Obama heading to the Hill City on Wednesday
The Associated Press
Sen. Barack Obama will visit Lynchburg on Wednesday for a town meeting at E.C. Glass High School.
Barack Obama will bring his presidential campaign for change to Lynchburg in a town hall meeting Wednesday at E.C. Glass High School, his Virginia staffers said Monday.
Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., will join Obama for the event inside the school’s 2,000-capacity gymnasium.
It will be the first appearance by a presumed presidential nominee in Lynchburg since Ronald Reagan in 1980.
John McCain, Obama’s opponent in the presidential race, delivered the commencement address at Liberty University in 2006 when the Republican was in between presidential campaigns.
The Democratic candidate’s Lynchburg headquarters started notifying supporters as soon as the meeting’s plans became definite Monday afternoon, and about 30 people had lined up for tickets at 5 p.m. at the Main Street headquarters.
All the available tickets were given out Monday.
“I got a call,” a smiling Lisa Waller said in describing how she and her friend Anitra Turner managed to be at the front of the line.
Another early arrival, Chris Cohen of Lynchburg, said the prospect of seeing Obama was “pretty exciting.”
“Lynchburg is off the beaten path, and I’m interested in seeing why he’s interested in us,” Cohen said.
Lynchburg City Councilman Mike Gillette said the Hill City could play a key role in Obama’s drive to win Virginia’s electoral votes for a Democrat, which hasn’t happened since 1964.
“Virginia has changed,” Gillette said.
“Obama knows he is going to do well in Northern Virginia and Richmond, and probably in Charlottesville and on the shore,” Gillette said.
“But he probably knows he is not going to do as well deep in Southwest Virginia, and that means our region really is a battleground. He needs to pull votes in our area in Central Virginia to put Virginia in his column,” Gillette said.
Doors to the high school gym will open at 4:30 p.m. and the program is scheduled to begin at 6:35.
Obama is expected to talk about the nation’s economy, his plans for a $1,000 tax cut for middle class families, a goal of 5 million new jobs in renewable energy and a college tuition tax credit.
The candidate will make a campaign stop Wednesday morning in Martinsville before appearing in Lynchburg. His designation as the Democratic Party’s candidate won’t be official until the national convention in Denver formally chooses him next Tuesday.
Gerard Hutcherson, who got his ticket Monday afternoon, said he became an Obama supporter as soon as he announced his candidacy. “I’m looking forward to the opportunity to see him in person,” Hutcherson said.
Jenny Poore, who said she’s an active volunteer among parents at Perrymont Elementary School, also was among the first to claim a ticket Monday.
“I’m excited to see a candidate who actually appears to care about what’s going on in our communities with children and the educational system, and with the economy and the war,” Poore said.
Lynchburg’s other brushes with presidential candidates have been rare.
Mike Huckabee spoke at Liberty University in November, and at Thomas Road Baptist Church in February, when he was running against McCain for the Republican nomination for president.
Both presidents Bush also have passed through Central Virginia.
George H.W. Bush spoke at the Liberty University graduation in 1990, and George W. Bush helped dedicate the D-Day Memorial in Bedford in 2001.
Lynchburg was a fairly significant stop on Reagan’s campaign schedule in October 1980, when an almost iconic photo of him shaking hands with Jerry Falwell appeared on front pages around the country.
That was the year that Moral Majority, promoted by Falwell, was emerging as a national political force. Spokesmen with Moral Majority said they registered millions of new voters nationwide.
Several Republican candidates around the country ousted Democratic incumbents that fall with the support of voters who made family values their cause.
Reagan’s campaign and Obama’s share the registration theme.
Voter registrars in Lynchburg and statewide say the rate of new-voter signups has exceeded the pace of 2004.
Obama and the Democratic Party have opened field offices in small cities, including Lynchburg and Bedford, that haven’t experienced an active presidential campaign in decades.
The effect of those registrations won’t be known until Nov. 4, when those voters get their first chance to show up at the polls.
Lynchburg’s Democratic Party leaders were excited Monday even though the usual local party workers didn’t have a leading role in Obama’s scheduling.
“This is great,” John Lawrence, chairman of the local Democratic Party, said. “To have a presidential candidate come here shows how important Virginia is electorally, plus how much Virginia has shifted away from being a Republican state.”
Mayor Joan Foster described the campaign stop as “interesting times in Lynchburg.”
“We’re on their radar screen. I think that’s newsworthy,” she said. “… It’s been a long time coming, in my opinion.”
Gillette said he thinks Central Virginia has a chance to be part of the political process in which it usually isn’t included.
“We’ll get a sense of what it feels like to live in New Hampshire during the primaries,” Gillette said.
Gillette said he, his wife and daughter put in a few days working for Obama’s campaign in New Hampshire last winter.
“We helped in the office, with canvassing and phone-bank work. It was pretty exciting,” Gillette said.
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Reader Reactions
I never said there are no racists in Lynchburg. There are racists everywhere. White racists, black racists, latino racists, etc. But my point was that racism has declined so much in this country that a man who is half black can run for president and not run into racism every step of the way. I asked why you would assume that Sen. Obama would run into racists at the event tonight that he would need to ‘give hell’ as you said. I have not seen any main stream person say or do anything racist towards Sen. Obama yet he is the one who keeps trying to bring race into this election. I believe that we should do what Dr. King said and not ‘judge anyone by the color of their skin but on the content of their character’ and the vast majority of people in lynchburg follow this same principle. If you are always expecting racism then you will always see racism in people whether they are racist or not. For example if there are white people protesting the event tonight you might think they are racist if you already have a racist mindset. But chances are if you talk to those protesters they will say they are protesting because they think Sen. Obama has the wrong vision for the future of this country and they dislike his socialistic polocies, the color of his skin has nothing to do with it. What gets me mad about Sen. Obama playing the race card is that if you dissagree with his positions people call you a racist.
I indeed must apologize to esrussell for insinuating that there are racist in the “Burg”. Why would someone assume that in a town that has been forced to have race relation meetings on the regular? As for Obama,he has very little idea of what it is to be confronted by racism and I do believe he is about to run into it head on. I don’t recall that he has focused on the same other than to refute what America is afraid to confront. Want some real examples of racism in your area, go to Rivermont, Daniels Hill, and White Rock Hill and interview some real citizens!!!
Ms. Cleo, why do you think racists will be there when Sen. Obama speaks? Have you seen anyone on the national scene say anything racists to him at all? The only one who has ever brought race into this election is Sen. Obama himself. Is he possibly a racist or does he want to portray himself as a victim and make us think he is having to weather a hail storm of racism everywhere he goes?
I wonder if Obama will mention his anti-nuclear power position. He wants to add 5 mil. jobs in renewable energy, but if he had his way, the nuclear industry would atrophy, costing our area a good number of jobs. That sounds like some really good change!!!
How many more Hillbillies are there in the dirty south? In addition to Obama having high press coverage he needs real high security as it seems someone in the city dislikes used appliance salesmen. LOL . Obama you are in the house and you should ignore all the racist that you will no doubt be in the presence of today. Give them hell.
Why is it that the paper fails to mention that Obama is set to name his VP choice this week and will be touring w/Jim Webb, one of the leading candidates to be asked? Mike Gillette should really stick to what he knows best, making bad votes on Lynchburg’s City Council. No one here wants to live in New Hampshire or New York and if he likes it so much there he ought to move back.
Oh Boy. A real live politician coming to Lynchburg. He will be selling used washers and dryers, and the bleeding hearts are lined up to buy one. I am so thrilled, I have to go to the restroom.

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