"I did not think it was arrogance," Plouffe says. He writes that in the run-up to the campaign for the Illinois Senate seat in 2004, Obama said he felt he could probably do every job on the campaign better than anyone he might hire to do the job. One of Obama's challenges, Plouffe says, was learning to trust his staff enough to handle the mass of details that can overwhelm a campaign. I wasn't sure he had the potential to be a great candidate." "But as it became clear that he was more serious, and this may happen, I think I began to really feel confident that he had the potential to be a terrific president. " jumped into this in a very unorthodox way," Plouffe tells Terry Gross. Plouffe remembers that when he and David Axelrod, who would become Obama's senior adviser, first met with the junior Senator from Illinois to discuss a run for the presidency, the idea seemed far-fetched. A longtime campaign strategist for the Democratic Party who also managed Obama's 2004 Senate race, Plouffe - who is not serving in the administration - has a new book called The Audacity to Win: The Inside Story and Lessons of Barack Obama's Historic Victory. If anyone is qualified to give a behind-the-scenes tour of Barack Obama's run for the White House, it's David Plouffe.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |