The Delaware Gazette

Springsteen, Jay-Z, put the pop in Obama rally

Pres­i­dent Barack Obama, accom­pa­nied by singer Bruce Spring­steen, waves as he arrive at a cam­paign event near the State Capi­tol Build­ing in Madi­son, Wis., Mon­day. (AP Photo/Pablo Mar­tinez Monsivais)

JIM KUHNHENN

Asso­ci­ated Press

COLUMBUS — Some­one has to intro­duce the president.

On Mon­day, the final day of the pres­i­den­tial cam­paign, Pres­i­dent Barack Obama, how­ever, didn’t bring along an open­ing act. He brought along two main acts.

Bruce Spring­steen. Jay-Z. Theirs wasn’t an intro­duc­tion, it was pop cul­ture moment.

The Boss was spend­ing the entire day with Obama, trav­el­ing on Air Force One from Madi­son, Wis., to Colum­bus, Ohio, and then to Des Moines, Iowa, where Obama planned a coda for his cam­paign, a finale where his run for the pres­i­dency began five years ago.

Jay-Z boomed his way into Columbus’s Nation­wide Arena, per­form­ing a ren­di­tion of his hit “99 Prob­lems” with a polit­i­cal twist for a crowd esti­mated by fire offi­cials at more than 15,000 peo­ple. He changed a key R-rated word to make his own polit­i­cal endorse­ment. “I got 99 prob­lems but Mitt ain’t one,” he sang.

“They tell the story of what our coun­try is,” Obama said of the two per­form­ers, “but also of what it should be and what it can be.”

Spring­steen added a whole new sense of vigor, even gid­di­ness, to the Obama entourage, with many of the president’s aides and advis­ers clearly star-struck by the rocker’s presence.

Spring­steen, in jeans, black boots, a work shirt, vest and leather jacket, was not wear­ing the typ­i­cal Air Force One attire. But the Obama camp has left for­mal­ity aside; many aides are grow­ing beards through Elec­tion Day and ties have been left behind in favor of sweaters for the chilly out­door events dur­ing the last hours of the campaign.

Asked if there was any down­side to using celebrity glitz instead of sub­stance to drive vot­ers to the polls in the final days, Obama spokes­woman Jen Psaki laughed. “I think Bruce Spring­steen might be offended by you call­ing him glitzy,” she said.

“Bruce Spring­steen, and some other celebri­ties who have been help­ing us, reach a broad audi­ence that some­times tune out what’s being said by politi­cians,” she said.

As Psaki spoke to reporters at the back of the plane, Obama was up front and on the phone with New Jer­sey Gov. Chris Christie dis­cussing the recov­ery from Super­storm Sandy. Christie, who says he has attended more than 100 Spring­steen con­certs, said Obama then handed the phone to Spring­steen, a New Jer­sey native whose songs often have been trib­utes to his youth in the state.

Upon land­ing in Colum­bus, Spring­steen told a reporter that it was his first trip on Air Force One. Grin­ning, he said: “It was pretty cool.” As for New Jer­sey, he said “I’m feel­ing pretty hope­ful” that the state’s hard-hit shore will recover

In Madi­son and Colum­bus, Spring­steen ser­e­naded audi­ences with ren­di­tions of top anthems “No Sur­ren­der,” ”Promised Land,” and “Land of Hope and Dreams.” But he also has a cus­tom made cam­paign song named after the Obama motto “For­ward” — “Not the best I’ve ever written.”

“How many things rhyme with Obama?” he asked.

Obama, no doubt, didn’t mind.

“I’m going to be fine with Bruce Spring­steen on the last day that I’ll ever cam­paign,” he said above the din of the crowd.

“That’s not a bad way to bring it home. With The Boss. With The Boss”

AP News Posted by on Nov 5 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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