Friday, August 29, 2008

Melting ice


Speaking of weather: Many of you will recall the segment of Vice President Gore's "Inconvenient Truth" (which also dealt with Hurricane Katrina) that focused on the melting of the polar ice cap and how global climate change could accelerate that - and in turn be accelerated by it. New evidence emerged this week that the melting of the ice cap in the Arctic Ocean is quickening and that - within a year or two - there could be no ice cap over the North Pole and environs during the summer months. Government flights over the Arctic Sea this past week noted nine polar bears swimming, looking for ice to rest on, and there was no ice anywhere. Some of these polar bears were swimming north - when the remaining ice cap was 400 miles away - when land (apparently Canada?) was only 50 miles away (but the bears expected the ice to be close, as it usually was). The Gore segment illustrated with animation the predicament of the polar bears. But this aspect of global climate change threatens not only individual bears and perhaps a whole species but also a catastrophic chain of events - perhaps like those displayed in the "Day After Tomorrow" movie.

-- Perry

Northward bound


One of my colleagues whose husband works for the Red Cross says that four Mid-South cities (Knoxville, Nashville, Memphis, and our own Louisville) are preparing to receive at least 5,000 families each (in our case – at the fairgrounds and nearby airport – from the New Orleans. Latest projections suggest that Hurricance Gustav – currently leaving Jamaica for Cuba – will hit New Orleans in two and a half days (see graphic) – just three years and a couple of days after Katrina hit. Officials began issuing evacuation orders today, interrupting some Katrina anniversary/memorial events. It’s still possible that Gustav could hit Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, or even the Florida coast instead.
P.S. Pray for the people of the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Cayman Islands, and Cuba whom Gustav is ravaging.

-- Perry

Central narratives


Both major presidential candidates tried to shore up weaknesses in their candidacies with their VP picks. But their candidacies are troubled enough that those picks undercut the central narratives of their campaigns. Senator Obama taunted Senator McCain last night for having been in Washington – and part of the problem – for 22 years – and Obama’s choice of a running mate who has himself been in Washington for 29 years (except for the technicality of having lived in Wilmington – which may mean something to some voters). I’ve written before how it’s hard to run as a change candidate with a running mate like Biden. Still, Obama and his aides figured he had to counter the Republican (and, originally, the Clintons’) attack on Obama as too inexperienced and (implicitly too young). The fact that an obvious attack on Obama forced him to undercut his primary campaign narrative (change) suggests how weak a candidate Obama was in the first place.

Senator McCain’s pick of Governor Palin is in a similar vein (if in the opposite direction). I think Palin’s a fun choice. What makes her a good candidate, a co-worker asks? She was a state championship high school girls’ basketball team in Alaska. I believe she also won a beauty pageant. She loves kids (including her disabled kid – her fifth!), hunting, and guns, and she hates abortion. Like McCain, she has a reputation as a maverick – to become governor, she took on an incumbent Republican governor and she has – like McCain in Congress – pushed tough ethics reforms (even while she’s gotten embroiled in her own little ethics controversy involving payback against an ex-brother in law). (Her husband works for the oil industry and – unlike McCain – she has pushed Alaska oil drilling – the husband for the oil industry may excite the Democrats briefly). (With her positions on abortion (against it), gun control (against it), and oil drilling (for it), Palin is sure to satisfy the Republican Right very leery about McCain’s flirtations with picking Governor Ridge or Senator Lieberman (and even Governor Romney – with his Mormon religion and liberal past).

More importantly: Democrats have attacked McCain as out-of-touch and (implicitly) old (in his policy/politics if not also in his literal age). At 44, Palin is three years younger than Obama, one year younger than me, and one year older than Michelle Obama. With five kids, she can hardly be portrayed as out of touch with the concerns of young, working families. By choosing a woman, McCain also pitches for disgruntled Hillary Clinton supporters. Shoring up his own weaknesses with a young Republican woman whose credentials match his own maverick credentials.

