ROCHESTER POST-BULLETIN: OBAMA PACKS MAYO CIVIC AUDITORIUM
The Twin Cities media has been consistent in reporting that yesterday's rally drew over 1000 people.
PB's Matthew Stolle's story tells how many over a thousand in Sen. Obama packs Mayo Civic Auditorium:
Riding a wave of political fascination almost Kennedyesque in its
fervor, Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois stumped in Rochester on Monday
for DFL Senate candidate Amy Klobuchar and congressional candidate Tim
Walz before a sign-waving, cheering throng estimated at 3,000 people.
Last week, First Bush drew fewer than a 1000. MPR cited Gutknecht campaign-supplied attendance figures of 700. For yesterday's rally, KTTC-TV also estimated an attendance of 3000.
Stolle continues:
“These are serious times,” Obama said in a 25-minute speech that
ranged from the war in Iraq to America’s health care crisis. “If we
don’t deal with these issues, we may be the first generation passing on
an America that’s a little poorer and a little meaner than the one we
inherited from our parents. And that’s unacceptable.”
Yet Obama’s speech, which came eight days before the Nov. 7
election, projected a tone of hopefulness based on what he called the
innate decency of the American people.
“This is all goodness. When the American people pay attention, good things happen,” Obama said.
Obama was in Rochester to lend his growing popularity to the
candidacies of Klobuchar and Walz, both of whom shared the stage with
Obama at Mayo Civic Auditorium. Polls have consistently shown Klobuchar
with a double-digit lead over GOP candidate Mark Kennedy, while Walz is
surprising political observers with his strong campaign against
six-term GOP incumbent Rep. Gil Gutknecht.
“I think part of the reason that they’re doing so well is that they
just feel real,” Obama said of Klobuchar and Walz. “They’re not
blow-dried and poll-tested and sound-bited. They sound like your
neighbors and your friends — people who you trust.”
Since being elected to the Senate in 2004, Obama, 45, has been
featured on the covers of Newsweek and Time magazines and has been the
subject of fervent speculation about his presidential ambitions. Two
weeks ago, Obama finally said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that he was
considering a run for president in 2008.
His speech at Mayo Civic Auditorium had the cadence and rhythm of a
sermon, almost conversational in tone. And local Democrats were clearly
hoping that the growing fascination and speculation surrounding Obama
would send a current of excitement through the Rochester area and help
deliver more DFL votes.
After the event, a large circle of admirers gathered around
Obama to have him sign copies of his new book, “The Audacity of Hope.”
A half-dozen or so people held up camera phones over the crowd to snap
pictures of him.
“I thought he was just great,” said Kristen Bertling, a 23-year-old
Mayo Clinic employee who had just taken a picture of Obama on her
phone. “I was just telling my friends. It’s almost like he’s your uncle
giving you advice on something.”
There were a number of high school students in the largely packed
auditorium. One student said that while the name Kerry or Clinton might
register a blank on many students’ faces, Obama has name recognition
among them.
“You say ‘Obama’ and people actually go, ‘Ohhh,’” said Sam Hagedorn,
a 16-year-old Mayo High School student who called Obama an “amazing
speaker, a real poet almost.”
Members of the Somali community in Rochester were also present at
the rally. Abdifatah Abdinur, a 28-year-old part-time Somali TV anchor,
noted with pride that Kenya, where Obama’s deceased father was born,
and Somalia neighbor each other. Obama is half white and half black.
“It is a connection. It’s like a man from Rochester becomes president or senator when you are from the same area,” Abdinur said.
PIONEER PRESS: THRILLER
The Pioneer Press offers the condensed version of yesterday's Rochester rally:
ROCHESTER, Minn. — With a week and a day until the election and a
visit from one of their party's biggest names of the moment, Democrats
in Rochester were feeling good Monday.
"I feel a wave forming. I think this is a seminal year for
Democrats," said Sharon Vandenorth, a Mayo Clinic employee who joined a
huge rally for U.S. Senate candidate Amy Klobuchar and 1st District
congressional candidate Tim Walz that featured U.S. Sen. Barack Obama.
The crowd of more than 1,000 Democrats gave Obama a rock star's
welcome, reflective of his growing national stature and possible 2008
presidential ambitions.
"I need you to knock on doors. I need you to make phone calls. I
need you to volunteer," the senator from Illinois told the crowd. "And
if you do that, on November 7th we are going to take America back."
