CNN iReport CNN iReport

DC students rally at The White House following Obama's election

November 5, 2008 | Washington, District of Columbia | Vetting explained

mattrist Posted by:
mattrist

  • Viewed 2,025 times
  • Shared 32 times
 
iReport —

"Nah Nah Nah Nah.. Hey Hey Hey, Goodbye," chanted 1,000 D.C. students

gathered in front of The White House after Sen. Barack Obama from

Illinois was elected as the 44th President of the United States.

 

Shortly

after news networks called the win for Obama, a literal explosion of

voices could be heard across the campus and throughout the city. In a

spirit of passion, students ran in droves to the white house to

assemble in an impromptu celebration.

 

"I

felt like it was a historical moment...I was overcome by the

camaraderie and excitement that I felt from the College Democrats party

that when everyone was shuffling out of the Marvin Center I felt

compelled to run," said GWU freshman Kate Chaloux, in a raspy voice from

all the screaming last night.

 

In front of the white house,

hundreds of students chanted "Yes, We Can!" or "Yes, We did!"

continuing to sing the song "Na Na Hey Hey Goodbye" by Steam.

 

For

the first time in history, Democratic Presidential candidate Barack

Obama reached out to the youth vote and mobilized a historically

overlooked subset of the population. It was clear last night that

students from around D.C. (Georgetown, GWU, Catholic, Howard, Etc.)

 

Running

through the streets of D.C. with screaming college students and a 3

piece brass band playing celebratory tunes, stopping traffic and

high-fiving people through car windows...all of these images will

pervade my memories of last night's election.

 

I feel for the

first time that the voice of the youth was heard. I am now truly proud

to be an American, and I will never forget Tuesday, November 4, 2008.

Comments

Log in to comment

iReport welcomes a lively discussion, so comments on iReports are not pre-screened before they post. See the iReport community guidelines for details about content that is not welcome on iReport.

What is iReport?

  • Share

    Tell a story, offer an opinion, say what's important to you.

  • Discuss

    Join the conversation on the day's big issues.

  • Be heard

    The best iReports get vetted and used on CNN platforms.

iReport is a user-generated section of CNN.com. The stories here come from users. CNN has vetted only the stories marked with the "CNN" badge. MORE...