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From the Desks of the Candidates

0827_office2.jpg

The two photos posted here show what the presidential candidates see around them as they work at their desks on Capitol Hill. Their office surroundings, like our own homes, just might influence their work (or vice versa). What do these offices say to you? Up top is one candidate's office - see the other after the jump...

 
 

0827_office1.jpg

Okay, so one office is cluttered, comfy, and warm. The other is clean, cheery, and fresh. We read that McCain's wife helped with the decor of his office and that Obama got involved in some of the decor choices for his place. You probably have your guesses by now of who's space is who's. See more decor photos and check your guess here.

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Workspace, Obama, McCain

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Comments (27)

McCain's office is undoubtedly the pompous overstuffed one. Obama's too classy for big n' ugly.

posted by toomuchstuff on August 27th 2008 at 12:13pm
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Awesome! This only further confirms my presidential decision.

posted by kellylc on August 27th 2008 at 12:16pm
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Ah, yes I thought the same as you toomuchstuff. Very interesting and makes a lot of sense to me.

posted by mamabythesea on August 27th 2008 at 12:18pm
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I LIKE the "pompous, overstuffed" one. It looks like a place for thinking, instead of a drab hotel lobby.

posted by RQinGeorgia on August 27th 2008 at 12:22pm
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Thinking about what? Cigars? Cattle rights? It screams "smoky back room" and "halls of power" like it was Warren freakin' Harding's house.

I'll agree that the design of the Obama room is not what I'd pick, though. Although I do like that painting on the far wall, and the sunny yellow, and I salute him for having living plants in the room.

posted by toomuchstuff on August 27th 2008 at 12:27pm
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You know the adage about a desk reflecting the mind of the owner?

Seems to fit.

posted by amygdaloides on August 27th 2008 at 12:33pm
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Fine, Obamas desk is tidy, but not only is it tidy, I see no signs of work being done there. No computer, no NOTHING!

posted by tallguylehigh on August 27th 2008 at 12:46pm
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mccain's office contains a picture of him and jerry fallwell, and a gun. enough said.

posted by salley on August 27th 2008 at 12:55pm
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Perhaps this is a function of Obama only having been Senator for 4 years, while McCain for, what, 20?

Sorry, just not sure what either is supposed to say about the other one. Once Obama is in office for 20 years or so, I'm sure we'll see plenty of pictures of him with the Jerry Falwells of the left. Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, etc.

posted by Gene on August 27th 2008 at 1:06pm
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Sorry, meant to say, "just not sure what these are supposed to say about them".

posted by Gene on August 27th 2008 at 1:07pm
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I think they should both keep their day jobs and leave the design to the pros.

posted by SFGail on August 27th 2008 at 1:54pm
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Yikes!! I actually like McCain's better. I feel dirty.

posted by Claire K on August 27th 2008 at 1:57pm
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Well, according to the captions McCain didn't even design his office, his wife Cindy did. Just like she bought 9 of their 10 homes with her inheritance.

At least Obama had a say in how his office looks instead of just stuffing it full of crap.

posted by yakimushi on August 27th 2008 at 2:05pm
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Ok, I see a LOT of truly American items in McCain's room, except for the orange rock from when he was a Prisoner of War. In stark contrast, B. Hussain Obama's room has a LOT of NON-American items, except for Muhammad's boxing gloves. And a guitar, that really has nothing to do with being a devout American. I want an American for president, not someone who is calling racism at every corner, and still can't prove that he was actually born in the USA and not some other country by an unknown father.

Nuff said, and BTW, perhaps Apartment Therapy is not the place to be posting stuff to cause political conflicts.

posted by plain jane on August 27th 2008 at 2:47pm
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Born in America? Seriously? He was born in Hawaii (ooooh, how exotic).

McCain was born in Panama.

Perhaps you want to check the facts instead of throwing out vaguely racist comments like "B. Hussain Obama" and "Muhammad's boxing gloves".

posted by yakimushi on August 27th 2008 at 3:15pm
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Ooooh, I guess I'm anti White now if I support Obama, and anti Black and anti Muslim if I support McCain... Get YOUR facts straight, Obama can't prove he was born in Hawaii. As for being vaguely racist, the article listed those items, and that is his name. BTW, didn't the USA just hang someone named Hussain?

posted by plain jane on August 27th 2008 at 3:45pm
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Plain Jane - I think you were the only one that went off on a rant that some might find offensive. Then you complained about the potential for AT becoming too political. Weird right?