The growing city of Rochester is a linchpin of Democratic hopes in Minnesota this year.
The DFL Party two years ago unexpectedly picked up several
legislative seats in the onetime Republican stronghold and transformed
the area into a key swing region. Walz, once considered a long shot
against Republican incumbent Gil Gutknecht, has in recent weeks surged
onto the list of possible Democratic pickups this year.
STAR TRIBUNE: TENSION MOUNTS IN TIGHT RACES
The Stribune looks at the close statewide and federal races this morning. We read this about the First:
The race so far: Republicans hadn't counted on having to defend
the seat of a 10-year House veteran. Then came Army Reserve veteran
Walz, part of a national "Fighting Dems" cadre of ex-military Democrats
in mostly Red districts. Walz, who advocates a change of course in
Iraq, has steadily gained momentum, money and national prominence,
forcing Gutknecht into an unexpected ad war.
Actually, Gutknecht's been in there twelve years, but since the Strib hadn't counted on covering this race, we can forgive them. So long as voters in the First remember Gutknecht's 12-years-or-vote -me-out pledge.
SWING STATE PROJECT: MONDAY INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURES
James L links to a little more spending by the NRCC in MN-01.
MANKATO FREE PRESS LTE: MR. NICE GUY
Phyllis Johnson tells another first-hand account of Tim Walz in Walz known for showing genuine concern, helping:
Tim Walz, along with a group of us, biked the Red
Jacket Trail a few years ago. One in our party had tire trouble on
several occasions. Walz was always there to help her.
She was very frustrated,
which Walz sensed and said, “You take my bike and I’ll ride yours.”
This is an example of what a gentleman Walz is. He shows the same
concern for his students. He listens to them and includes them when he
teaches, which I’m sure he’ll do for his constituents.
Walz spent more than a year teaching in China. How appropriate to know that we could have a congressman who knows China.
We don’t have to vote straight party lines Nov. 7. We can vote for the best person. That person would be Walz.
Mark Halverson is able to see Gutknecht's personal charm, but wants someone who will represent the district in Gutknecht’s voting record has been very disturbing:
At first glance, Gil Gutknecht looks like an
appealing candidate. He’s well groomed, personable and as with most
incumbent members of Congress, very good at speaking eloquently while
not saying much at all.
During his several years
representing Minnesota’s First Congressional District, he has not
rocked the boat. He has done nothing controversial. He hasn’t done much
of anything, it appears.
While one might be inclined to leave such
an innocuous representative in Congress, thankful that he has largely
avoided public scrutiny, there is one very disturbing fact that tells
the true story about Gutknecht’s tenure. He has voted with the Bush
administration over 80 percent of the time.
The Bush Administration represents the
worst in politics. Both individually and collectively they are cynical,
arrogant, dishonest and incompetent. They have gotten us in a terrible
war upon false pretenses and without an exit strategy.
They have rolled back civil liberties at
every opportunity. They have made great strides towards increasing the
distance between those few who are very wealthy, and the rest of the
population.
They have even rolled-back environmental
protection, in the face of compelling evidence that we are on the brink
of environmental disaster. A vote for Gutknecht in the upcoming
election is nothing more that a vote in favor of the Bush
administration. Make no mistake about it. It is time to move in a new
direction. It is time to elect Tim Walz as our First District U.S.
House representative.
WORTHINGTON DAILY GLOBE LTE: A VETERAN ON GUTKNECHT
Simon Koster of Worthington believes Gutknecht doesn't care about veterans:
I just listened to an ad by Congressman Gil Gutknecht bragging about
his support of U.S. soldiers. I’d like to set the record straight.
Because
of Gil Gutknecht and our current administration, George W. Bush and
crew, I and approximately 700,000 U.S. veterans cannot — and I repeat
cannot — use VA services. They don’t have the funding to do what’s been
promised veterans. The U.S. is $8.4 trillion in debt and going
backwards fast. To save money, cut off veterans!
My letter, and I
know of others that have receives similar ones, states I have to prove
that the medical attention I want is because of military service. Yes,
I have to prove. How? Why? I received $25 per month when into the Air
Force in January 1964. I served honorably, but I’m not being treated
honorably.
My vote goes to Tim Walz, a military man who understands the problem and isn’t a political robot like Gil Gutknecht.
We'll post the netroots update in the afternoon.