Washington Bureau

Top Obama Aide Goes From Duke Basketball Court to DC

By Sean Mussenden
Media General News Service
May 16 2008 | text size: small medium large
Barack Obama aide and former Duke basketball player Reggie Love waits in a soul food restaurant in Greensboro, N.C., as the candidate meets diners.
By Lauren Carroll/Winston-Salem Journal
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GREENSBORO, N.C.- On the campaign trail, there are hundreds of young staffers who have been working their entire lives to get a job in the White House.

And then there's Reggie Love.

At 26, Love, a former Duke University basketball and football star isn't exactly sure how he ended up as one of Barack Obama's most indispensable aides on the trail this year.

As Obama's "body man," he has spent almost every hour of every day with the presumptive Democratic nominee for the last 15 months.

He makes sure Obama gets up on time in the morning, gets in the shower and has breakfast. He makes sure he has his daily briefing books and list of fundraisers or super delegates to call that day. He
makes sure he gets to bed at night.

In between, he does a thousand other tasks that busy presidential candidates like Obama cannot do for themselves.

Love isn't quite sure how he ended up here. That's remarkable in an arena populated by young, careerist politicos, the former class president-types who have been angling for positions like his since high school.

Love, a Charlotte native, majored in political science at Duke University. But until he fell backwards into a job in Obama's senate office in Washington in early 2006, he didn't expect to actually work in politics.

"Before I started working for Barack, I was very cynical about politics," he said in an interview earlier this month.

He hoped to become a professional athlete. And while many people harbor such dreams unrealistically, Love almost made it - and still might, at least overseas.

He was never the best player on Duke's basketball team during his run from 2000 to 2005. Playing forward and center, though, he was a key role player during a stretch where Duke won a national championship and several Atlantic Coast Conference championships.

On Duke's sub-par football team, Love stood out. As a 6-foot four-inch, 225 pound wide receiver, he was good enough to try out for two NFL squads, the Dallas Cowboys and the Green Bay Packers, though he missed the cut for both.

In 2006, he was considering entering a training program for a Wall Street investment bank, when a friend alerted him to an opening in Obama's senate office in Washington. He got the job, and when Obama decided to run for president, Love moved on with him.

Mentally, he says, the last 15 months on the campaign trail have been like playing four straight seasons of college sports. Physically, he's feeling better than he did during the bruising NFL training camps.

In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, Obama pointed out that one of the body man's most important roles is making sure the candidate isn't overwhelmed by demands to call fundraisers, or meet local supporters or read a draft of a speech.

Love's temperament is suited for the job, he said.

"People ...want me here or want me there, or are making requests, or are wanting some phone call out of me. Having somebody who is a good people person is really important," he said of Love.
At a campaign rally in Charlotte, Love's hometown, the weekend before the North Carolina primary, Obama coaxed a reluctant Love onto the stage, calling him "one of the staffers I love the most."

"He is there, day in, day out, never complains, has always got a cheerful attitude," Obama told the crowd. "He is ...going places."

Basketball rivalries within North Carolina are fierce, and hatred of Duke is intense in many pockets. Love said he didn't meet a single person who said they would not vote for Obama because of his decision to bring a Blue Devil on staff.

"Even though the Duke-Carolina rivalry is fierce, there's some civility to it. Much more so than with the (University of) Maryland fans," he said.

The body man position has been around for years, but only gained notoriety with the television show "The West Wing" that made a lead character of the president's body man, Charlie Young.

The job is both exhausting and frequently repetitive, and includes lots of menial jobs. At a soul food restaurant in Greensboro on the eve of the North Carolina primary, Love held Obama's box of hot wings while the candidate worked the crowd.

The pressure is intense. He and other staffers are surrounded by hundreds of members of the media, so the potential of accidentally saying something to damage the campaign is real. Even seemingly trivial things get reported.

For example, earlier this month, Obama, Love and other staffers went to the back of the campaign plane to challenge members of the press to a game of Taboo, a word association game.
Players offer clues to teammates to get them to guess words. One of the clues Love came up with, "where gay people buy clothes" was reported by dozens of news outlets. Obama guessed Abercrombie & Fitch. The answer was the Gap.

Despite the drawbacks, the benefits of the job are many. The body man, in both the White House and on the campaign trail, gets to see history being made up close. And there are fun parts.
Love, Obama and other staffers play basketball on the road when time allows.

And it opens doors.

Blake Gottesman, President George W. Bush's body man for most of his tenure, left the White House in 2006 and was granted admission to Harvard's graduate business school despite his never having received an undergraduate degree.

It helped Doug Band, who did the job for President Clinton, run in circles that led to his dating supermodel Naomi Campbell, according to the Washington Post.

Before the campaign started, Love had considered moving overseas to join a professional basketball league after it ended. Now, he's worried that he might be too old. He acknowledges that if Obama wins, working in the White House would be a nice perk.

Even if he never expected to end up there.

Sean Mussenden can be reached at smussenden@mediageneral.com or 202-662-7668.
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