Yes, We Can!
Column by Chris Graham
“If I forget everything else when I get old and gray,” a friend told me Tuesday night, “I hope I never forget this feeling.”
I understood completely what he was saying, because I had just had a similar thought myself. CNN and Fox News had just called the presidential race in Virginia for Barack Obama, bringing tears to my eyes and the eyes of many at our party at the Waynesboro Democratic Headquarters because we knew what was coming next.
The big-screen TV was tuned to CNN, which ran a countdown to the close of the polls in Calfornia, a state that was all but certain to go to Obama and push him over the top in the Electoral College.
Five … four … three … two … one …
“Barack Obama has been elected president of the United States.”
I turned my attention from the TV toward the wild celebration around me and saw a sight that I hope is etched in my mind’s eye forever. We had upwards of 200 people at the HQ for our Election Night party, and many were still on hand at 11 for the announcement that we had worked so many thousands of volunteer hours for. And we couldn’t help ourselves but to reach out to the people with whom we had knocked on doors and made phone calls and made the evolution from strangers to fast friends to family over the course of the past year.
“Yes, We Did! Yes, We Did! Yes, We Did!” we chanted together, riffing on the Obama campaign “Yes, We Can!” mantra in our delerium.
But that’s not what I’ll remember most fondly, as fond as that memory itself is. It’s this that I will take to eternity – black and white, young and old, wealthy and middle class, slapping high-fives and bumping fists, bear-hugging and kissing cheeks, lifting each other from chairs and twirling each other in the air.
From the corporate executives to the small-business owners to the church pastors and teachers to the retirees who lived through the Great Depression and World War II to the single mother with two kids, we were all there for the same reason. For us, The Change We Need is more than a catchphrase. It’s about getting our country back on the right track again, about rebuilding our economy on the backs of middle-class families, about restoring America’s standing in the world, about extending the benefits of the greatest health-care system in the world to the millions of Americans who have trouble accessing it, about living better today and building for a better tomorrow, and doing it the right way, without tearing at each other through ideology and partisanship so that we emphasize that which divides us as opposed to that which unites.
We started on this mission together under the most humbling of circumstances. We had trouble getting a quorum of our Democratic committee together in May for the meeting called to consider the matter of my election as the new chairman. And then being the new chairman, I had to figure some things out on the fly, like how to raise money to get campaign yard signs and bumper stickers and buttons to put into a headquarters that we also needed to pay for and then staff.
My thinking at the beginning was pollyanna-ish, to say the least, borrowing from the line in the movie “Field of Dreams” that offers that “if you build it, they will come.” Come they did, drawn in by Barack Obama and Mark Warner and our local congressional candidate, Sam Rasoul, fulfilling my attempt at prophecy in a conversation with my wife, Crystal, back in May before I assumed the duties as the new chair at that meeting where we barely made our quorum. “Remember this,” I said to her, looking around at the tiny gathering that could have been held in a closet, if we had been trying to prove a point. “In two years, we’ll have 200 people in this committee.”
We’re a year and a half ahead of schedule on that end, and we’re already seeing some important success in our efforts at the polls. Though we fell short of our goal of winning a majority in Waynesboro for Obama, we did get 44.1 percent of the vote for him on Tuesday, improving nearly 10 percentage points over what John Kerry did in Waynesboro in 2004 and achieving a net gain of 1,400 votes in the Democratic column from ’04 to ’08. We also achieved a significant victory in the U.S. Senate race for Mark Warner, who picked up 58 percent of the vote in Waynesboro in his race with Republican Jim Gilmore, who had taken 60 percent of the vote in Waynesboro in his last campaign, the 1997 governor’s race.
And as far as I’m concerned, we’re just getting started with what we’re aiming to achieve. Much hard work lies ahead as we set ourselves on a course toward bringing some of that Change We Need to Waynesboro and the Valley. Unemployment is at a recent high here in our city, our school system is not graduating 20 percent of its students on schedule, nearly half of the students in our schools qualify for free or reduced-price school lunches, and our economy is based on a retail sector that doesn’t provide sustainable living wages for those who work in it.
Can we get things turned around and get our Waynesboro back on the right track again? The answer to that question is one that we’ve been using to motivate us here for the past few months.
