Obama's reelection bid: Can he recapture the magic? Does he need to?
ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Political Science Professor Cal Jillson provided expertise to The Christian Science Monitor and The New York Daily News on President Obama's announcement that he was seeking reelection.
By Linda Feldmann
Staff Writer
Four years ago, Barack Obama was the upstart freshman senator, off on a long-shot quest to become the most powerful man in the world.
Now heβs President Obama, The Man, the insider, the politician with the machine looking for four more years. Can he recapture the magic of his historic election 2-1/2 years ago? Does he need to?
The short answer, analysts say, is no and no. Itβs well nigh impossible to capture lightning in a bottle twice, but that doesnβt matter. As the sitting president of the United States, Mr. Obama goes into his reelection bid β announced Monday morning via e-mail and Web video β with all the advantages and disadvantages of an incumbent.
βThis is a very standard case of: βMy agenda is not yet complete. In a second term, Iβll be able to do more great things,β β says Cal Jillson, a political scientist at ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Methodist University in Dallas.
Instead of taking the field by storm, as he did in 2007, βthis is more grind it out,β Mr. Jillson continues. βHeβs already president of the United States. People already have formed opinions. Itβs not hope and change anymore. Itβs, can Obamaβs program continue slowly to create economic recovery and get the country back on its feet and restore confidence.β
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