Beside Barack
As her husband’s political star ascends and the race for the White House heats up, Michelle Obama, an accomplished woman in her own right, keeps Barack Obama grounded and her finger on the pulse of what women are thinking. Read highlights from our feature below. Be sure to pick up the September issue on newsstands now to read more about the woman who could be America’s next first lady.


Michelle Obama strolls through the campaign headquarters on the eleventh floor of a nondescript downtown Chicago high-rise like a queen. Long-limbed and striking, she is not dressed like a candidate’s wife. No jewel-toned knits or demure knee-length skirts. It’s hot outside, so her shoulders are bare. Campaign workers fall silent as she glides by, more awed than intimidated.

Michelle Obama, wife of Illinois Senator Barack Obama, does not act like a candidate’s wife, either. When standing on stage by her husband’s side, there is none of that dutiful head nodding. Her gaze is fixed on him but there is not an ounce of subservience in it. Still it is clear that when they are together he is the person commanding the stage.

But as her husband continues to turn heads in his bid to become the nation’s first African-American president, Michelle Obama just might be the campaign’s secret weapon.

Michelle on women trying to do it all:
“I cannot be involved in a presidential campaign, hold down a full-time senior-level position, get my kids to camp, and exercise and eat right. I know I can’t do it all.”

On first hearing about her future husband from co-workers:
“I thought, This is probably just a Black man who can talk straight. That’s why they’re excited about him.”

On considering her husband’s run for President:
“I took myself down every dark road you could go on, just to prepare myself before we jumped out there.”

On her husband:
“The authenticity you see is real, and that’s why I fell in love with him.”

For more insight into Michelle, her husband and their bid for the White House, read the entire article in our September issue with Jill Scott on the cover.

Gwen Ifill is the managing editor of Washington Week and senior correspondent for The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer.

See what our news blogger, Roland Martin, has to say about Barack's blackness »




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What do you think


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-5 latest comments

After reading the article and the blog on Michelle Obama - I still am not a fan of her nor her husband. As a young black woman, you would think i would be the first person to jump on the bangwagon of a black man and a strong black woman on his side leading this country but I havent heard anything from either one of them on how they are planning on empowering and strengthening our race in this country. I want to be able to vote for someone that I feel has the experience and the know how to do so, regardless of race or gender

-Tanisha

Michelle would make a wonderful first Black lady.

She seems to be honest, hardworking and dedicated to her family. Any woman that can stay by her man during rough times such as election campaigning the ups and the downs and still live with some grace and style is one to be admired and role modeled. No matter what is going on behind the scenes: the things we don't see now but may hear about years later, keep your head up Michelle--you look good!

eboneyneely@yahoo.com Louisville, Ky.

-Eboney Denise Neely

michelle is so sophisticated and elegant and with her personal achievements she seems to be a woman that lots of girls of all races can aspire to be like

-Yan

TRUTHFULLY THERE IS NO ONE IN THE U.S. NOW WHO CAN HONESTLY SAY WHAT NATIONALITY THEY ARE SIMPLY BECAUSE THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A PURE RACE AT LEAST NOT NOW!! IF SHE DOESN'T WANT TO BE KNOWN AS A BLACK WOMAN, BUT WANTS THE WORLD TO KNOW HER (ALL OF HER) THAN I SAY SO BE IT,( AT LEAST SHE'S NOT PRETENDING)

-SYNDIE LUMPKIN

Everyone has a story to tell. Good, bad and indifferent. There is an audience who really likes Mrs. Obama simply because they can relate to her, and there is an audience who can relate to Karrine and Tameka. Sometimes people get a little misdirected.To hear constantly that Karrine has slept with countless men, is sickening. This is just my opinion. I applaud her for getting her life in some kind of order. This is not a positive story to me. I read her story in the beginning, I thought it would stop there. It has no

-A J