The problem here is that a central narrative in the Republican attack on Obama (besides that he is not really American/patriotic/Christian – that he’s the “Other”) is that he’s too inexperienced and (implicitly) too young. Now, it’s true that Obama is the presidential candidate and Palin is the vice presidential candidate. And she does have executive experience (like then Governor Clinton did in 1992 – but he had 10 year of it), which Obama does not. But she has even less foreign policy experience (none) and like Obama has not been in the military. Even if Palin has a very interesting personal story (and I bet she does), it’s hard to imagine McCain making the too little experience argument with a straight face when the person he’s put a heartbeat of the presidency has been the president of a small (population wise) state for just two years and before that was the mayor of Wasilla, Alaska.

Like the choice. She sounds fun. But McCain and Obama have both shown how weak their respective candidacies were by – in picking running mates to shore up their weaknesses – undercutting the central narratives of their campaigns. Now, on to the bus tours and then the Twin Cities.

P.S. I got to watch Senator McCain’s Dayton, OH announcement of Governor Palin as his running mate. Listening to McCain and Palin, it was clear that the pick of Palin will shift McCain back to his maverick pitch, so that they will be competing with Obama and Biden as the change candidates. I’m not sure what will happen to the not enough experience line. They’ll try on a Republican spin on change: ethics reform, anti-government waste, energy independence through domestic production, and bipartisan cooperation. (Obama also makes the ethics reform and bipartisan cooperation pitches).

Other tidbits we learned about Palin: She loves fishing. She and her husband have both been union members. Her route into politics was through the school PTA. She’s an Army mom. (In fact, her oldest child is to be deployed to Iraq BEFORE Beau Biden is.) Her youngest child is just five months old! As governor, she’s also been (for two years) the commander of the Alaska National Guard.

As always, McCain beamed but looked a little awkward up there. Palin seems like a good speaker. We’ll see if her high-pitched voice grates on some unused to seeing women in leadership. She pitched the gender angle, noting not only the anniversary of women’s suffrage but also the candidacies of Democrats Geraldine Ferraro and Hillary Clinton (and then went on to vow to continue Clinton’s campaign against the “glass ceiling” herself).

The crowd – in a battleground state - which was to have been McCain’s largest (at 15,000?) - seemed very enthusiastic (no sign of disappointment that Ohioan Rob Portman – a dark horse VP possibility – was not chosen).

It was interesting to watch the theatrics of McCain, a man, and Palin, a woman, partnering – and the choreography also of Cindy McCain and Palin’s husband. Also interesting was the choice of music before and after the two speeches: Van Halen’s (or Van Hagar’s) “Right Now.”

Also interesting-ly – today was McCain’s 72nd birthday and the Palins’ 20th wedding anniversary (they were high school sweethearts).

P.P.S. I wonder if Senator Biden will eat up Governor Palin in debates. Just as the other Democratic candidates had to be careful attacking Senator Clinton, the only woman, in debates, so Biden will have to be careful in attacking Palin, the second woman VP nominee. And the Democrats will have a harder time arguing that both of the VP candidates are out of touch.

P.P.S. On the other hand, I can now imagine Governor Palin tearing into Senator Biden as a creature of the Washington establishment (Wilmington residence not withstanding) and even part of the culture of corruption. Palin, in this view, emerges as kind of a counter-Congressman Foley – whose indictment was as much as anything responsible for the Democratic takeover of Congress in 2006.

I can also now imagine the McCain campaign engaging in two enormous head fakes. They were never seriously considering Governor Ridge or Senator Lieberman as vice presidential running mates. But by vocally shopping such moderate pro-abortion rights Washington insiders, they got the Right wing of the party so gleeful now – not that they know who some of the supposed alternatives were. By head faking towards Ridge and Lieberman, McCain made the Right REALLY happy with him, instead of just happy with him.

Then there’s the vaunted Obama campaign. By head faking towards an EXPERIENCE campaign, the McCain folks tricked the Obama folks into going for someone with whom it makes it much tougher to make his central CHANGE argument. Now, McCain (wioth Palin) has switched gears and adopted the CHANGE mantle himself – which is what he wanted to run on all along. Palin emerged as the fiscally conservative, socially conservative reformer, the housecleaning happy homemaker, that now allows McCain to run (implicitly) against the Bush Administration (despite McCain’s recent alliance with them) and against Congress (even though he’s been in it for 22 years). Having adopted then discarded EXPERIENCE, McCain-Palin can now run on CHANGE. Having lost the CHANGE paradigm when he picked Biden, and unable anyway to run on EXPERIENCE since the top of the ticket has little (though much more than Palin does, despite her executive experience), Obama-McCain is deprived of any plausible reason for their candidacy.

