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Newsweek special report on U.S. elections 2008 (Part 7)

Hampshire friends and Joe Lieberman about the fun times in New Hampshire—dragging voters to town halls when he stood at zero in the polls. New Hampshire adviser Mike Dennehy later said that McCain’s town-hall event in Peterborough was his “best event in New Hampshire, probably ever.” Afterward, when McCain boarded the plane, he turned to Dennehy and said, “How many are we down by?” Dennehy looked at him for a second. “Let’s not talk about that tonight,” Dennehy said.

On the last flight home to Arizona, McCain came back to say goodbye to the reporters he had long since virtually stopped speaking to, still stunned by what he viewed as personal betrayal by friends in the press corps. “Feelin’ good, feelin’ confident about the way things have turned out,” the candidate said, delivering the necessary white lie. “We’ve spent a lot of time together … We’ve had a great time. I wish all of you every success and look forward to being with you in the future.” Behind him, Cindy McCain did not disguise her feelings. She teared up and looked drained. So did McCain’s traveling buddies Lieberman and Lindsey Graham.

Steve Schmidt spoke briefly with the reporters. “Are you happy with the campaign?” he was asked. He answered: “I think we did our absolute best in really difficult circumstances … It is highly doubtful that anyone will have to run in a worse political climate than the one John McCain had to run in this year.” Another reporter asked if he was happy with “the pick of Palin.” He ducked the question. Schmidt was trying, not very hard, to hide his true feelings. He had been compelled to personally take over Palin’s debate prep when she seemed unwilling to engage in the drudge work of learning the issues. McCain’s advisers had been frustrated when Palin refused to talk to donors because she found it corrupting, and they were furious when they heard rumors that Todd Palin was calling around to Alaska bigwigs telling them to hold their powder until 2012. The day of the third debate, Palin refused to go onstage with New Hampshire GOP Sen. John Sununu and Jeb Bradley, a New Hampshire congressman running for the Senate, because they were pro-choice and because Bradley opposed drilling in Alaska. The McCain campaign ordered her onstage at the next campaign stop, but she refused to acknowledge the two Republican candidates standing behind her. McCain himself rarely spoke to Palin (perhaps once a week when they were not traveling together, estimated one adviser). Aides kept him in the dark about Palin’s spending on clothes because they were sure he’d be offended. In his concession speech, McCain praised Palin, but the body language between them onstage was not particularly friendly. (Palin had asked to speak; Schmidt vetoed the request.)

McCain’s speech, written by Salter, could not have been more gracious to Obama. It evoked McCain’s life of service with humility and reminded voters what McCain’s campaign might have been. He said he had no regrets. “Today,” he said, “I was a candidate for the highest office in the country I love so much. And tonight, I remain her servant. That is blessing enough for anyone …”

On election night, Obama ate a steak dinner with his family at their home in Chicago’s Hyde Park. Repairing to a hotel suite, he closeted himself with the core group that had been with him from the beginning—Axelrod, Plouffe, communications director Robert Gibbs and Valerie Jarrett, his family friend and mentor. Various children—Obama’s two girls, the children of Michelle’s brother Craig, Gibbs’s son, Joe Biden’s grandchildren—happily wandered in and out. For most of the fall, the campaign had worried about Ohio as the most important battleground state. When the news came through that Obama had won Ohio, Obama said to Axelrod, “So it looks like we’re going to win this thing, huh?” Axelrod replied, “It looks like it, yeah.” He deadpanned, “I don’t want to congratulate you until I can congratulate you.” According to Jarrett, Obama was “as even-tempered as ever.”

In a sea of Americans in Grant Park in Chicago at midnight, Obama said, “It has been a long time coming, but tonight, because of what we did on this day, in this election, at this defining moment, change has come to America.” Yes, it has.

-END

(This story is based on reporting by NEWSWEEK’S Daren Briscoe, Eleanor Clift, Katie Connolly, Peter Goldman, Daniel Stone and Nick Summers. It was written by Evan Thomas.)

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