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For His Campaign, Obama Has Assembled an Eclectic Brain Trust
This is already a hallmark of Obama's inner circle. At meetings, the Democratic presidential nominee invites disagreements. He often asks questions to shake things up, pushing and prodding, even when he thinks he knows the answers. His goal is to draw out his staffers and see if they can come up with new approaches he ought to consider.

Unlike President George W. Bush, who doesn't like second-guessing after he makes a decision, Obama encourages his advisers to constantly re-evaluate what's being done so he can adjust his thinking if circumstances change or if someone has a better idea.

As with any president, Obama's brain trust will be crucial to his success if he wins the White House in November. His closest confidants are an eclectic mix of longtime friends who are devoted to him, Chicago pals from his years in Illinois who have strong liberal backgrounds, and former officials in President Bill Clinton's administration who are eager to move up the ladder of government to higher-level jobs—all under the philosophy of what one called "principled pragmatism."

David Axelrod. A former Chicago Tribune reporter and longtime Democratic consultant, the soft-spoken and cerebral David Axelrod is Obama's chief political strategist. "Ax," who has run a host of campaigns, including two successful mayoral bids in Chicago and Deval Patrick's victory as the first African-American governor of Massachusetts, shares Obama's desire for diverse opinions. And like Obama, he is methodical and perseverant. He is not known for trying to reconstruct the candidates he works for to make them more appealing according to public opinion polls. Instead, Axelrod encourages authenticity, advising his clients to be who they are as he tries to build up their strong points.

Axelrod, 53, was a devoted admirer of Robert F. Kennedy in his adolescence and was emotionally crushed when Kennedy was assassinated in 1968. Now he sees Obama's campaign as an opportunity to rekindle the idealism that RFK once inspired, especially among young people.

From the start of this campaign, Axelrod worked closely with Obama to fashion a central theme of "change," and he believes Obama could transform politics if he wins. He saw Obama's potential early. "My involvement was a leap of faith," Axelrod once said of his decision to help Obama win his long-shot campaign for the Senate from Illinois in 2004. "I thought that if I could help Barack Obama get to Washington then I would have accomplished something great in my life."

Since then, he has become a close friend and confidant of both Obama and his wife, Michelle.

Axelrod is also heavily involved in charity work. He and his wife, Susan, have a daughter with epilepsy, and the couple have been active in efforts to raise money for epilepsy research.

If Obama wins, Axelrod could become a counselor at the White House or chairman of the Democratic National Committee.

Susan Rice. In the Clinton administration, Susan Rice served as assistant secretary of state for African affairs. But today, she has expanded her portfolio to include the rest of the world, becoming an invaluable member of Obama's team. She is an advocate of principled pragmatism in foreign affairs—a strong set of ideals such as a commitment to human rights and democracy tempered by the acknowledgement that there are limits to American power.

Rice argues, along with Obama, that the Bush administration has allowed the United States to become too isolated in the world and is too focused on military solutions to international problems. Her candidate, she says, is "uniquely attuned to 21st-century national security challenges."

Rice grew up in the nation's capital, the daughter of an elite black family—her father was once a governor of the Federal Reserve and her mother was an education scholar. A Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, she worked on foreign policy as an aide to Michael Dukakis and adviser to John Kerry during their failed presidential bids. She now counts former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright as a close friend and mentor.

Rice, 43, is first and foremost a policy adviser, but she also has become an effective public advocate of Obama's positions in the media. She could be appointed White House national security adviser.

Austan Goolsbee. University of Chicago professor Austan Goolsbee considers himself mostly a problem solver rather than an ideologue. But he has shown no reluctance to display his tough, combative side in the current campaign, emerging as one of Obama's senior economic advisers.

"This is going to be a fight over who is going to be best for the average American and who will get the economy growing again in a way that benefits everyone, and not just a wealthy, well-connected few," Goolsbee recently told the Financial Times.

Goolsbee, who, with Freakonomics author Steven Levitt, ushered in a new era of what might be called "popular economics" at the conservative University of Chicago, wrote a series of columns dealing with subjects from iPods to paperless tax returns for the New York Times and Slate.com. He has also penned numerous academic journal articles, often focusing on technology or the tax code.

The economist did get into hot water earlier in the campaign when he apparently told Canadian officials that Obama's criticisms of the North American Free Trade Agreement were being exaggerated and Obama would be more moderate on NAFTA if he became president. Goolsbee said he was misinterpreted, and he remains in Obama's good graces.

An avid snowboarder and father of three, Goolsbee, 39, is expected to be named chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers in an Obama administration.

Valerie Jarrett. Chicago businesswoman Valerie Jarrett is one of Obama's closest confidants across the spectrum of policy and politics. She is a former senior adviser to Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and was finance chairwoman of Obama's 2004 campaign for the Senate, serving as a bridge between the private sector and Obama's political organization. She now runs the Habitat Co., a real estate development and management firm, and is the former chairwoman of the Chicago Transit Authority Board and the Chicago Stock Exchange.

Jarrett, 51, got started in politics and government when she worked for Harold Washington, Chicago's first black mayor. Later, in the 1990s, as an aide to Mayor Daley, she hired a young Michelle Obama to work for the city. She remains a close friend of both Michelle and Barack, and is proud of her role as someone who will give them both her unvarnished views.

In a recent interview with National Public Radio, Jarrett said, "Friends are there to tell you something that's not very popular. And I think, you know, as we see often in life, as people reach higher and higher planes, oftentimes people are a little, you know, shy." She added, "So to have a friend who can say to you, you know, quite candidly what he or she thinks is probably a good thing."

Jarrett could end up as a White House counselor or as chief of staff.

With Alex Kingsbury

Taken from here