A Night I Won’t Forget
Wednesday November 05th 2008, 10:52 pm
Filed under: Adventures with Dave, Bringing Down the Man, City Life, My roots, Obama

If Sarah and I are graced with children someday (woah), talking about the presidential election of 2008 will have a special importance.  We had the chance to stand in Grant Park with 250,000 people and follow the election results all night.  Then, as the west coast states closed their polling places, we watched as Wolf Blitzer told us Barack Obama would be the 44th president of the United States.

I can’t write that without getting goosebumps and watery eyes.  The memory of raising my arms in jubilation with about 250,000 people, one of which was my wife of 30 days, is one I will never forget.  It was almost like a combined sigh of relief for a moment most of us probably at at least one time doubted we would ever see.  As much as I supported Obama from before his announcement in Springfield, to believe that he actually was named president-elect?  It’s still a struggle.

I remember talking with Sarah and realizing that she was as excited as I was, and the anticipation on the ride downtown.  I was wearing a button my friend Kelly bought me – it said “Beer Brewers for Obama.”  While beer brewing is still a yet-to-be-achieved dream, it was a fun, eye-catching button to wear.  Sarah and I were in a crowd of supporters as we walked from the station to the park.  It wasn’t long before we hit Michigan Avenue and saw the first real glimpses of the enormity of the crowd.

We were quickly divided into two groups – people with tickets and those without.  As Sarah and I pushed through to the ticket side, mounted police appeared and the hustling crowd slowed to a crawl.  We chatted with people around us as we made it through the first check point.  Lots of people were being turned away and the crowd control staff was visibly overwhelmed.

Once past the first check point, we made lots of ground as we crossed Columbus Drive flanked by mounted police.  We thought we were moments away from finding our place in the park, but we were definitely wrong.  We again slowed, this time to a complete stop.  That’s when it started to happen.  Pennsylvania was called for Obama.  Expected, yes, but incredibly important.  A loss in PA meant this race was a lot closer.  That’s when we pretty much all knew all we had to hear was Ohio or Florida.

We moved in clumps in that crowd as the check point gradually let us move past.  As much as we hated just standing there, it made sense and worked out well.  More people were turned away at this check point, so once we made it through it was another chunk of ground we had to cross.  This time it wasn’t just cops lining the path – the first Secret Service officers and Obama staffers began to appear.  We were told repeatedly not to run, but we were all making that awkward speed walk that kids do when you tell them not to run.

Once we made it to the metal detectors, Secret Service outnumbered the Chicago P.D.  The lines moved quickly as we literally had every ring of keys, cell phone, and camera inspected.  It actually moved really quickly considering the circumstances.  We were the first of our group to make it the entire way in so we found the closest spot  we could.  That’s when we heard it – Ohio.  For someone who bore a little of the blame from my Minnesota friends in 2004, I took great pride in my home state’s decision.  I also knew that this was it.  Any path to victory for McCain went through Ohio, and Obama had blocked it like my friend Geoff and Corey block my longest road in Settlers of Catan.  We would have to wait several hours though until the west coast polls would close and networks could ethically call the race.

The crowd was in high spirits.  Even though the networks weren’t calling it, we were all talking about the importance of the Ohio victory.  They flashed a county map and I saw that my home county was blue.  I literally choked up.  I wondered how my parents had voted.  I wondered if my mom was physically able to vote after her surgery.  Sarah soon made a trip to grab us a couple slices of pizza and some water.  She also brought back some of our best friends.

As we stood there and watched CNN on the giant screen, we cheered the Obama victories and booed the McCain wins – even the obvious ones.  We watched as Obama got closer and closer to 270 and anxiously waited for the polls to close on the west coast.  We counted down the seconds.  And then it happened.  Wolf acted like it was just another projection, but he flashed the words President Barack Obama on the screen.  A wave of disbelief hit the crowd for a half of a second… then an explosion.  We yelled at the top of our lungs and raised our arms in the air.  I turned to Sarah and hugged her with tears in my eyes.  My friends came next.  They just kept showing it over and over.  Jesse Jackson cried.  Oprah was flipping out.  And we were all there together in Grant Park.

The last sound check operator walked ot the podium and said, “Last sound check for the next president of the United States.”  We went crazy again.  They showed McCain’s speech, which garnered a mix of responses.  The mention of Palin was pretty much the only part that drew a widespread negative reaction.  The announcer came over the PA and we cheered as a bishop walked out to give the invocation.  We cheered again for the pledge and national anthem.  Anticipation was at a fever pitch.

Then… music.  Stevie Wonder.  Brooks and Dunn.  Buddy Guy.  More and more music.  The end of each song was a tease.  We stood there in disbelief as Obama’s appearance was delayed.  It was as if it was Christmas morning and your parents were making you wait to open gifts.  And then, as we waited for another song to come on, there he was.  Obama poked his head out and made his walk to the podium.  I was in disbelief.  It was real.

I will always have the words of his speech, but the experience of standing in Grant Park on that night will be one I have to hold on to in only a few pictures and my memory.  Here is hoping the next four (or eight) years prove to be worthy of that night.


4 Comments so far
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I’m so glad you got to be there, Dave. :)

Comment by Geof F. Morris 11.05.08 @ 11:27 pm

In 20 years, we’ll likely look back and find that this election was not nearly as important as it was made out to be. I still don’t understand why so many people were so “gung ho” about Obama (I’ve always found most of his policies to be questionable), but they got the average voter to listen to them this time around.

Now we’ll see if people actually got what they voted for.

Comment by Greg Nilsen 11.06.08 @ 5:50 am

greg, for the rest of the history of this nation this election will be important. it may never be remembered for successful or failed policies. in fact, it’s doubtful that it will…with US foreign policy being the only possible exception.

what will be looked back upon in 20 years, 40 years, 100 years as being important will be that out of of a population in this country brought here under duress, held captive for 250 years by law, and another 150 by any means the dominant culture couldd think up…that the work carried out by harriet tubman, and w.e.b. dubois, and rosa parks, and martin luther king, jr, and innumerable others finally culminated in an advocate for the first time in the white house.

however, he is not solely an advocate for black americans. as proven by the voting numbers, he’s an advocate for other minority groups. he’s an advocate for young white voters. he’s an advocate for college educated voters, and non-college grads (like me). still, the significance in history, as people look back at this election will be mainly this. for the first time in our nation’s history…one founded on the phrase “…that all men are created equal”, a phrase never lived up to…we have a president who is not a white male.

i think people are gung ho because we believe he is a different leader than we’ve ever had. humility, understanding, quiet confidence. i have faith in him as my president. full faith. it’s not where my life’s faith lies, but as president, i am confident in him. but my tearful moments did not come in relief that GW would soon be gone (maybe had i thought about it). they came watching a room full of young african-american students from spellman college dropping to their knees, and rising up in cheers. they came in seeing jesse jackson’s tears…in the tears of black men and women whose faces crossed my tv screen. i don’t know your ethnicity, but i know dave, sarah, and i, along with the rest of the white people in this country will never know how it felt that night to know that for the first time, someone like us had won the presidency. we’ve always been represented…well. and continue to be. when barack leaves the senate, it will lose the only black senator on the floor. nonetheless, the hope and belief that rose up on tuesday night…that’s why this election will be important for the life of this nation and the rest of history.

Comment by Nate 11.06.08 @ 8:41 am

[...] A Night I Won’t Forget @ Big Kid:Bigger City (tags: gfmorris_comment) [...]

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