Spot the difference

MR. RUSSERT:  Before you go, you know there's been enormous speculation about your political future.  Will you serve your full six-year term as U.S. senator from Illinois?SEN.-ELECT OBAMA:  Absolutely.  You know, a little–some of this hype's been a little overblown.  It's flattering, but I have to remind people that I haven't been sworn in yet.  ...

MR. RUSSERT:  Before you go, you know there's been enormous speculation about your political future.  Will you serve your full six-year term as U.S. senator from Illinois?
SEN.-ELECT OBAMA:  Absolutely.  You know, a little--some of this hype's been a little overblown.  It's flattering, but I have to remind people that I haven't been sworn in yet.  I don't know where the rest rooms are in the Senate.  I'm going to have to figure out how to work the phones, answer constituent mail.  I expect to be in the Senate for quite some time, and hopefully I'll build up my seniority from my current position, which I believe is 99th out of 100."

MR. RUSSERT:  Before you go, you know there's been enormous speculation about your political future.  Will you serve your full six-year term as U.S. senator from Illinois?
SEN.-ELECT OBAMA:  Absolutely.  You know, a little–some of this hype's been a little overblown.  It's flattering, but I have to remind people that I haven't been sworn in yet.  I don't know where the rest rooms are in the Senate.  I'm going to have to figure out how to work the phones, answer constituent mail.  I expect to be in the Senate for quite some time, and hopefully I'll build up my seniority from my current position, which I believe is 99th out of 100."

Meet the Press, November 7, 2004.

Are you running for President in 2008?" Obama surprises me by saying he's just thinking about the 2006 election right now, which, in the semiotic dance of presidential politics, is definitely not a no. A few days later, I ask Obama the obvious follow-up question: Will he think about running for President in 2008 when the congressional election is over? "When the election is over and my book tour is done, I will think about how I can be most useful to the country and how I can reconcile that with being a good dad and a good husband," he says carefully, and then adds, "I haven't completely decided or unraveled that puzzle yet."

Time, October 15, 2006

James Forsyth is assistant editor at Foreign Policy.

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