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CNN Special Reports
Race For The White House: Barack Obama Versus John McCain. Aired 9-10p ET
Aired February 16, 2020 - 21:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
[21:00:00]
ANA CABRERA, CNN HOST: My thanks to David Axelrod and Charlie Black. I'm Ana Cabrera. The CNN Original series "The Race for the White House" starts right now.
MAHERSHALA ALI, NARRATOR, RACE FOR THE WHITE HOUSE: You're the junior Senator from Illinois, and you barely know your way around the Hill. And now the party bosses want a meeting. They have a proposition. They want you to take a shot at the White House. Not eventually but now.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Think about it, will you?
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ALI: Well, first you have to get past her, the senator with decades of experience and friends in high places, already at home in the Oval Office. And then you have to get past him, a senator and bonafide war hero backed by a mean political machine. Let's say you are ready. Here's the real question. Is America? Only one way to find out.
America, President George W. Bush's second term. At war in Iraq and Afghanistan, teetering on the brink of a global economic crash. Disillusion, divided, desperate for a change. Whoever wins the Democratic nomination, looks like a shoe-in for the White House.
Senator Hillary Clinton is ready to roll.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
HILLARY CLINTON, FMR FIRST LADY, UNITED STATES & FMR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: I am not just starting a campaign, though. I'm beginning a conversation with you, with America.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PATTI SOLIS DOYLE, CLINTON CAMPAIGN MANAGER: We had been working on getting ready for a potential presidential run for Hillary Clinton for a very long time. All the pieces were in place.
BARBARA A. PERRY, PRESIDENTIAL STUDIES DIRECTOR, MILLER CENTER, UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA: Hillary Clinton is a major frontrunner as she launches her campaign. She's the former First Lady. She is a well- respected senator. She is married to Bill Clinton.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
CLINTON: And I'm in it to win it.
(CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)
(END VIDEO CLIP)
MARK PENN, CHIEF STRATEGIST, CLINTON CAMPAIGN: The team was never overconfident about winning because a lot of women would vote for the first woman President. The question was, would men?
ALI: In Hillary Clinton's office is a photograph of the Obama family. A gift from the freshman senator from Illinois.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
BARACK OBAMA, FMR PRESIDENT, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: People call me Alabamer, they call me Yo mama, but the name's Obama.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
DOYLE: Barack Obama really wasn't on our radar as a candidate in early 2006. I think the general feeling was he just got to the senate, there is no way he's going to run for President. That would be pretty, you know, audacious.
DAVID AXELROD, CHIEF STRATEGIST, OBAMA CAMPAIGN: I got a call from Senator Obama in the spring of 2006, and he said, just had the most peculiar meeting. He said Harry Reid and Chuck Schumer called me and -
ALI: Senators Harry Reid and Chuck Schumer, top democratic dogs on the Hill.
AXELROD: And Harry said you ought to think about running for President.
ALI: Like every overnight success, Obama's didn't actually happen overnight.
AXELROD: We waged a quiet campaign to get him the keynote slot at the 2004 Democratic convention.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: Do we participate in the politics of cynicism? Or do we participate in the politics of hope?
(END VIDEO CLIP)
LEAH WRIGHT RIGUEUR, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PUBLIC POLICY, HARVARD KENNEDY SCHOOL: He wants to think of himself as a case study for the nation.
[21:05:00] (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: The hope of a skinny kid with a funny name who believes that America has a place for him too.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
RIGUEUR: But he's coming from a very distinct background that represents the American story.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: There is not a black America and a white America and Latino America and Asian America. There's the United States of America.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAN JONES, FMR OBAMA WHITE HOUSE OFFICIAL: I think everybody saw this guy is going to be President someday. But so soon, so quickly?
DAVID PLOUFFE, OBAMA CAMPAIGN MANAGER: Did I think he had the makings of a good President? I certainly did. Did I know he had the makings of a good presidential candidate? I wasn't sure about.
AXELROD: My concern was that he wasn't pathological enough. And he said you know me, I'm competitive. He said, I'm not getting in this to lose.
ALI: And how does the candidate's wife feel?
