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| Barack Obama | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Future of the Democratic Party? By PERRY BACON JR.
Obama, 43, son of a black Kenyan immigrant and a white woman from Kansas, grew up in Hawaii and attended Columbia University and Harvard Law School, where he became the first African-American president of the Harvard Law Review. Rather than take a high-paying corporate-law job, he headed to Chicago to work at a small civil rights firm and later entered politics. In the Illinois state legislature, Obama developed a reputation for bipartisanship, notably winning support for a law requiring police to videotape homicide confessions.
In only his fourth month in the Senate, Obama is still learning the rules of
Washington, but he realizes that many Americans have even greater hopes for
him. They see him as a man who cannot only repair the growing divide between
Democrats and Republicans but also ease racial tensions that persist more than
four decades after Martin Luther King Jr. proclaimed his dream at the Lincoln
Memorial. It's an almost impossible set of expectations, but for a man whose
first name in Swahili means "blessed by God," nothing seems out of reach.
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FROM THE APRIL 18, 2005 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2005
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