On a more positive note (for Obama), one of last night’s speakers (I think it was Obama’s IL colleague in the U.S. Senate, Dick Durbin), came up with a great analogy for the “inexperienced” Obama, other than Bill Clinton. He recalled that a man from IL with experience only in the IL Legislature and just two years in Congress, when he campaigned against a war that was popular when it started but folks have later turned against was also called inexperienced when he ran for president. The year was 1860, and the man was Abraham Lincoln from the new Republican Party. Despite being “inexperienced,” Lincoln won the 1860 presidential election and went on to become one of our great presidents. Nice touch, Senator Durbin.

P.P.P.P.S. Part of Palin’s pitch is her – like Pawlenty’s – working-class roots – which Biden supposedly has too, but they’re not as apparent to me. I think Palin will play much better in the South (as well as in the West) than Biden (who was picked more for the Northeast and Midwest).

Two other tidbits – Todd, Palin’s husband, is part Eskimo; and – as she alluded to – he’s a champion snowmobiler.

As with the Democratic Party nomination race, Palin’s selection makes this another historic race: pitting the first African American candidate against the oldest first-time candidate and the second woman vice presidential candidate. No matter who wins, we’ll get the first African American president or the first woman vice president. Obama seemed to recognize this when he undercut his own spokesperson in praising the choice – in part to recognize his need for support from former Hillary Clinton voters.

P.P.P.P.P.S. Some other interesting tidbits from Stephanie and Mom. During her most recent pregnancy, Palin went through amniocentesis and found out that her fifth child would/did have Down syndrome. But she went ahead and gave birth to the child (and Stephanie says she hid her pregnancy from her friends and colleagues for a long time, lest they pressure her to consider abortion). Mom also says that Senator Clinton called to congratulate Palin and was warmer with her than she was with Obama. I read that an Obama spokesperson criticized the selection of Palin because of her experience. But several hours later on a plane Obama praised Palin and welcomed her to the debate, essentially chastising his spokesperson in the process.



-- Perry

It's Governor Palin!



Final night


Once again, we missed some of the Democratic National Convention Thursday night. I turned on the radio and TV just in time to hear the tail end of a speech by New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, originally scheduled for foreign policy night (Wednesday), who I thought might have made a good vice presidential running mate.


The whole event seemd to be a pretty good experience for the 80,000 or so people there - and more people ended up watching it than any other political convention event - plus more than watched the Olympics opening ceremonies and the "American Idol" finals - something like 40 million people. On the whole, however, I don't think it flowed as well as the indoor events (but the fact that it attracted so many viewers was a big accomplishment itself). Of course, we missed some of the musical numbers - Jennifer Hudson singing the National Anthem (joined by Olympian Shawn Johnson leading the Pledge of Allegiance - nicely linking our recent political blog entries with recent Olympics and "Idol" entries), Sheryl Crow singing "A Change Would Do You Good," and Will.I.Am and John Legend singing (with Senator Obama recorded speaking) their hit "Yes We Can." (I've watched all of these on YouTube plus Melisssa's Etheridge's Wednesday night "God Bless America"/ "The Times (They Are a'Changin')/Born in the U.S.A." medley.) (We did see Stevie Wonder singing to the Obamas "Signed, Sealed, Delivered (I'm Yours).")
Keeping in mind that this event was partly for viewers who are independents, "Reagan Democrats," and Anglo working-class/lower-middle class who might like Senator McCain's "maverick" image or might have supported Senator Clinton, I actually thought the high points that I did see were two. One of them was Michael MacDonald (formerly of the Doobie Brothers)'s stunning version of "America the Beautiful," which some people argue should be the National Anthem. To see this performance, click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bSTBCF-3Lb8

Hearing Vice President Gore was good for 2000 nostalgics like us and for "An Inconvenient Truth" fans like us.