VALERIE JARRETT, SENIOR ADVISER, OBAMA CAMPAIGN: Michelle Obama is a realist. She wants to know just how bad it could possibly be so she can prepare herself for that.
AXELROD: At one point, she asked, what is it that you think you can contribute that nobody else can contribute and Barack said, the day I put my hand up and take that oath of office, the world will look at us differently and there are kids all over this country, millions of kids who will look at themselves differently.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: I stand before you today to announce my candidacy for President of the United States of America.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PENN: From the day that Barack Obama entered, he was the opponent, we knew that. It was a puzzle, trying to figure out how to stop that phenomena.
ALI: One part of that puzzle, an unpopular war in Iraq. Obama spoke out against it. Clinton voted to support it. Chief strategist Mark Penn's idea is to double down on Clinton's toughness by channeling Britain's iron lady. DOYLE: One of his strong messages to the team and to the candidate. It
was we need Margaret Thatcher, not Mary Tyler Moore. Other people, myself included, felt that American voters really needed to see the Hillary that we knew. Fiercely loyal, fiercely nurturing, funny but we lost that battle.
ALI: In late March 2007, the iron lady and the skinny kid with the funny name face off in Las Vegas. The issue, healthcare.
DOYLE: She has been studying public policy all of her life. She's really, really good.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
CLINTON: So we can't get to universal health care coverage unless we end insurance discrimination once and for all.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AXELROD: Obama looked ill-informed. He didn't really have a fully formulated plan.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: I would like to--
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PLOUFFE: He always resisted and really resented the performance part of politics.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: As I indicated before--
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PLOUFFE: That really wasn't how he was wired.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: We have a plan that we are n the process of unveiling.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PLOUFFE: He was kind of cut down the size a little bit.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
CLINTON: We don't just need candidates to have a plan. We're all going to have a plans. That's not in doubt. We need a movement.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AXELROD: She cleaned his clock. Yes.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
CLINTON: Thank you all very much.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AXELROD: I mean, he was very blunt about it and he said, Hillary looked like a President up there and I didn't.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[21:10:00]
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
FMR. SEN. JOHN MCCAIN (R), FMR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE 2008: I know how to fight and I know how to make peace. I know who I am and what I want to do.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ALI: Senator John McCain is in Portsmouth, New Hampshire to announce his bid for the 2008 Republican nomination.
RICK DAVIS, MCCAIN CAMPAIGN MANAGER: John McCain is a hero of mine. The insurgent. The smart guy. The fighter you know. The truth teller. You know the underdog.
PERRY: He is a genuine war hero. Prisoner of war shot down over in North Vietnam, badly wounded.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Lieutenant commander in the navy and your official number 64787.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JONES: His father was an important figure in the U.S. military and he was given the opportunity to leave captivity early and he says, I'm not going to go. I'm going to sit here in hell with my colleagues.
ALI: McCain is going to need all his legendary resilience to overcome the legacy of the current Republican President.
PERRY: In Iraq war, the abuse of Iraqi prisoners by American military. The gross negligence towards the victims of hurricane Katrina. The economy is souring and Bush's approval ratings are down in the thirties.
DAVIS: George Bush was like tyre that was lit on fire and hung around John McCain's neck.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Once considered the GOP front runner in the race for the White House, John McCain is now struggling to keep his campaign afloat.
CHARLIE BLACK, SENIOR ADVISER, MCCAIN CAMPAIGN: The campaign wasn't managed well and a lot of money was raised but it was also spent.
DAVIS: We had a staff of about just under 400 people. We had a massive campaign office in Crystal City. We started running out of money. We started running out of support.
MARK SALTER, SENIOR ADVISER, MCCAIN CAMPAIGN: There were genuine divisions and friction. Strategy, money, host of things.
DAVIS: John knew the campaign wasn't working. He was either going to get out of the campaign and cut his losses or he was going to have to change the campaign dramatically and so John McCain did, what was a typical John McCain move. In order to get a little relaxation and clear his mind, he went to a battle zone. He went to Iraq.
[21:15:00]
ALI: In Baghdad on July 4, surrounded by the military admirers, John McCain attends a reenlistment and naturalization ceremony.
SALTER: When he got to the ceremony, he saw boots of the guys that are going to be made naturalized citizens there. They had been killed in action and that got to him.
