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  1. Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Posts
    3,273
    #1
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/ame...08/7709978.stm
    http://edition.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS...ent/index.html

    Quote Originally Posted by BBC
    Democratic Senator Barack Obama has been elected the first black president of the United States, according to projected results.

    He is projected to have won enough states to guarantee that he has beaten Republican rival John McCain.

    He has so far held most of the states that voted Democrat in 2004, as well as seizing at least four from the Republicans.

    Several other key swing states are hanging in the balance.

    In Indiana and North Carolina, with most of the vote counted, there was less than 0.5% between the two candidates.

    However, the popular vote remains close. At 0345 GMT it stood at 50.7% for the Democratic Senator from Illinois, against 48.2% for Arizona Senator McCain.

    Mr Obama captured the key battleground states of Pennsylvania and Ohio, before passing the essential figure of 270 electoral college votes at 0400 GMT, when projections showed he had also taken California and a slew of other states.
    pretty decisive projections.
    Last edited by roninblade; November 5th, 2008 at 01:27 PM.

  2. Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    4,488
    #2
    Base on US media projection...
    US MEDIA:
    Obama is US president



    Agence France-Presse, INQUIRER.net
    First Posted 11:59:00 11/05/2008


    WASHINGTON – (UPDATE) Americans elected Democrat Barack Obama as their first black president Tuesday, handing him an historic victory over Republican John McCain, US media projected.
    Obama was virtually assured of making history Tuesday by becoming America's first black president, after thwarting Republican John McCain's long-shot comeback hopes in an epochal election.
    On a dramatic election night that will reshape US politics, Obama took an insurmountable lead by grabbing key states Ohio and Pennsylvania and needed only certain Democratic pickups to be reach the 270 electoral votes needed for victory.
    Tens of millions of people had earlier stood in long lines to cast votes with America locked in a moment of deep crisis, mired in the worst financial meltdown since the 1930s and waging two foreign wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
    Tens of thousands of Obama supporters euphorically waited for the first-term Illinois senator to show up at his massive victory party in downtown Chicago. McCain had so far stayed out of sight in a luxury hotel in his native Arizona.
    Democrats were also projected to land major gains in the Senate and House of Representatives and thereby grab a monopoly of power in Washington and usher in a new political era after years of Republican dominance.
    Obama had so far amassed 207 electoral votes with McCain on 135, but the mathematics of the US electoral map meant McCain had an impossible task to overhaul his lead.
    While television networks stopped short of definitively declaring Obama the victor, many blogs and websites pointed out that the die was already cast.
    Two senior McCain aides were quoted by Fox and CNN as saying "there is no path to victory."
    Obama gave early notice of the way the night would unfold by capturing the key northeastern state of Pennsylvania -- McCain's best hope of winning a Democratic state and stopping his rival from claiming the White House.
    He later added Ohio, the decisive state which swept President George W. Bush to victory in 2004 and another Republican state, Iowa.
    No one since John F. Kennedy in 1960 has lost two of the critical triumvirate of Ohio, Pennsylvania and Florida and gone on to win the presidency.
    Florida was too close to call but Obama was outperforming Democratic nominee John Kerry's figures in the state in 2004.
    Obama also captured New Mexico, another Republican seat McCain needed to hold to keep his slim White House dreams alive.
    Obama also won Massachusetts, Connecticut, Illinois, New Jersey, Maine, New Hampshire, Washington DC, Delaware, Michigan, Wisconsin, Rhode Island, and Minnesota, according to network projections.
    McCain captured Kentucky, Tennessee, West Virginia, South Carolina and Oklahoma, Alabama, Arkansas, Wyoming, Louisiana, Kansas, Utah and Texas.
    Other normally Republican states, North Carolina, and Virginia were too close-to-call, as was Midwestern Indiana, in another positive sign for Obama.
    In the Senate, Democrats wrested control of seats in the traditionally Republican state of Virginia, followed by New Hampshire, North Carolina and New Mexico, to take their tally in the chamber to 54 seats.
    Eight seats remained up for grabs, as networks announced that Democrats had won 15 seats and Republicans 12.
    Republican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell clung on, meaning that Democrats were highly unlikely to win the 60 seats they need in the 100-seat chamber needed to frustrate Republican obstruction tactics.
    Among the Republican casualties was Elizabeth Dole in North Carolina, wife of former Senate majority leader and defeated 1996 presidential nominee Bob Dole.
    CNN reported that exit polls showed that the economy was the top priority, being named by 62 percent of voters, compared to Iraq with 10 percent, terrorism on nine percent and healthcare on nine percent.
    Obama made a short election day trip to the Midwestern swing state of Indiana, after casting his vote alongside wife Michelle with daughters Sasha and Malia close by.
    "I feel great and it was fun, I had a chance to vote with my daughters," he said.
    "I noticed that Michelle took a long time though. I had to check to see who she was voting for," the Hawaiian-born US senator from Illinois, 47, said with a laugh.
    McCain kept silent as he voted in his home state of Arizona, but later led a boisterous rally in Grand Junction, Colorado, promising supporters: "We're going to win it."
    McCain, a former Vietnam War prisoner would be at 72 the oldest president inaugurated for a first term if elected.
    Obama, the son of a black Kenyan father and white mother from Kansas, would become the first African-American president after a stunning rise to the pinnacle of US politics.



  3. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    1,985
    #3
    Now he needs to perform while he is in office and bring back this economy. He has to remember that he represents every minority(Black, Asian, Latino, etc) in this country and if he screws up one bit, no minority will sit in that chair again for at least 100 years. I sure hope he is up to the task at hand.

  4. Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    14,181
    #4
    I am quite indifferent on this issue but I congratulate Senator Obama or rather President-elect Obama for his convincing win. But then again given the US is right now I hope he gets a lot blessing!

  5. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    3,872
    #5
    Well, I hope his economic policies will be good for us, however unlikely it may be.

  6. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    553
    #6
    yup! my mom called just to say Obama won.
    their 1st black president... but she voted for McCain,hehe.

  7. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    407
    #7
    11:05 pm(chicago) president elect obama with family at grant park!!!Change has come to america!!

  8. Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Posts
    335
    #8
    McCain concedes, Obama wins!
    In the Philippines we expect GMA to be the first to congratulate him, and syempre the 2010 presidentiables!

  9. Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Posts
    1,889
    #9
    Quite monumental, if I may say so. America, the melting pot of many nationalities, finally elected a man that represents the "mixed" faces of the USA.


    BTW, his victory is more of a repudiation of the failed Bush policies as McCain has been seen as an extension many of those policies.

    The last man from Illinois with a "change" platform was Abraham Lincoln....quite a large shoes to follow.

  10. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    45,927
    #10
    wow

    we witness history

    first black US president

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Obama the 44th US President