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It was an election to remember

Technology (yes, you, YouTube) changes the election for all.

A TIME OF TRANSITION: A LOOK BACK AT CAMPAIGN '08 / TOP OF THE TICKET

November 09, 2008|Don Frederick, Frederick is a Times staff writer.

Regardless of what I did for a living, I would have been following the presidential campaign -- obsessively. It's a deep-seated disorder, one that probably took root when the 1960 Kennedy-Nixon face-off unfolded before my 9-year-old eyes.

As this similarly memorable race played out, I was allowed a vantage point made to order for such a character defect: blogger.


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It's an evolving craft, with few set-in-stone rules. There's a seat-of-the-pants quality to it -- snap judgments and gut reactions predominate; more thoughtful analysis and sweeping perspective are best sought elsewhere.

Still, the post-now/move-on nature of blogging enables one to tap into a campaign's daily rhythm. And it hones a sense for the twist or turn that alters its flow. In the lengthy journey that culminated in Barack Obama's election, three such times stand out for me -- three moments when, from my blogger's perch, the campaign's established course got rocked (to greater or lesser degrees).

The first occurred just before Halloween a year ago, when Hillary Rodham Clinton was still the accepted front-runner in the battle for the Democratic nomination and the fight for the Republican nod was a free-for-all. The latest in a stream of debates among the Democrats -- notable mainly for Clinton's mastery over policy matters large and small -- was nearing an end when Tim Russert of NBC asked her about driver's licenses for illegal immigrants.

To the shock of all concerned, she stumbled, offering an uncharacteristically muddled answer that became the evening's headline. Never mind that at a future debate, Obama would provide a comparably confused response; the bar at that point was lower for him than for her.

Her bungled answer did not sink her candidacy; more serious problems, such as a poorly conceived strategy and a poorly managed staff -- as well as Obama's appeal and superior organization -- would do that. But her misstep was the first public chink in her armor, and from then on the aura of inevitability that had surrounded her diminished.

Once voting started in the primary season, Obama became the clear Democratic leader with a string of victories in February. Clinton, though, hung on. And then, in mid-March, what had been a shadow in Obama's past was thrust into the spotlight.

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