But I thought the other really effective part of the evening - again, given the overall objective - was the incorporation of short speeches by half a dozen ordinary Americans. Most of these were good speakers, and they each told how they learned about Senator Obama and what personal reasons they had for supporting his candidacy. Most people watched the event on Cable News Network, but - for those who came in with the four major networks - the segment with these people's short speeches started just after 10 p.m. Eastern time, when the major networks left their regular programming and started broadcasting the convention. Not surprisingly, most of these speakers were Anglo and all were from battleground states (which no doubt generated them and the Obama campaign some useful local press in their home areas). Monica Early of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio (below), was one of these speakers.


Pamela Cash-Roper, of Pittsboro, North Carolina (below) (a Republican turned Obama-crat), was another one of these speakers.

Teresa Asenap, of Albuquerque, New Mexico, was the only apparent non-Anglo among these to speak.



The last and most memorable of these speakers was Barney Smith, of Marion, Indiana. Another Republican turned Obama-crat, who lost his manufacturing job and health care coverage to overseas competition, Smith was probably the only mediocre speaker. But he had the best line of that. Word-playing on the similarity of his name and a Wall Street firm, the speaker was "We need to a president who pays more attention to what Barney Smith needs than what Smith Barney needs."


Obama's speech needed to do three things: be a good speech and have good delivery without some of the soaring (and empty?) rhetoric that the Republicans have made fun of him for in their anti-"celebrity" campaign; take on Senator McCain directly without sounding too too bitter; and make a bread and butter economic policy pitch again for why - especially Reagan Democrats, Clinton-crats, and independents should support him. A fouth thing: connect his beliefs and platforms with his personal story, which others had told during the previous three nights. The speech - a tad long for him - but done in plenty of time before 11 p.m. - toned down the rhetoric, made the connection to his (largely Anglo - in the way it was told) personal story. I wondered if the folks there and TV viewers nevertheless missed the soaring rhetoric. But - for people who watched several hours - either there or on CNN or CSPAN - the "Yes We Can" performance hinted strongly at Obama's talents there.
To see the original "Yes We Can," click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjXyqcx-mYY
To see the live version from Denverk, click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CP3MrUjwTUQ





I thought the Obama and Biden families - and the two running mates - spent too little time on stage after the speeches (Biden introduced Obama) - but they may have been trying to avoid shots for the Republicans to use in their anti-celebrity campaign.



The final (convention) night story was the lead story on the 11 p.m. news and in the morning, but quickly got taken over by the Palin announcement, and - now - the hurricane. Despite the huge crowd at Mile High Stadium and especially on TV, the Democrats appeared to get no big bounce out of this. If anything, they got 1 more percentage of voters from this, and McCain got one more percentage from the Palin announcement.
But the Democratic convention delivered, there was no super obvious Clinton-crat imbroglio, and Obama did what he needed in his speech (and the ordinary people and Michael MacDonald confirmed this). The daring Palin selection no doubt has its many upsides - and I think Palin will play better in the South (though none of us have heard of "hockey Moms" - we still get it - and a few people may wonder about two parents working full-time with four or five kids at home - including one disabled) than Biden will - but it still undercuts one of McCain's main arguments. Hurricane Gustav may give the Bush Administration and the Republicans a kind of "do over," but ultimately it is robbing the Republicans of a bunch of free media (with all of those mean if effective speeches four years ago) and more of a coming out for Governor Palin. Plus it just reminds people of the incompetence of the Republicans with Katrina (if not also in Iraq). So, I think, ultimately, the good work that the Democrats did back in Denver will pay dividends, as individual voters go to the polls in November and decide at the last moment whose lever to pull.
Nevertheless, given that we know that Anglo voters tend to overreport how much they support non-Anglo candidates and the skill of the Republican attack machine (and vote shifting effort), it seems that Obama would need a decent-sized lead (like then Governor Clinton had in 1992) coming out of the convention. That - despite all of the good speeches and choreography - he/they did not get.
P.S. We did get to watch Obama and Biden on "60 Minutes" last night, and they looked very comfortable together. We quit watching CNN and the Weather Channel religiously about noon, but apparently the storm is started to die down, which means the Republican convention may go on. Obama has been calling for his supporters to help as they can - but not soon enough for the Republicans, for giving politics as usual speeches through Sunday night. Good for Governor Palim, for supporting her 17-year-old daughter, who is five months pregnant and will apparently marry the father. Still, folks who wonder about two full-time-working parents (one a governor and now a vice presidential candidate) trying to raise five kids including a disabled kid still have to scratch their heads- maybe these teenagers could use some more supervision.
P.P.S. A final night oddity: The only country song I heard during the event was - it turns - the all-important music after Senator Obama's speech - it turns out to be Brooks and Dunn's "Only in America." This seemed like a bit of a too un-subtle pitch for those Reagan Democrat votes - plus it turns that the country duo played this live at the 2004 Republican National Convention.
-- Perry