“Yes, We Can!”
Related posts:
- Virginia: Warner backs Obama, campaign manager says Column by Chris Graham freepress2@ntelos.net “We’ve been doing everything we possibly can to make sure that we’re coordinated with the Obama campaign,” Mark Warner’s campaign...
- Election ’08: History! Story by Chris Graham freepress2@ntelos.net Barack Obama will be the 44th President of the United States, in no small part due to Virginia, which voted...
- Poll Watch: Another poll shows Obama up significantly in Virginia Story by Chris Graham freepress2@ntelos.net A Public Policy Polling survey released yesterday gives Barack Obama a solid 51 percent-to-43 percent lead over John McCain in...
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- Election ’08: Obama, Warner get nod in final pre-election polls Story by Chris Graham freepress2@ntelos.net Gallup and Larry Sabato are calling it a Barack Obama landslide, and a summary of the other major national polls...


















As my father always said, be careful what you asked for; you just may get it.
As opposed to … well, let’s just let the other guys who have been running things into the ground keep doing what they’re doing, because otherwise we might have to step up and do it ourselves.
Thanks, but I think it’s time for a change. Or as it were, more change.
Keep up the good work Chris, you’ve done a great job organizing the Democratic party in a very difficult area of the Commonwealth. And we Staunton dems appreciate your efforts to build the Party. YES WE CAN!!
And Yes, We Will!
way to go, waynesboro. this article highlights some of the exciting energy that is rising in the valley.
i recently moved back to the area after several years living in seattle. i struggle with mixed emotions about my old hometown of waynesboro: on one hand, i see every big box store imaginable threatening to shut down once and for all what could be a thriving valley downtown. on the other, i am cheered by new places such as stone soup books & cafe, and the first waynesboro farmer’s market season. it seems that the town teeters on the edge. between short-sighted instant gratification and long-term investment in community.
along with my husband and others in the valley, we have started a new blog called the state (http://vastate.wordpress.com) covering local politics, news, art, style, music, food, and really, whatever we would talk about with our friends over dinner. check out our recent review of stone soup!
So, should I construe from this article that the Augusta Free Press is an arm of the Virginia Democratic Committee? I am shocked that a media outlet no matter its circulation would put its object credible in question; unless it’s The New York Times, Washington Post, MSNBC, CNN, L.A. Times, NPR and even Fox News! At least you at the Augusta Free Press ware you alliances on your sleeve; and on that topic. Will I be able to get the party approved arm ban from you guys? The blue one with the “HOPE” symbol that I’m sure will be wore by members of the new national security force that came up during a speech that President Elect Obama gave in Colorado about building a new civil service corps. Thank you for your time.
Carl, in case you missed the tagline on our masthead, The Augusta Free Press bills itself as “The Valley’s Progressive Voice.” You want to gripe and moan about how much it sucks to be a Republican these days, go to the NV or the DN-R or any of a number of other conservative local media and have at it.
Chris, thank you for reinforcing my opinion that “progressives” tend to group people. You have made two incorrect assumptions about me. First I’m not a Republican, I’m Libertarian & I’m most certainly not griping and moaning about anything concerning the GOP. I think that change is a GOOD thing; just not change for change sake! In any account, I believe that the role of the State is not to “rob from the rich and give to the poor” but to provide a safe environment to achieve greatness.
The tone of your response has taken me aback I must say; I thought the free exchange of ideas was treasured? Anyway thank you for giving me a place to express my ideas at least for now!
“Free exchange of ideas”? Your comment was one snarky partisan-laced comment after another. And then you complain when the same is thrown back at you. We’re off to a bad start here, but I’ll give you your due. You say you want a free exchange of ideas, so let’s go with a free exchange of ideas.
Chris, it is very good to meet you, even though we don’t agree about much politically, I do enjoy a good debate from time to time! No hard feeling, by the way I did vote for u last year. I hope (no pun intended) that someone well fix this mess we find ourselves in, whoever is to blame!
Good to meet you, too, and thanks for the vote! Feel free to give me hell when necessary. (Hopefully it’s not all that necessary, but …)