bank.  The campaign had $6.6 million in expenses and has $190,000 in debt. 

“The final tally of support from the American people is true testament to the desire for a different kind of politics in this country and a belief at the grassroots level that Barack Obama can bring out the best in America to solve our problems,” said Obama for America Finance Chair Penny Pritzker.

The Obama campaign raised $6.9 million over the Internet from over 50,000 donors, and another $3.4 through mail and phone grassroots efforts.

Posted by Mike on April 15, 2007 | Permalink

Earnest Tapped To Lead Obama’s Iowa Communications Team

Earnest Tapped To Lead Obama’s Iowa Communications Team

DES MOINES – Senator Barack Obama’s campaign for president today announced the hiring of Josh Earnest to lead the campaign’s communications operation in Iowa.  The announcement comes one week after Senator Obama completed his fifth trip to Iowa and visited his 20th county since declaring his candidacy for president two months ago.

“Earnest’s hiring reflects our campaign’s commitment to dedicating significant resources and talent to talk to Iowans about Senator Obama’s vision for changing politics as usual in Washington, DC,” said Iowa State Director Paul Tewes.  “We’re pleased he’s agreed to lead the talented team that we already have in place in Iowa.”

Earnest will lead an Iowa communications staff that includes Iowa Press Secretary Tommy Vietor who was a spokesman in Senator Obama’s Senate office, Iowa Deputy Press Secretary Gannet Tseggai formerly a press aide for Senator Ted Kennedy and Iowa Press Assistant Bobby Gravitz who filled a similar role on former Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack’s campaign for president.

Earnest served as National Communications Director for Tom Vilsack’s presidential campaign until the former Iowa governor ended his campaign in February.  Last year, Earnest was the Communications Director for Jim Davis’s campaign for Florida governor.  Before moving to Florida, Earnest did a 2 ½ year stint at the Democratic National Committee, including a year as National Press Secretary in 2005.

Posted by Mike on April 13, 2007 | Permalink

Over 100,000 People Donate to Obama Campaign in First Quarter

Over 100,000 People Donate to Obama Campaign in First Quarter

Campaign Raises At Least $25 Million, At Least $23.5 Million for Primary

Chicago, IL- The Obama for America campaign today announced that it will report raising at least $25 million from more than 100,000 people in the first quarter of 2007, with at least $23.5 million eligible to be spent in the Democratic primary.

“This overwhelming response, in only a few short weeks, shows the hunger for a different kind of politics in this country and a belief at the grassroots level that Barack Obama can bring out the best in America to solve our problems,” said Obama for America Finance Chair Penny Pritzker.

The Obama campaign raised $6.9 million over the Internet from more than 50,000 donors.

Posted by Mike on April 04, 2007 | Permalink

Obama Community Kickoff Events To Occur In Each Of Iowa's 99 Counties

Hope.Action.Change Community Kickoff Events to Occur in Each of Iowa’s 99 Counties

DES MOINES – U.S. Senator Barack Obama’s Iowa campaign announced today that Hope.Action.Change Community Kickoff events will occur in each of Iowa’s 99 counties this Saturday. From Lyon to Lee, Iowans will join together in their communities to discuss the need to change the way we do politics in Washington so that we can transform our country.

“My years working as a community organizer taught me that change doesn't come from the top, it comes from the bottom, from everyday people working together,” Obama said. “So I’m inspired that just 50 days into this campaign, Iowans in 99 counties came together to begin the process of building a bottom-up organization dedicated to changing this country."

At 3:00 on March 31, Senator Obama will attend a community kickoff event in Onawa. It will be broadcast live over the internet at www.barackobama.com. More than 5,000 Hope.Action.Change Community Kickoff events will take place simultaneously in homes across the country.   

Barack Obama started his political career over two decades ago working as a community organizer in some of Chicago’s poorest neighborhoods, motivated by the idea that he could play a part in building a better America. He is taking that idea to living rooms and community halls this weekend by engaging thousands of people across the country and calling them to action.

Posted by Mike on March 30, 2007 | Permalink

Statement from Barack Obama on Elizabeth and John Edwards

Chicago, IL-Today, Barack Obama made the following statement on Elizabeth and John Edwards.


"Today, Michelle and I join every American in sending our thoughts and prayers to Elizabeth and John and the entire Edwards family. We all admire Elizabeth’s strength and determination and the deep love they so obviously share."

