Talk-show diva Oprah Winfrey said worry about the direction of her country and a personal belief in Senator Barack Obama pushed her to make her first endorsement in a presidential campaign, invaluable support in a tight race for the Democratic nomination.
The weekend "Oprahpalooza" lends A-list star power to Obama's campaign, drawing huge crowds that Obama hopes will translate into votes.
Tens of thousands were expected to turn out for Winfrey's Iowa stops and her visits yesterday to South Carolina and New Hampshire with Obama and his wife.
PHOTO: AFP
In South Carolina, the campaign ran out of the 18,000 tickets originally available for the biggest event and moved it to the 80,000-seat University of South Carolina football stadium.
In Des Moines, spectators lined up hours early on Saturday. Cameras flashed in the capacity crowd during Winfrey's speech, which opened and closed to loud applause and was frequently interrupted by cries of "We love Oprah."
Winfrey said she felt nervous and "out of my pew" as she addressed a gathering hall packed shoulder-to-shoulder in the largest gathering of Iowans in the campaign this year.
But she did not hide her political convictions, making an argument for change from the Bush administration other than another Clinton in the White House.
Winfrey did not mention the current president or Obama rival Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton by name, but was not subtle about her feelings for Clinton's argument that Obama does not have the experience to be president when she voted to authorize the war in Iraq.
"The amount of time you spend in Washington means nothing unless you are accountable for the judgment you made," Winfrey said.
She said from the beginning Obama "stood with clarity and conviction against this war in Iraq."
"There are times that I even worry about what happens to our country," Winfrey said, standing on a small stage before a sea of people in the 9,300m2 hall. "That is why for the very first time in my life I feel compelled to stand up and speak out for the man who I believe has a new vision for America."
The campaign distributed 23,000 tickets for the Des Moines event and more than 10,000 for another later in Cedar Rapids.
Thousands of people, many who do not normally participate in politics, came into his offices, volunteered and attended caucus trainings to get tickets.
The campaign said 18,500 people showed up in Des Moines. At least one person near the stage passed out and paramedics came in to help.
The Democratic race in Iowa, which holds its primary caucuses on Jan. 3, is tight, with Obama, Clinton and 2004 vice presidential nominee John Edwards in a dead heat.
Winfrey said she does not know if her influence on the presidential campaign will have the same impact as driving up the popularity of books and products featured on her show.
"I understand the difference between the Book Club and a free refrigerator," she said. "I understand the difference between that and this critical moment in our nation's history."
She said she is "tired of politics as usual," which is why she seldom invites politicians on her show to spread their rhetoric. Obama, she said, has an "ear for eloquence and a tongue dipped in the unvarnished truth."
Obama spoke after Winfrey, and acknowledged that he was under no illusions that the crowd was there to hear him. Indeed, some people left during his speech, although the majority stuck around to hear him.
"You want Oprah as vice president?" he asked the crowd that responded with enthusiastic cheers. "That would be a demotion, you understand that?"
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