Skip navigation

Obama: Still long road ahead

He wins Democratic primary in Wis., looks for second victory in Hawaii

Video
‘Change we seek is months ... away’
Feb. 19: Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., after winning the Wisconsin primary, encourages voters to “fight for every delegate needed to win the nomination” and if that is achieved to then fight for the presidency.

MSNBC

Video: Decision '08  
  
Turning Point: 2008
Nov. 5: NBC's Tom Brokaw recaps the historic election of America's first black president. Produced by msnbc.com's Kevin Flynn.

  The candidates in pictures
U.S. Republican presidential nominee Senator McCain points into the crowd at an airport campaign rally in Roswell
Reuters
Final push
Presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain make their final appeals to voters.
Image: President Richard Nixon greets John McCain after he returned from Vietnam.
AP file
John McCain
The Republican presidential candidates' life has revolved around the public need.
Barak "Barry" Obama
Punahoe Schools via AP
The life of Barack Obama
The path of the president-elect, from childhood to party leader
Image: Sarah Palin
The Mat-Su Valley Frontiersman via AP
Sarah Palin
The fast-track governor's rise from Alaska beauty queen to governor to John McCain’s running mate.
AP file
Joseph Biden
The senator's legacy of public service and life filled with second chances.
updated 11:37 p.m. ET Feb. 19, 2008

HOUSTON - Barack Obama welcomed his latest Democratic presidential primary triumph with a caution to exultant supporters Tuesday that they've all got "months and miles" to go and it won't be easy.

Obama addressed a boisterous rally in Houston on Tuesday night after defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton in Wisconsin for his ninth straight win. He looked for another boost later in the night in Hawaii, the state of his birth.

Obama almost literally stole the spotlight from his rival, beginning his speech before she had finished hers in Ohio. Cable networks cut away from her to the man now clearly the front-runner.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

The Illinois senator seemed to echo Clinton in one respect when he agreed "it's going to take more than rousing speeches" and big rallies to bring change to Washington. Clinton and presumptive Republican nominee John McCain are both sounding the theme that Obama offers words instead of substance.

"As wonderful as this gathering is, as exciting as these enormous crowds and this enormous energy may be — what we're trying to do here is not easy," Obama said. "It is going to require something more. Because the problem that we face in America today is not the lack of good ideas. It's that Washington has become a place where good ideas go to die."

And Obama said he's not naive.

"Hope is not blind optimism," he said. It's as if the cynics are saying "we need to season and stew him a little more and boil all the hope out of him."

The senator contended: "It is my central premise that the only way we will bring about real change in America is if we can bring new people into the process."

Mixed with the soaring "Yes we can" rhetoric was an appeal for Texans to take advantage of opportunities to vote in advance of the March 4 primary.

"I don't want you to wait until March 4," he said. "I want you to start voting tomorrow here in Texas."

The primaries in Texas and Ohio on March 4 offer a mother lode of 334 Democratic delegates and chance to break out of a nomination struggle that could drag on for months, perhaps even to the convention this summer in Denver.

  Picking the president: The candidates
Click to visit that candidate’s msnbc.com page or click the XML symbol for an RSS feed.


John McCain
  
Barack Obama

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide