I went to a political fundraiser tonight in Cleveland, a few blocks from the Cleveland Clinic. I was there because I helped bundle some larger donations for Obama.
U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown spoke at the event, and he was magnificent. I didn’t take notes, because I didn’t have a pen and pad with me, but the thing that really struck me was the senator’s description of the Democratic ground war in Ohio. He said that there are 500 paid Obama staffers in Ohio and almost 100 field offices — not just in the heavily Democratic northeast, but all over the state, including in southern counties that Democrats haven’t seriously contested in decades.
He said the enthusiasm, too, is on Obama’s side, all over the state, adding that he’s never seen anything like it in his political life.
Sen. Brown was optimistic about Obama’s chances, but struck a cautionary note, reminding the hundred or so in attendance that John Kerry was up 4 points in the polls the Thursday before the election. The next day, Friday, was when Osama bin Laden’s video appeared. People began to get fearful, and the polls froze. Then, day-by-day over the weekend, they began to drop. On election day, Kerry lost by 2 percent.
We have a lead, Sen. Brown said. “But it’s not enough.”
He seemed particularly concerned about the new slash-and-burn approach of the McCain campaign. “The Swiftboating started Sunday,” he said, a reference to the day Sarah Palin started falsely saying that Obama pals around with a domestic terrorist.
It just might work, he said.
He spoke eloquently about Obama’s positions on the economy and health care, and then answered more than a dozen questions from the audience. He told us that he’s going around the state, talking about the elephant in the room — race — and making a personal appeal for voters to look beyond it in this crucial election; to take the measure of Obama, the man, the leader, beyond his skin color.
His final message was clear: We all need to do absolutely everything we can — talk to everyone we know; try to persuade every last family member or friend; leave not a single stone unturned — and, if we do, come Jan. 20, Barack Obama will be in the White House.