Posted by Mike on March 22, 2007 | Permalink

Obama Campaign: Announces Iowa Campaign Staff Additions

Obama Campaign: Announces Iowa Campaign Staff Additions

DES MOINES – U.S. Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) today announced that he has hired a number of key staffers to lead his campaign in Iowa.

“This team understands that strong organizations are built from the bottom up and is committed to running a campaign designed to change the way we do politics in this country,” Obama said. “I look forward to working with them to build grassroots support in Iowa the old fashioned way – by reaching out to caucus-goers one Iowan at a time.”

Below is a list of the Obama campaign’s staff additions:

Jackie Norris, Senior Advisor
Franny Starkey, Trip Director
Marygrace Galston, Deputy State Director
Mitch Stewart, Iowa Caucus Director
Steve Chasse, Outreach Director
Tsehaynesh Abebe, Field Director
Mike Blake, Deputy Political Director
Tommy Vietor, Iowa Press Secretary
Gannet Tseggai, Iowa Deputy Press Secretary

Posted by Mike on March 15, 2007 | Permalink

Remarks Of Senator Barack Obama At IAFF Meeting

Remarks of Senator Barack Obama
IAFF Meeting March 14, 2007 Washington, DC

**As Prepared for Delivery**

Look at all of you, Brothers and Sisters—I’m truly fired up today.

This is a hall filled with heroes.  To all of you who do the work every day to protect us and save us, thank you.  To the heroes who are serving and saving lives in the desert sands thousands of miles away, we thank you.  And to the heroes who have been called to another House, we miss you.

It is a noble calling to see a building a blaze and want to rush in.  It is a noble calling what you do.  You know that.  I know that.  This country knows that. 

The alarm sounds and you are there.  You were the strength they needed to help rescue and recover after the tragic tornados in Alabama.  You were the force to tame the wildfires in California.  You were the calm in the chaos of Katrina.  And we love you for what you did on September 11th.   

It is a noble calling what you do.  You know that.  I know that.  This country knows that.  But sometimes Washington forgets.  They praise your work.  They cheer you on when you race up the stairs.  But when it’s time for you to get health care or buy the radios and equipment you need, those supporters disappear like a puff of smoke.

Instead of making your job easier, they create other kinds of fires that you have to put out.  They tried to cut funding so that you couldn’t buy the masks and suits you need.  They wanted to stop the hiring of 75,000 new firefighters.  They wanted to hide the US Fire Administration under layers of bureaucracy at Homeland Security.  And 5 years after September 11th, they still won’t give our first responders the health care they earned by doing the Lord’s work that day.  Instead of making your job easier, they tried to create those other kinds of fires.  Well, we are working together to put those fires out.

What keeps Washington from doing all that it needs to do to better protect our firefighters, police officers, and EMT’s—it’s not a lack of ideas and solutions that’s holding us back.  It is the smallness of our politics. 

Washington has become a place where politics has become a business instead of a mission; a place where the cynics and the lobbyists have turned our government into a game only they can afford to play; a place where we spend a lot of time keeping score of who’s up and who’s down and not enough time rolling up our sleeves and figuring out what to do about better serving our first responders, our veterans, and our men and women standing guard in Iraq. 

We can’t afford the games they play in this town anymore.  The times we live in are too serious – the challenges too great.  So I know they like to say that I haven’t been in Washington all that long, but I’ve been there long enough to know that it’s time for Washington to change. 

The American people are in a serious mood.  They want Washington to get to work.  And with more than 820 of your Brothers and Sisters serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, we owe you nothing less. 

When you are saving lives here and saving lives on the streets of Baghdad in a war that never should have been authorized, your actions teach us how to be better citizens.  You run marathons and raise money for our veterans.  You help train army transportation units to care for the wounded.  And you have donated thousands of t-shirts to our soldiers fighting overseas with the Hero-to-Hero program. 

You sign the shirts with messages of hope and support for your friends in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Your Brothers and Sisters from all across the country are working with police officers and you have sent more than 10,000 shirts to our soldiers.  I’m not a firefighter, and I am certainly not a hero.  But I have one more for you: a signed shirt from me.  It reads, “Thank you.  Be safe.  You’re coming home soon.”

And I mean that; they will be coming home soon. 

