Felicia Brown waited in line for more than two hours to see President Barack Obama. She waited as the nerves of many of her line-mates began to fray. She waited as a rude volunteer threatened a gaggle of line-skippers. She waited as a host of VIPs hustled by, and as at least one person passed out and was carted off on a stretcher.
But after more than two hours and a final security screening, there she was, seated in the fourth-to-last row in a convention space at the Sheraton Hotel in midtown Manhattan, watching the first black president of the United States, live and in person.
And it was all by a stroke of luck that she made it there at all.
Brown’s name was pulled randomly from a list of folks who had registered to attend the National Action Network’s annual convention, at which the president was Friday’s keynote speaker. Brown said she didn’t even realize the president would be speaking until Monday. Then, on Tuesday, she got a call from convention organizers telling her that she was selected to receive a ticket to the event.
“I got the phone call and I thought it was a joke,” said Brown, an unemployed benefits analyst from Plainfield, New Jersey. “I literally thought it was a late April Fools joke.”
After all the bumps and bruises the president has taken during a tumultuous first term in office, and the more recent healthcare and budget battles of his second, Brown said her affinity for Obama has been unshakable. The luster hasn’t faded a bit.
“I know this is a historical moment. I doubt we’re going to see another African-American president in my lifetime,” she said. “But it’s more than that. Just to know we have such a positive image of a black man. And the way he is with his wife and his children. It’s beyond just the presidency.”
Indeed, so much of Obama’s presidency has been about more than just his presidency. His image, that very image that Brown described as holding so much power, has hung implicitly, like a cloud, or in some cases, an anvil.
There was his former minister, Jeremiah Wright, whose fiery pro-black sermons cast a pall over his candidacy. And in the early days of his presidency, when the economy was in freefall and the unemployment rate for blacks hit double-digit highs, the Congressional Black Caucus angrily demanded that he, of first black president-fame, do more to help down-and-out blacks. The president demurred.
All these years later, as Obama has used his second term to shift the narrative that he hasn’t done enough to remedy the plight of black people, by focusing a lot of his efforts on issues disproportionately affecting people of color, the cloud continues to trail him.
His attendance at the National Action Network, a national activist organization founded and led by msnbc host Rev. Al Sharpton, was preceded by revelations that years ago, Sharpton worked in some capacity with the FBI to target members of New York’s mafia. Sharpton has long been used as a target for the right wing who, despite his dramatic evolution from street activist to mainstream cable news host, view him as a rabble-rousing race-baiter. Sharpton has also gained the ear of the White House and has consulted with Obama on a number of issues throughout his presidency.
Sharpton acknowledged this week he had cooperated with the FBI but denied being an informant.
In an exposé on Sharpton by The Smoking Gun, the first five paragraphs reference the White House, Obama or First Lady Michelle Obama no less than 10 times: “Later this week, Obama will travel to New York and appear in a Manhattan hotel ballroom at the side of the man whom FBI agents primarily referred to as “CI-7” — short for confidential informant #7.”
The bad buzz surrounding revelations that Sharpton helped federal agents snare a host of nefarious underworld characters couldn’t dampen the mood for those who’d traveled to see the president address the National Action Network’s convention.
“Nothing but mess,” one attendee said, describing what had been big news on the front pages of New York City tabloids but little more than a blip on the national radar.
As Sharpton introduced President Obama on Friday, he praised POTUS as an “action president.”
“No president in the last 50 years has shown more action around protecting the rights of ordinary citizens and the civil rights of people denied than our action president Barack Obama,” Sharpton said. “I’m not talking about style. I’m not talking about rhetoric. I’m not talking about who would high-five us, I’m talking about action.”









