In 2008, President Obama ensured his place in American history as the first black president.
But by winning re-election, Obama cements that achievement. The nation’s decision to embrace a non-white-male chief executive is now no longer an aberration, a victory in a year (2008) in which arguably everything went right for Obama and wrong for the Republicans.
Now, Obama has won the majority of American votes despite an intense, organized opposition to his leadership, historically high unemployment during his tenure, hundreds of millions of dollars in campaign ads attacking him, and a set of policies that sharply divided the two political parties.
In 2008, Americans elected the idea of Obama and a black president. In 2012, they powerfully affirmed that decision.
If Obama had lost, his defeat would not have been solely (or even principally) because of race, as some voters who backed him in 2008 opted against doing so this year, arguing he had not lived up to the promise of his campaign. But a loss by Obama would have highlighted the racial division that still exists in America (almost 60 percent of whites backed Mitt Romney, while fewer than 10 percent of blacks did). And the president’s reelection will strengthen the voices of those who say America is growing more accepting of its increasing diversity.