DAVIS: John came back and told us a story and it was very emotional. And he said I looked at that and I realized I need to fight as much for my country as they are.
ALI: McCain makes a bold tactical move, stripping his campaign to the bare bones and relaunching at the No surrender tour.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: Hey guys. Having fun now.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ALI: While other candidates, Republican and Democrat distanced themselves from the unpopular war in Iraq, the maverick John McCain defends it, insisting that victory is within reach.
DAVIS: He told us all that the new campaign theme is to rather lose the presidency than lose war in Iraq.
BLACK: McCain believed not only in the war but that we needed to put more troops and in order to make sure we won the war. The so called surge strategy.
DAVIS: With the surge, comes additional troops and additional spending that a war weary nation was very likely to contest.
SALTER: We were playing to very small crowds and I mean, I remember one, I think it was in somebody's garage.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: We cannot surrender in Iraq and we will not as long - that are serving.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ALI: The Republican race had gotten crowded. Among the front runner is former governor of Massachusetts, Mitt Romney. A candidate who is everything McCain is not.
PERRY: Very button down, very conservative in his personality in the style. Very smooth on the stump.
ALI: Determined to grab back the media spotlight, McCain picks a fight with Romney.
DAVIS: He had wishy washy on the Iraq war. He didn't want to get into it. We saw it as a vulnerability.
ALI: The opportunity comes during a Republican debate in New Hampshire when the subject of the surge comes up.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
SEN. MITT ROMNEY, (R) FMR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE 2012: What I've indicated is that is very consistent with what the President speaking about. What we're hearing from Iraq right now and that is that the surge is apparently working.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
DAVIS: And of course John saw that as the moment and pounced.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: Definitely the surge is working. The surge is working Sir.
ROMNEY: That is what--
MCCAIN: No, it is working. Not apparently. It's working.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SALTER: It's not apparently. It is working, right? And it is working. It is working. That's surrender to say apparently working.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: And I can assure you, it's more than apparent. It is working and we have to rally the American people.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SALTER: And you know it worked. The essential McCain came through.
DAVIS: It's not that people like wars but they like being winters and John McCain gave the first inkling of hope that we can actually pull this off.
SALTER: At a time when everyone's war weary, that was the magic.
ALI: John McCain sales into the primary season, telling anyone who will listen that Mac is back. A battle cry that carries him through to the nomination by early March.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: I will be the Republican nominee for President of United States.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SALTER: We were able to thread through an eye of a needle.
DAVIS: John McCain had done it his way like Frank Sinatra.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[21:20:00]
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: Can I say hello?
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ALI: Barack Obama's knocking on every door in Iowa, determined to win this crucial first state.
PLOUFFE: Hillary Clinton was such a strong front runner. Our view was we had to win Iowa. Not come in second. Not come in third. We had to have a jolt. We had to have her have a setback.
ALI: Obama's Iowa strategy is months in the making, painstakingly built from the grass roots up.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: He's a candidate running for President.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AXELROD: We had young people from around the country who descended on Iowa and really became kind of indigenous to their communities.
PLOUFFE: They had to use their skill, their personality, their persuasion, their character to recruit people.
MICHAEL BLAKE, DEPUTY POLITICAL DIRECTOR, OBAMA CAMPAIGN, IOWA: You know I have David Plouffe, poking his finger in my chest saying, we're going to win Iowa, right Blake? I said, absolutely Sir. Absolutely. We're going to win. He said, we are going to win. Yes, we are. Yes, we are.
RONNIE CHO, FIELD ORGANIZER, OBAMA CAMPAIGN, IOWA: So I was organizing southeast Polk County and I would post up at a coffee shop, serve on a roadside diner back booth. Anytime someone would walk in, I would kind of perk up, no. Earnestly hope to bring him over to talk to me.
I became a known figure in the community. People would say, oh yes, you're that Chinaman that's over at the coffee shop. I'd be like yes, I guess, yes. That's me. Took maybe a month before the first person came up and - and chatted me up and we knew that we were gaining some ground.
ALI: Just over 50 days before caucus night, with Barack and Michelle dancing out front, Team Obama revealed for the first time the strength of their organization.