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Difficult week


After a big weekend during which I helped bring off a couple of big events, I faced a stressful serious of events/decisions this week. Nearly a year after I first recommended that the Toastmasters club that I've worked hard to keep going fold, the other officers and I met to discuss our future. After four of us had visited a neighboring Toastmasters club and talked with Toastmasters leaders about folding our club into that club, one officer who had not made the visit pushed us to keep going. Plus our one officer from outside the building came in with new ideas. I came into the meeting nervous and with mixed feelings, wistful about our Toastmasters colleagues and good programs but also tired of sometimes carrying the ball for the club. Part of me is very excited that we have a new lease on life, but it remains to be seen whether the payoff for the club will be worth the time we and I put into it. (Pictured above is our outgoing club president at the last meeting of our entire club, last week.)

The next night I faced a similarly nerve-wracking meeting. I helped lead our church's Guatemala mission trip a year ago. I had blown hot and cold about following up on this meeting and had done a poor job of helping generate enthusiasm about this follow-up. Recent our pastor has led the charge on two efforts I've been involved in: thinking about possible church building renovation and thinking up extending/following up on Guatemala mission. The pastor and I talked about this, and she looked to me to help lead the charge at metings of the Outreach Council and the congregation session (board) considering endorsing the formation of a Guatemala mission task force that would pursue partnership possibilities with the evangelical Presbyterian congregations north of Guatemala's Lake Izabal with whom we visited last summer. In both meetings I was very quiet and did only so little, when we barely squeeked out endorsements from the two groups (I'm part of both). After I left the last Guatemala working group (task force to be?) meeting earlier this month, the group talked about Stephanie and a man who helped organize orientation before the mission trip, but did not actually go with it. I have occasionally frankly been jealous of this man - a Southern Baptist preacher at one point, quite young - and we have jockeyed for influence over the mission effort. He'd missed our last meeting and last night he irritated me while ostensibly supporting the proposal continuing to push for partnership with congregations in the Dominican Republic (where he has more connections), instead of in Guatemala, and with a single congregation, instead of the group of congregations we'd established ties with already. I know that we need the support of this man, who the pastor really respects and who is fluent in Spanish (which not all of us are). We can't really pursue this unless we're prepared to send 2-3 people - including some fluent Spanish speakers - and yet I felt like this man kind of betrayed us by arguing against two core elements of the working group's vision for the mission effort. (Pictured below is the join part of the church Council meetings two weeks ago, prior to the Outreach Council only meeting in the same room.)

This afternoon I faced a similar level of stress. More often than not, my work products encounter a sea of red ink in that my managers suggest a large number of revisions to the surveys, reports, proposals, and focus group scripts that I develop. Sugges is not really the right word - Historically, the top two managers are not interested in hearing any arguments about this. I've learned lots this way - and we've avoided long (democratic?) debates. But I've look forward to improving my work and gaining more respect for my work products. This afternoon I encountered two newer work products with suggestions that I really don't agree with and that - as is regularly the case - put me in the middle between my clients and my managers (as they occasionally now do between my managers). I'm not exactly sure how I'm going to confront this tomorrow morning. These are both projects that we need to make progress with quickly, and so by tomorrow morning I'll need to figure out how to raise these issues with my managers, which makes me nervous. Our office is in some ways less hierarchical before some of those in management turned over. And yet I continue to have only a modest amount of control over my projects and continue to be caught sometimes between more powerful forces in the office.
Pray for wisdom, patience, and leadership development for me.
-- Perry

Brown, green, blue (and red) weekend


I had a busy weekend last weekend (the weekend before Labor Day weekend) mainly working on events I was tangentially involved in. You might recall that last spring I helped a little organize a (trial) Walkathon for the Parent-Student-Teacher Association at Vincent's school, the Brown School. This time we did it much earlier in the year. We hoped for 200 people (or students?) and for $5,000 raised, to replace the old catalog orders. We also hoped for anice start-of-the-year event to welcome Brown students and their families (and to do a better job than the catalog sales done of drawing in middle school and high school students). Pictured above is a fun activity that helped start the spring walkathon too - chalking the sidewalks to let people know where to walk (preferably three times - approximately three miles).

