Elections tend to produce a feeling of nostalgia in me. Growing up as
the daughter of a political scientist, election season was exciting and
election night always a holiday. I remember the overpowering joy of
speeding on my bicycle through the array of Ohio fall colors and
political signs mixed together. Also mixed together in my mind are
memories of political booths at fairs and festivals, fundraisers,
sausage and chicken paprikash dinners and Democratic Party Headquarters
on the nights of Dukakis’s slaughter, Clinton’s first win and John
Kerry’s convention speech.
Upon retirement, my dad went
to work with vigor on many of the political causes he had championed
all his life. He worked very hard for Kerry four years ago. In an email
to me a week before that election, he told me that the excitement and
ground game of the campaign was like nothing he had ever seen before and
was hopeful that a high turnout would put them over the top.
At
Christmas in 2006, my dad was still glowing over the results of the
midterm elections. In his car, papered over in political bumper stickers
(much to the mortification of my Republican stepmother), my dad regaled
me with stories of Ohio’s new progressive Senator, Sherrod Brown and
read aloud articles from the magazine the Progressive as I drove from
Toledo to Columbus. At the time, I complained to my friends that it
seemed I’d never been able to have a real conversation with my dad. All
we had ever been able to talk about was politics.
Almost
two years later, I would give anything to have that type of
conversation with my father again, the kind of conversation where he
could share with me his passions and his joy in what he holds dear in
the world. Now I know that my father’s declining ability to remember
things has finally been classified as Alzheimer’s, and the biggest
wakeup call for me is that he has not been involved in this campaign.
Given his assessment of the Kerry campaign, I wondered what he would say
if he were involved for Obama. Last week, Obama HQ called him to see if
he would make phone calls on Saturday. He was excited to be of use, and
drove off that afternoon. About an hour after he should have been
there, they called to see where he was. He arrived home about 2½ hours
later. He said that he had made calls, but had nothing to say about the
energy of a campaign ground game that appears to be unprecedented in
modern politics. Soon it will be time to retire his politically papered
Honda as well.
Although it is now me doing most of the
reading and talking about issues, we are still able to talk and we are
still able to share our joy in politics. I am fortunate that maybe
tonight, we will be able to celebrate together by phone and share one
more big and exciting win.
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