The player

For Barack Obama, says David Maraniss, the path to victory has been marked by fierce drive and a little luck.

BARACK OBAMA WAS at his red-brick home on Chicago’s South Side when the good news started reaching him early in the night. He was in the fold of his family when New Hampshire became the first swing state to fall his way and when the incomplete but encouraging results from Florida made it seem more likely that the title of president would precede his name for another four years. He was watching television and working the phones at the Fairmont Hotel when Wisconsin went for him, and then Iowa. Soon enough NBC became the first network to declare him the winner, and then other networks and major newspapers followed by giving him Ohio and, with it, the election.

It was 10:19 p.m. here when the president learned for certain that he would not be fired and could instead think about getting fired up and ready to go, again. Kisses, handshakes, fist bumps in the hotel room. Nearby, at McCormick Place, where a vast throng awaited him, the dancing began. Ear-splitting, joyous shouting erupted and would not stop as more blue states piled up the Electoral College margin.

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