[21:25:00]
CHO: We had amazing young people showing up. These are not traditional caucus goers. We kind of made caucuses seem cool.
BLAKE: So we had the sisarets (ph) drumline which they were always just crushing it you know, great energy. Got on my black denim, my T- shirt, me and Ronnie Cho.
Cho doing the Chobama dance outside you know.
CHO: There must have been 3000-4000 volunteers and supporters. You could hear this drum kind of getting louder and louder as it marched downtown. Someone said oh, my God, it's like Lord of the Rings.
PERRY: Iowa was perplexing to our campaign. You know young people do not caucus. They just don't.
GAIL SHEEHY, HILLARY CLINTON BIOGRAPHER: Hillary's campaign you know dismissed them as Facebook kids but they were the future. They were Obama's people. And Hillary's people missed that.
ALI: It's 6:30 on caucus night and in the next couple of hours, Obama's ten-months Iowa gamble will either be won or lost.
BLAKE: I had no idea what a caucus was before I got there. No clue what it was.
CHO: I think the most important thing to remember about the Democratic caucuses is they are not an election. They are a carcass. They're more like a meeting and people stand up and be counted.
BLAKE: But the best way to describe it is, it's 90 minutes of organized chaos.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I need one person for Obama. You want to be counted for Obama?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yes.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Yes, thank you.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
CHO: It was so loud you could not think and I'm trying to hold it together but I felt confident because I know that I done the work and I knew every single person walking in that door. I knew their families. I've had lunch in their living rooms.
PLOUFFE: In that moment, they're not thinking about necessarily the speech Obama gave. They're thinking about OK, you're the person asking. You're representing Obama. I believe in you. I trust in you. You're making the case. I'll be for you.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Holy shit. Holy shit. Holy shit.
BRIAN WILLIAMS, CNN HOST: We are back on the air here in Des Moines and we have news to report at this hour. NBC news is projecting that when all the caucus goers preferences are counted up, Barack Obama will win the Iowa caucuses on the Democratic side.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
CHO: I may live to a 100 years old and I will maintain that will always hold a place as one of the best nights of my life.
DOYLE: Iowa caucus night was really, probably the worst night of my political life. We thought you know what, maybe she is just not likable enough to be a president.
ALI: With the New Hampshire primary just days away, the media is drafting Clinton's political obituary.
DOYLE: I had the task of telling her that we were not in a good place, that our polling showed that we were going to lose New Hampshire and worse, we may even come in third.
So from there you know, she goes to her first events.
AXELROD: We're in the RV. We're campaigning and someone gets on and says Hillary just broke down at an event.
DOYLE: Our communications people, our press people are getting calls. Hillary's crying. Hillary's crying.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
CLINTON: You know, I have so many opportunities from this country. I just don't want to see us fall backwards.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
DOYLE: When I saw the footage of her looking into her heart and answering why she wants to be president.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
CLINTON: I see what's happening. We have to reverse it.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
DOYLE: I thought, all right, this is good for us.
ALI: And when the results come in, the tears in the Clinton camp are tears of joy.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: For the first time this evening, I can tell you that campaign officials do believe that she's won here tonight. Hi-fis being exchanged.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
DOYLE: It was a real turning point for the campaign.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
CLINTON: Over the last week, I listened to you and in the process, I found my own voice.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JARRETT: I think we were shell shocked. It was just profoundly painful defeat. He said, you know what, it shouldn't be too easy. And I remember thinking why not.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[21:30:00]
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
ALI: The fight for the Democratic nomination rolls into South Carolina and the gloves are coming off.
AXELROD: He said, look, this can be a tough debate and I'm going to be tough.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: While I was working on those streets, watching those folks see their job shift overseas, you were a corporate lawyer sitting on the board of Walmart. I was fighting these fights.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AXELROD: He didn't say it but I think he thought it was important for the African-American community in South Carolina to see that he wasn't going to be pushed around. ALI: Political arguments here often circle around the issue of race.
ANTON GUNN, POLITICAL DIRECTOR, OBAMA CAMPAIGN, SOUTH CAROLINA: See, in South Carolina, race permeates everything. It doesn't matter where you go to church, where you go to school, where you live. Race is just kind of a defining factor.