Your Brothers and Sisters and the more than 1.6 million of our best and bravest who have been deployed since September 11th.  They will be part of a homecoming not seen in a generation. 

Now, this is personal to most of you.  You know someone who used to ride next to you on the truck who is on their 2nd tour in Iraq.  Some of your family members are serving in Iraq.  Many of you have served in the Guard and Reserves.  And you know, just like those people who say that they support firefighters and then disappear when it’s time to give them health care and the necessary equipment—they’re doing the same thing with the troops. 

They say that they support them.  They give long speeches about valor and sacrifice.  They say the words with a preacher’s ease.  But when it comes time to sending our troops into battle with the proper equipment and ensure that veterans have what they need when they get home, they don’t do anything except slap a yellow ribbon on the back of their SUV.  That’s how body armor doesn’t reach Baghdad.  That’s how come our men and women have to use scrap metal to protect their Humvees.  That’s how Walter Reed happens. 

Our veterans end up living among mice and mold.  They stare at stacks of paperwork.  They’re given the run-around when it comes to their care.  They are learning to walk again and talk again.  They thought they left the frontline in Iraq but they came home to a new frontline of red tape and bureaucracy.

This is unacceptable.  When our veterans come home, I don’t want them forgotten in run down buildings.  When our veterans come home, I don’t want them crawling around a dumpster for a meal or a box for shelter.  When our veterans come home, I don’t want them drowning in whiskey to silence the PTSD.  When our veterans come home, I don’t want them begging to see a doctor.  When our veterans come home, I don’t want their wives or mothers or husbands to have to choose between caring for their loved-one or keeping the job that pays the bills. When our veterans come home, I don’t want them sitting in a room all alone with tears in their eyes because they can only get voicemail at the VA. 

I don’t want that for our veterans.  We know they deserve more.

You and I believe in the sacred trust between this country and those who serve it.  That trust begins the moment a soldier signs on.  If they put on the uniform and serve this country, then this grateful nation will train them and equip them with what they need to complete the mission.  If they put on the uniform and serve this country, an honorable nation honors that service by making sure that our veterans’ cares and concerns are met when they return home.  This trust is sacred and we need to build it back so that the best and the bravest always put on the uniform.

Our veterans have come home with their bodies broken and their nerves shattered.  Today, we have more than 631,000 veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan.  According to a recent VA health care report, one third—more than 205,000—have sought treatment at VA health facilities.  That number is much larger than the 23,000 wounded in action number the Pentagon tells us and what gets reported on the news. 

The reason the number of veterans seeking care at a VA facility is so high is because the wounded in action number is incomplete. It doesn’t include the nearly 7,000 who have been injured and needed to be medically evacuated out of Iraq.  It doesn’t include the nearly 19,000 who have been stricken with a disease and needed to be medically evacuated out of Iraq.  The total of number of soldiers who have been hurt in Iraq is almost 43,000.  Help me get the truth out because whether or not a veteran is wounded in action, injured or becomes sick—they still deserve the recognition and the best care in the world. 

So let’s make a promise today—to put this fire out too—and say that, right here and right now, is when we begin to put together a comprehensive plan for our veterans. 

It is time for us to start taking care of our own again: to say what we mean and mean what we say.  If we support first responders, then let’s give them the equipment they need to save our lives.  If we support our troops, then let’s send them into battle with the body armor they need.  And if we say that we support our veterans, then let’s give them the heroes welcome they deserve.  It is time for us to renew our sacred trust with people who serve and work hard to make America the best place on earth. 

Last weekend, I was in Iowa and I took a bus ride with a group of firefighters.  We rode together from one event to the next.  I did a lot of listening on that ride as they told about their concerns.  They talked about how cities and towns were expanding around them.  And yet, as more and more people were moving in, there were fewer and fewer dollars available to hire more firefighters.  They were deeply concerned that was putting people at risk.  As we expand into rural area and as suburbs grow, we ought to be able to hire more firefighters to keep us safe.

On that bus ride, we talked about the need for higher wages.  Budgets are tight across this country.  Folks are worried that as wages stay flat and health care cost go up, mortgage rates go up, the costs of your kids’ clothing goes up, college tuition goes up—they won’t be able to afford to do the job they love.  These folks have to be able to negotiate higher wages.  If firefighters are putting their lives on the line to save, then it shouldn’t cost them the shirt off their backs.

