Wary of voter overconfidence, Obama not letting up
The curious part is that Obama keeps saying just the opposite: Not one thing is sealed.
DES MOINES: "Here I am, signed, sealed, delivered."
That's what the giddy crowds at Barack Obama's campaign rallies hear when he walks off the stage, the booming sound of Stevie Wonder singing about the promise of a sure thing.
The curious part is that Obama keeps saying just the opposite: Not one thing is sealed.
"We can't afford to slow down, or sit back, or let up, for one day, for one minute, for one second in this last week," the Democratic presidential nominee told supporters Thursday.
"Not now. Not now," he said in the Florida sunshine that day. "We've got to work hard."
In his contest against Republican John McCain, Obama has gone big, drawing hundreds of thousands of people to rallies in the last few days alone. He used his fundraising muscle to buy a prime-time TV slot for his infomercial, viewed by 33.6 million, and touted his new unity with former President Clinton.
But Obama also is careful to look engaged individually, too. Twice this week, in campaign offices outside Denver and in Pittsburgh, he got on the phone directly with voters.
One woman grilled him at length about his environmental record. One said she wanted tickets to his inauguration. One made him smile by saying she was 100 percent Obama.
It is standard election politics not to look cocky. Voters hate being taken for granted. Yet the tone of Obama's argument suggests he is going beyond playing it safe.
"Complacency kills campaigns," said Mark Mellman, a Democratic strategist and John Kerry's pollster during the 2004 presidential race. "Winners always run like they are behind."
That helps explain why Obama barreled on with an outdoor rally in Pennsylvania this week despite the foul weather. The thousands of people who showed up endured sideways rain, cold chills and mud. McCain canceled a similar rally 50 miles away.
Obama told them: "If we see this kind dedication on Election Day, there is no way that we're not going to bring change to America."
On Friday, Obama again showed an assume-nothing attitude. Politically, a stop in Iowa was not essential. But he came to Des Moines to hunt for votes and thank the people of the state for backing him from the start. "I will always be grateful to all of you," he said.
McCain faces this fact: Late come-from-behind wins are rare in presidential races.
In Gallup polling, only twice in the past 14 elections did a candidate lose the popular vote after being ahead about a week before the election. They were Democrat Jimmy Carter in 1980 and President Bush in 2000, although he won the electoral vote.
As the election closes in, Obama leads McCain in most national polls, and most state surveys show him running strong in traditional Democratic states and leading in some that Bush won in 2004, including Ohio, Colorado, Nevada and Virginia. That makes a path for a McCain victory difficult to discern.
Mellman said all those polls assume that every Obama supporter will turn out to vote, and that every volunteer will do what it takes to turn out the vote.
"Don't believe for one second in these polls," Obama told a crowd of 35,000 people outside Orlando, Fla., late Wednesday night. "Power concedes nothing. We are going to work over the next five days like our lives depended on it. We're going to have to struggle."
Craig Ferguson of CBS' "Late Late Show" put it this way: "Obama is so far ahead now, seems the only way he can lose is if his supporters screw it up. But aha! Obama's supporters have a secret weakness: They are Democrats."
A new poll showed that at this late date, some people are still making up their minds. One in seven, or 14 percent, can't decide ��� or, they support a candidate but might switch, according to an Associated Press-Yahoo News poll of likely voters released Friday.
One way to look at Obama's underdog approach is that he's not just running to win. He's trying to sweep every state in play, giving him and his party a crushing win and big leverage.
He scored a surprise victory in the Iowa caucuses and then, while riding high, promptly lost the New Hampshire primary to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.
"We've been ahead and we've been behind," he said. "Sometimes we've assumed that when we're ahead ��� New Hampshire is a big example ��� that that guarantees anything. It doesn't."
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