ALI: Up till now, the Obama strategy on race has been largely to steer clear.
AXELROD: We always understated race. He always used to say I'm of the African-American community but I'm not limited to it.
JONES: That was audacious on his part. For him to say, I'm not going to let you put me into this small box. I want to be in the full box, the big box with everybody. And people thought he was trying to be post-racial.
ALI: But in South Carolina, history is too raw, and memories too bitter for post-racial to fly.
GUNN: There was a serious fear in the black community that every time we get our hopes around a great leader like Dr. King, like Malcolm X, Medgar Evers, that they all get assassinated.
[21:35:00]
And there were people who literally said I don't want to vote for Barack Obama because I'm concerned for his safety, that if I vote for him and put him in that position, they are going to try to kill him.
ALI: Michelle Obama had hit South Carolina early to address the issue head on.
JARRETT: She goes right into Orangeburg, and she, in her own way, directly and clearly said to the crowd that was gathering, I know you're afraid, I have those same fears, but we have to conquer those fears.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MICHELLE OBAMA, FORMER FIRST LADY, USA: You know, we all have that aunt, that grandmother that bought all that new furniture. Spent our lifesavings on it and the what did she do? She puts plastic on it to protect it.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JARRETT: The don't treat him like your grandmother's living room furniture that's covered in plastic. We can't protect him. We have to take the plastic off. And that just rang so true to so many people.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: Let's prove to our children that they can really reach for their dreams. I want that for my girls. Let's show them that America is ready for Barack Obama today, right now.
(APPLAUSE)
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AXELROD: I was taping some ads with Michelle Obama and I looked at my Blackberry and I said, oh my God, I can't believe this. This can't be true and she's going what, what? And finally I said, it says we are going to win by 30 points. And I think she slugged me and said don't ever do that to me again.
ALI: Obama scores big, and his supporters go wild.
AXELROD: There was a spontaneous chant that erupted at his victory speech, "Race doesn't matter." It was in one way a beautiful thing to hear that, and in another way, it was way premature.
PLOUFFE: We were winning, winning, winning, winning, winning.
AXELROD: And when it hit, it hit like a lightning bolt.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
REVEREND JEREMIAH WRIGHT, BARACK OBAMA'S PASTOR: The government gives him the drugs, build bigger prisons, passes a three-strike law, and then wants us to sing "God bless America."
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ALI: On March 13th, 2008, America is introduced to the Reverend Jeremiah Wright.
PERRY: Jeremiah Wright is the pastor of Barack Obama and his wife. He married them. He had baptized their two little daughters.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
JEREMIAH: No, no, no, not God bless America, God damn America.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: How could you go to this church for 20 years and not know this guy?
TUCKER CARLSON, FOX NEWS HOST: Well, you know, I sort of agree.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Obama's out.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PLOUFFE: This was a grade-A political shit storm.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: New polls say Obama's taking a big hit because of his pastor.
(END VIDEO CLIP) RIGUEUR: The backlash is so swift and so fierce and so visceral that
Barack Obama has to react.
AXELROD: He called me and he said, I want to give this speech on race. It's non-negotiable and I want to give it no later than Tuesday morning.
JARRETTE: So I remember sitting in the audience next to Michelle Obama, and we were all kind of bracing ourselves.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: Reverend Wright's comments were not only wrong but divisive, divisive at a time when we need unity. I can no more disown him than I can disown my white grandmother, who, on more than one occasion, has uttered racial or stereo typical comments that made me cringe.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JARRETTE: That vulnerability and willingness to be so open and honest, people feel it. They don't just think it. They feel it.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: These people are part of me, and they are part of America. This country that I love.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AXELROD: It actually turned a moment of a doubt into a moment of triumph because he looked like a President of the United States.
ALI: Hillary Clinton slugs it out until the end. And when she finally goes down, she goes down fighting.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
CLINTON: Although we weren't able to shatter that highest, hardest glass ceiling this time, thanks to you, it's got about 18 million cracks in it.
(CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)
(END VIDEO CLIP)
[21:40:00]
ALI: On a balmy August night in Denver in front of 80,000 people, Barack Obama accepts his nomination.
