NATION | WORLD | BUSINESS | ARTS | PHOTOS | CURRENT ISSUE
Barack  Obama
Leaders &
Revolutionaries
George Bush
Condoleezza Rice
Bill Clinton
Barack Obama
Bill Frist
Donald Rumsfeld
Mark Malloch Brown
Gordon Brown
Ali Husaini Sistani
Abu Mousab al-Zarqawi
Hu Jintao
Kim Jong Il
Manmohan Singh
Thabo Mbeki
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger
Mahmoud Abbas
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Ariel Sharon
Javier Solana
John Howard
Chen Shui-bian
Hugo Chavez

Artists & Entertainers

Builders &
Titans


Scientists &
Thinkers


Heroes &
Icons


Introduction

Essay

FROM THE ARCHIVE
Leaders & Revolutionaries from 1900-1999

The Future of the Democratic Party?

By PERRY BACON JR.

ANNE RYAN / POLARIS
 FROM THE TIME ARCHIVE
Obama's Ascent
How do you leap from neighborhood activist to U.S. Senator to perhaps higher office? Even for Barack Obama, it's more complicated than it looks [11/15/2004]

By winning more than 52% of the vote in a seven-candidate Senate primary in Illinois last year, Barack Obama instantly made his name in political circles. And after delivering a lyrical speech last July at the Democratic National Convention—he declared that the "audacity of hope" and the "insistence on small miracles" unite Americans more than blue or red states divide them—the self-proclaimed "skinny kid with a funny name" became one of the most admired politicians in America. Even before his election last November as the Senate's third black member since Reconstruction, Obama's memoir had landed on best-seller lists, groups from all around the country had invited him to speak, and everyone began asking when he would run for President.

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.


Dec. 27, 2004 Jan. 13, 2003 Apr. 5, 2004
Larger Cover
Larger Cover
Larger Cover

The Making of the TIME 100
Executive Editor Adi Ignatius discusses this year's TIME 100 selections. Take a tour behind the scenes



Quick Links: Leaders & Revolutionaries | Artists & Entertainers | Builders & Titans | Scientists & Thinkers | Heroes & Icons | Back to TIME.com Home

FROM THE APRIL 18, 2005 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2005

Copyright © Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Subscribe | Customer Service | Help | Site Map | Search | Contact Us
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Reprints & Permissions | Press Releases | Media Kit