Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Obama, McCain hit the hustings two years early

Two contenders crisscross the country, stumping for the party faithful

Slide show
  Old charisma vs. new charisma
A prelude to the Obama vs. McCain '08 battle.

more photos

Interactive
2006 key races
The races to watch.
By Tom Curry
National affairs writer
MSNBC
updated 2:05 p.m. ET Nov. 2, 2006

Tom Curry
National affairs writer

E-mail
BLAINE, Minn. - Can’t wait for the 2008 presidential campaign to start?

You don’t have to. If you came to Minnesota this week you could have seen, within 48 hours of each other, the two contenders who arguably are the most charismatic standard bearers for their parties in the presidential election: Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona, who campaigned from one end of the state to the other on Wednesday, and Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, the rising star who rallied Democrats in Rochester, Minn. Monday night. Obama has thrown his party’s presidential calculus into a loop by stepping into the race on Meet the Press two weeks ago.

Call it Old Charisma versus Young Charisma: McCain, U.S. Naval Academy, class of 1958, versus, Obama, Columbia University, class of ‘83, who was only a six-year old boy when McCain flew his plane off the deck of the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Forrestal, went down over North Vietnam, and was taken to the “Hanoi Hilton” to endure abuse and solitary confinement.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

McCain, white-haired and squinty-eyed, bears not only the hard-earned lines of age and experience, but an extraordinary scar down the left side of his face from surgery to remove melanoma.

Obama has the flawless, unlined visage of a carefree young movie idol.

Like McCain, who parlayed his books into useful tours that kept him in the public eye, Obama is now combining book-selling and stops at Borders (as he did in St. Paul, Minn. Monday) with national tours to talk up Democratic candidates.

A test site for '08
Minnesota is a good place to watch the two in action: people here, although polite, take their politics seriously.

It would be a coup for McCain -- assuming he is GOP nominee in 2008 -- if could capture the state’s ten electoral votes; Minnesota hasn’t gone Republican in a presidential election since Richard Nixon won it in 1972.

Here’s the score for this pre-season comparison: Obama 3,000; McCain 200.

That’s the number of people at Obama’s rally in Rochester, and McCain’s in the northern Twin Cities suburb of Blaine on Wednesday.

OK, the Obama event was scheduled for 5:30 p.m. so workers could get there after leaving the office or shop; and McCain’s speech was a noon event that was less convenient for working people.

But Obama generated ecstatic enthusiasm and McCain drew something more reserved: respect and affection.

McCain’s speech on behalf of Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty had humor, which Obama’s didn’t. Obama’s was lofty and motivational; McCain’s was shorter and more business-like.

Although McCain doesn’t agree with Sixth Congressional district Republican candidate Michele Bachmann on social issues such as banning same-sex marriage, McCain lavished praise on Bachmann, who was one of his warm-up speakers.

McCain told his threadbare joke about having a hard act to follow and feeling like Zsa Zsa Gabor’s fifth husband who on their wedding night said, “I know what I’m supposed to do; I just don’t know how to make it interesting.”

Believe it or not, some people seem not to have heard that one yet, so McCain got a good laugh.

The zing in the speech was his slap at Sen. John Kerry: “It’s important that we continue to show our support” for soldiers in Iraq “and certainly not suggest that any educational deficiencies motivate their service to this nation.”

There was also a slight valedictory tone to McCain’s speech as he praised Pawlenty, who is 24 years younger than the Arizona senator.

“I’m not getting any younger,” McCain told the crowd. “I’ve had the great honor of serving this nation for a long time, and one of my obligations is to do what I can to assist and motivate other Americans of the next generation to serve this country.”

He said, “This is the kind of leadership I’d like to pass that torch to.”


Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Search Jobs

Find your next car

Find Your Dream Home

Find a business to start

$7 trades, no fee IRAs