PLOUFFE: For me that was one of the times when the history of this was apparent. You see him stride out there, the first African-American nominee. It was a magical night.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
(CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)
OBAMA: Thank you. Thank you so much.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ALI: The next day, Obama 's magic night is overshadowed by breaking news.
PLOUFFE: Our phones start buzzing with rumors that John McCain is picking Sarah Palin for his Vice Presidential pick. And we're all like, what?
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
ALI: Trailing in the polls, Republican nominee John McCain decides to roll the dice.
DAVIS: We started at looking what we could do to get back in the race because we were barely mentioned in the news. We were desperate for attention.
[21:45:00]
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: She's not from these parts and she's not from Washington. But when you get to know her, you're going to be as impressed as I am.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
DAVIS: We needed to find someone that could move some votes, and we sure did.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: I am very pleased and very privileged to introduce to you the next Vice President of the United States, Governor Sarah Palin of the great state of Alaska.
(APPLAUSE)
SARAH PALIN, FMR GOVERNOR, ALASKA: I was just your average hockey mom and signed up for the PTA. I love those hockey moms. You know they say the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull? Lip stick.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
DAVIS: There was not another word to be breathed about Barack Obama on the evening news that night. It was all Sarah, all week long.
PATRICK BUCHANAN, POLITICAL COMMENTATOR: I was surprised and elated. She was known as a conservative Republican, a solid, conservative, outspoken.
PERRY: She's particularly particular with white working-class, evangelical churchgoers. BLACK: She had a great impact on the ticket and boosted McCain's
chances. She drew bigger crowds out in the country than McCain did.
BUCHANAN: McCain had no real argument for why he should beat Barack Obama. But when he picked her, a significant slice of the country just lit up.
AXELROD: Obama says, national politics is really tough. He said it took me six months to become a decent candidate. Maybe she's the greatest candidate since Ronald Reagan. But I'll give this a month and we'll know in a month what kind of candidate she is.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: What insight into Russian actions particularly in the last couple of weeks does the proximity of the state give you?
PALIN: They're our next door neighbors. And you can actually see Russia from land here in Alaska.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BUCHANAN: The media was rough on her. But you know that's what you expect when you're in a presidential campaign.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: You've cited Alaska's proximity to Russia as part of your foreign policy experience. What did you mean by that?
PALIN: Every morning when Alaskans wake up, one of the first things they do is look outside to see if there are any Russians hanging around.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BUCHANAN: Saturday Night Live doesn't treat anyone fairly.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
PALIN: It's our responsibility to say, you know, shoo, get back over there.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
DAVIS: Sarah Palin really didn't get a fair shot to be able to present her own credentials to the American public without getting defined in advance by the media. She wasn't looking for a pass. She was just looking for a fair break.
ALI: The Palin phenomenon is only upstaged by an event of global significance.
AXELROD: So on September 14th, 2008, I called a meeting at my office because we were worried about Sarah Palin. And at the end of the meeting Senator Obama said I just spoke to Hank Paulson last night for an hour, who is George Bush's Treasury Secretary, and he said something bad overnight is going to happen.
I can't tell you what it is, but it's going to have a dramatic impact.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It was a Monday morning like none other in the 158- year history of financial giant Lehman Brothers. The company went bankrupt.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SALTER: This is a global catastrophe, the market is selling off 800 points a day. It's head spinning. You felt like you were in a crashing airplane.
DAVIS: John said I got to do what's right for the country. I'm going to suspend our presidential campaign. I got to go to Capitol Hill, make sure they do the right thing on the bailout.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
PALIN: And I'm not going to be campaigning because of this crisis. I think we should cancel the next presidential debate.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JONES: Then Obama comes out and says, guess what.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: It is going to be part of the President's job to deal with more than one thing at once.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JONES: And kept on campaigning.
PERRY: John McCain asks to have a summit meeting at the White House that he will attend, Obama will attend, and senate leaders and congressional leaders will attend as well as the incumbent President George Bush.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The breaking news happening right now, President Bush and the men running to replace him together at the White House, talking about the nation's financial crisis.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PERRY: And the word gets out in the media that Obama seemed supremely presidential in the White House and John McCain did not.
