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Thursday, April 10, 2008

One Lucky Baby

By Brett Thomas-DeJongh
CrowNews.Net


She’s not a superdelegate, she hasn’t donated money to any campaign and she won't be eligible to vote until 2025.



Yet Tazawana Jo Barlow got face time and photo ops with both Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama when they appeared in Missoula last weekend.



How did she manage the kind of access most journalists and lobbyists can only dream about? 



Well, it helps to be 10 months old and very cute. That, and her mother has a knack for being in the right place at the right time.



Amid some 8,000 people at an Obama rally held at the University of
Montana's Adam Center Saturday, Twila Old Coyote finagled VIP seats
behind the lectern and stage for her and her daughter. She also got
within arm’s length of Hillary Clinton during a Sunday event attended
by nearly 2,000 people at the Neptune Aviation hangar near the Missoula
International Airport.


And both times, the candidates seized the opportunity to create the kind of ‘aww’ moment that wins hearts and minds. 


After finishing his speech, Obama was shaking hands but refusing photo
ops -- that is until he spotted Taza.


Old Coyote remembers he had just told a supporter, I’m not posing for pictures, but upon seeing her daughter, quickly added, Except with babies.   


Once Taza was in Obama’s arms, Old Coyote snapped a picture with her camera phone to preserve the moment. 



At the Clinton rally a day later, Old Coyote was ready with her digital camera -- this time, with freshly charged batteries.



After her speech, Clinton shook hands with supporters and took
questions. 


“I had Taza on my shoulders, but we were about four people
deep,” Old Coyote said. 


She had given up getting closer, she said, but then Clinton
looked her way saying, Oh, there’s a baby


People in front let
mother and child through, and soon Taza was in Clinton’s arms.


She’s
so sweet
, Old Coyote recalled Clinton saying, I want to take her with me.



Taza seemed to be at ease with both candidates. Old Coyote, who works at
UM’s office of American Indian Student Services, is not as impartial.


She is an Obama supporter, she said, because she sees him as someone who will do more to
address Native issues. 


“He wants to meet on a yearly basis with tribal
leaders, and not have them go through the bureaucracy,” Old Coyote said.



She also expressed that Obama’s background better equips him to understand
the Native perspective. 


“He gets it,” she said, “And I don’t think
[Clinton] does.” 


On the Net


For other Native viewpoints on the Democratic candidates, have a look at Jodie Rave's recent articles for the Missoulian.


Here's a Reznet piece about presidential candidates and the Indian vote.


Video of both Clinton's and Obama's speeches in Missoula is available here. (Windows Media Player 9 is required.)


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