BTW, I wouldn't read much into either office. Both have staffs who staged these offices.

posted by Gigi818 on August 27th 2008 at 3:52pm
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Um, sorry..plain jane, but I took "vaguely racist" as a reference to your use of Barack Obama's middle name rather than his first name, and not a reference to his skin color. Nice bait and switch. The racism you display is the assumption that a person's name alone (in this case, an identifiable Middle Eastern name) is sufficient cause to dismiss them as "not American" enough. So I hope you don't have any Germans or Italians or Poles or Irish in your family tree. If you do, a hundred years ago your family might have been "not American" enough.

And really, what is a truly American item? And how does one guarantee one's "devout American-ness"? (sounds a little too fundamentalist for me!) I don't know about you, but I'd sure be pleased to be represented by a president who recognized that other nations and cultures have contributed valuable ideas and ideals to our modern consciousness.

Oh, and America didn't hang Saddam Hussain, the Iraqi-interim government hung Saddam Hussain. Unless, of course, that was your Freudian slip and you believe that the war in Iraq really is a war of American aggression and that we took over the country and the government rather than were "invited".

posted by DianneS on August 27th 2008 at 4:20pm
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Hm, somewhat unsurprisingly, McCain's office is more my style. I like the more traditional furniture but the whole room feels kind of heavy.

I love the lightness of Obama's office, but that red carpet really clashes.

If you combined the lightness of Obama's office and the traditional furniture of McCain's then you'd have the perfect place, in my opinion.

And why don't we just knock it off with the politics, yeah? People believe what they believe and there's very little changing it and this is definitely not the place.

posted by Tiamat_the_Red on August 27th 2008 at 4:27pm
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a gun, a picture of jerry farwell, picture of long murder native americans and piles of junk

vs.

a wall of inspiration of some the best leader of the world including lincoln and dr. King (how is that unamerican plain jane?).


It doesn't really matter as both rooms are staged to convey a certain Ideal. McCain is of the old west and being a good old boy and being free to hunt and rule.

Obama's is all about how hip and worldly he is.

Both room only reveal to us what the canidates want people to see.

posted by TheoJ on August 27th 2008 at 5:02pm
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no jane, the iraqi's hung someone named hussein.

posted by Julia at Living Luxely on August 27th 2008 at 5:16pm
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no jane, the iraqis hung someone named hussein.

posted by Julia at Living Luxely on August 27th 2008 at 5:53pm
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I like McCain's office much better. But like another commenter pointed out, he has been in that office 20 years, so obviously Obama's is going to look a little better. I bet 15 years ago McCain's office was pretty hip looking. Now it just looks lived in and comfortable. I really think Obama's office looks like a therapist's waiting room, and McCain's looks like a man's study.

My design choice preferences do not reflect my upcoming vote though.

posted by nuni on August 27th 2008 at 6:36pm
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They both look awfully dated to me. The first one seems not out of place with candles and lanterns, rather than electricity. Not the most forward thinking, outside-the-box type, in my view. "I'm comfortable with what the status quo of everyone who has come before me, and there's nothing wrong with that," type of nonsense.

And the second seems more 'attempt at coastal' in the early 90s. More of an afterthought to fill a room than an attempt to affect his environment. And in that setting, it does seem out of place and/or time, but the incorporation of a world view other than traditional English/Early American furniture makes it far more refresing.

posted by That70sHeidi on August 28th 2008 at 4:11am
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Plain Jane:

I found your comments to be inflammatory and inappropriate for a design blog. The racism wasn't vague. Please take it somewhere else.

posted by H.H. Hannah on August 28th 2008 at 4:31am
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i guessed right, Obama is too upbeat to be in such a dark room. plainjane: very Mcain of you bringing up pointless issues to divert attention from the issue John would be proud.
God help America...

posted by thedirtyshow on August 28th 2008 at 8:12am
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you can find Obama's birth certificate right here: http://my.barackobama.com/page/invite/birthcert.

posted by notyou on September 1st 2008 at 5:05am
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