That’s the message I carried back with me.  We need to get to work so you can do the work you love without having to live from paycheck to paycheck.

We’re going to change the politics in Washington so we are safer.  We can do this.  We can change the politics in Washington, push the big money and the special interests aside and we can put the people’s hopes and your concerns back at the center of our public debate.   We can end the can’t-do, won’t-do, won’t-even-try style of politics in this country and tackle the challenges we face today.  We can do this.   

We can reform a health care system where we spend more than any other country in the world but still have families who skip seeing the doctor because they can’t afford the bill.  We can and will have universal health care in this country by the end of the next President’s first term.

We can stop sending $800 million a day to Middle East dictators for oil that’s a danger to our planet and a drag on our economy, and we can start using renewable fuels that are grown right in Iowa and Illinois, and we can help our car companies use technology we already have to start churning our cars that use less oil. 

We can start giving kids the education they need to compete with kids not just across America but around the world – we can recruit an army of new teachers who we pay more, and support more, and ask more of.  And we can end the Washington mindset that says the answer to better schools is either more money or more reform because we know it’s both. 

But none of this will come to pass until we do what everyone in this room knows what we must do and end this war in Iraq.

As many of you know, I opposed this war from the beginning – in part because I believed that if we gave this President the open-ended authority to invade Iraq, we would end up with the open-ended occupation we find ourselves in today. 

Now nearly 3,200 of our soldiers have given the last full measure of devotion to their country.  Tens of thousands more will return home with wounds that last a lifetime.  And yet still, every day, we send our sons and daughters, our friends and neighbors to go fight in the crossfire of someone else’s civil war. 

We learned that 14,000 Guard members across the country are leaving for a second tour before they’re supposed to, before they’re ready, and before they have the proper equipment to do the job they’re being sent for.  That means one more suit hangs on the hook every time the alarm bell sounds.  That means one more set of boots sit still for months.  That means one less Brother or Sister to watch your back in a burning building.  This is wrong. 

We shouldn’t be sending more troops to Iraq, we should be bringing them home. 

It’s time to find an end to this war.  That’s why I have a plan that will begin withdrawing our troops from Iraq on May 1st of this year, with the goal of removing all of our combat forces from the country by March of 2008.

I’ve also said that we have to make sure we’re not as careless getting out of this war as we were getting in, and that’s why this withdrawal would be gradual, and would keep some U.S. troops in the region to prevent a wider war and go after Al Qaeda and other terrorists. 

But above all, it’s a plan that recognizes a fact that just about everyone in the world understands except the White House – there is no military solution to this war.  Letting the Iraqis know that we will not be there forever is our last, best hope to pressure the Sunni and Shia to come to the table and find peace. 

It’s time to find an end to this war.  It’s time to refocus on the wider struggle against terror and restore our standing in the world.  And you can help.  Thanks to your emails and your letters and your support, we now have more than 60 members of Congress – Democrat and Republican – supporting our plan.  And if you keep it up, we can get more.  We can pass this plan and send a message even George Bush can’t ignore.

So when those voices start sounding the alarm that we can’t change Washington and its ways and start engaging in a serious debate about the serious times we face, just say those three words that have made America what it is today:  “Yes we can.” 

When people say that we can’t take care of your Brothers and Sisters when they get sick from breathing in too much soot and smoke, we say, “Yes we can.”  When they say that we can’t finally buy the radios you need to talk to one another in case of an emergency, we say, “Yes we can.” 

When they say that we can’t bring your Brothers and Sisters home from Iraq so they can do the job they love back home, we say, “Yes we can.”  Thank you.

Posted by Mike on March 14, 2007 | Permalink

Statement on Former Governor Tom Vilsack’s Announcement

Statement on Former Governor Tom Vilsack’s Announcement

DES MOINES – U.S. Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) today released the following statement on former Governor Tom Vilsack’s announcement:

“Tom Vilsack is an outstanding public servant whose initiatives in Iowa on education reform, health care and alternative energy are models from which our entire nation can learn. More than that, Tom brings a badly needed sense of honor and decency to our politics, and a passionate advocacy for an end to the war in Iraq. I hope he will continue to speak out in the months and years to come, as his is an important and valued voice.”

Posted by Mike on February 23, 2007 | Permalink

Barack Obama 2008 Announcement Tour Video Ames Iowa

Posted by Mike on February 11, 2007 | Permalink

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