JONES: The world economy fell apart in that campaign. And he somehow as a junior baby senator looks more presidential handling it than a legendary war hero in John McCain. SALTER: I think from that point on, we wouldn't have said it to each
other, but I think in all our minds, we knew that the odds were almost impossible.
[21:50:00]
ALI: McCain resumes campaigning the next day and the first presidential debate will go ahead as scheduled.
AXELROD: Before the first debate, I was a nervous wreck. I turned to Obama and I said, how are you feeling? And he said, just give me the ball, man. I'm ready.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
SALIN: I was reading today a copy of the New York Times.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ALI: A month before election day, with the Republican ticket just six points behind, Sarah Palin lobs a grenade into the Obama campaign.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
PALIN: And I was really interested to read in there about Barack Obama's friends from Chicago. It turns out, one of his earliest supporters is a man who, according to the "New York Times," was a domestic terrorist.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ALI: The article, about 1960s revolutionary Bill Ayers, offers the Republican ticket a chance to come from behind.
[21:55:00]
PERRY: Bill Ayers was a professor in Chicago and a neighbor of Barack Obama . But he had a very radical past. He had been a member of the domestic terrorist group, the Weather Underground in the late 1960s, early 1970s, that planted bombs in the U.S., Pentagon and the Department of State.
ALI: The McCain team seizes the moment.
DAVIS: We did decide the relationship that Obama had with Bill Ayers was imbalanced. And so we took advantage of it.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Barack Obama and domestic terrorist Bill Ayers, friends. They've worked together for years. But Obama tries to hide it. Why?
(END VIDEO CLIP) ALI: Obama plays down his relationship with Ayers but the controversy
adds fuel to a racist whispering campaign that is taken up by the mainstream media.
JARRETT: There was a dark underbelly. The whole notion that Senator Obama wasn't born in this country. That he was a Muslim. Mrs. Obama was described as the angry black woman, taking her phrases out of context. All intended to distort and discredit both Barack and Michelle Obama and make him unelectable.
JONES: As the election draws near and the crowds get bigger, for McCain, he starts to hear and see statements from the crowds that are unfair to Barack Obama.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We're scared. We're scared of an Obama presidency.
JONES: McCain could just, if he wanted to, just laugh it off. Ignore it. Change the subject. Pivot. That's what politicians are supposed to do.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: I have to tell you, I have to tell you, he is a decent person and a person that you do not have to be scared as President of the United States. Now I just--
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JONES: You don't to have correct your own people. As long as they vote for you, you're fine unless you're John McCain.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I can't trust Obama. I have read about him. And he's not - he's an Arab.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JONES: And he will probably be remembered a 100 years from now for the moment of truth choice he makes.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: No ma'am. No ma'am. He's a decent family man, citizen that I happen to have disagreements with on fundamental issues. And that's what this campaign is all about. He's not. Thank you. Thank you.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SALTER: HE did he something that is not often done in politics. A moment of great fairness and grace in a difficult situation.
AXELROD: That was John McCain at his best.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: We want a fight and I will fight. But we will be respectful. I admire Senator Obama and his accomplishments.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JONES: He looks at his own base and he says no. I don't want your support based on a lie. I want your support based on the truth of who I am. And it may have cost him. Who knows the impact of that?
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MCCAIN: Because that's the way politics should be conducted in America.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Good morning election day. After a hard fought battle--
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: A battle between Barack Obama and John McCain shifts to America's voters--
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Happening now, a historic election day in the United States. Barack Obama and John McCain vote.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Two men, two parties, two very different visions.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PLOUFFE: We knew we were going to win and we were clear we were going to win with a big margin but it didn't become clear until all the networks said--
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Barack Obama, 47 years old, will become President- elect of the United States.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
JARRETT: Well, I had been in Grant Park during the day and had watched the crowd build. The spirit is hard to put into words. It was peaceful, it was jubilant. Strangers were hugging one another and crying with emotion.
PLOUFFE: It was such a striking moment. Young, African-American, so much promise.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PLOUFFE: But it was more so sober than people think. It was almost like deep breath time. Like, OK. Now the real work begins.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OBAMA: We will get there. I promise you. We as a people will get there.
(END VIDEO CLIP)