Pictured below is Vincent's friend Cody, who is the Student Council president. He and his Mother helped organized a Student Council fund-raiser, with students getting to throw pies at their favorite (or not so favorite) teachers. Elementary school students and teachers pretty much participated in this.





Stephanie and Vincent stopped by for about 45 minutes. Stephanie brought some fruit. Vincent brought pledges/contributions and walked the two miles. They both chit-chatted - including with the family of one of Vincent's Danish exchange program colleagues, Nathan (including his mother, pictured below).

I left Old Louisville's Central Park, scene of the Walkathon, before the clean-up was entirely through, at 1 p.m., in time to drive to southern Jefferson County's Beulah Presbyterian Church, scene of the Mid-Kentucky Presbytery's annual training event. I caught the tail end of lunch/tabling and then most of a worskhop on introducing environmental issues - particularly to youth groups - led by a seminary student tied with our church, Rebecca. I explained I was partly looking for ideas for a children's workshop Stephanie and I were leading as part of an environmental issues fair at our church the next morning. Rebecca led a great workshop, complete with ideas/activities on how to focus folks on environmental Awareness, Information, ...




I hopped in my hot car at 2:30 p.m. to drive back past Old Louisville and over the Ohio River to Jeffersonville, IN, where I hoped to attend the later part of an opening of a Jeffersonville IN Obama for president headquarters. I got there in time to see the second half of an Obama cake.


More importantly, I got there in time to see - through a projector - the new Obama-Biden ticket's Springfield, IL event. Senator Obama presented a pretty compelling family story - including the line that Senator Biden never moved to Washington - about a running mate I had mixed feelings about. Senator Biden did an OK job reading a speech - I'm sure he'll get better - but the event on the whole was good. There a mix of blacks and whites at the local event - with some paid staff - one married to a Filipino (?) American I met - and possible tugs - volunteering for Congressman Hill's campaign, the Obama campaign, (or back in Louisville the Congressman Yarmouth campaign)?



I talked with Nancy (pictured below), a Clark County Democratic official and (Louisville suburban) Oldham County school administrator who befriended me several events ago. She said that several local officials - including some who had been lukewarm about Obama (Congressman Hill wasn't there - but you'll recall that he had endorsed Obama before the IN primary - even though Senator Clinton won the district easily) - including Sheriff Danny Rodden - a striking figure who - when volunteering for Hill - I had ended up making calls for - and whose surprise victory was the centerpiece of a memorable Clark County (IN) Democrats event Stephanie and I went to - in a Jeffersonville bingo parlor - on Election Night 2006.



The next morning I was bright up and early at church at 8 a.m. to start setting up the Environmental Justice breakfast/event. When we pulled just - at the start - 2 kids out (the number grew), I read the story from the lectionary of Pharoah's family discovering baby Moses in the reeds - and Stephanie and I used this story to talk about favorite - and potentially life-changing - natural areas that God wants us to protect. Stephanie showed pictures - from the blog! - or Wakulla Springs and her visit there. And then the kids and we engaged in a craft activity Stephanie and I had found on the Internet - using construction paper to make the spring and grass and Moses and his sister, Miriam. By this time, Rebecca (from the Saturday workshop!) had shown up, with the two foster kids who that had been with her family for a couple of weeks. These two kids were dead set on posing for the camera, and so I took one picture with one of them and one without them.



Later some of the other folks who had organized the event appeared as part of an innovative "sermon" with our pastor, who asked them - set up in a panel - a series of questions (which they'd seen before) - which weaved together in a nice message.



Having picked up the green (to environmental events), brown (Sc hool), and blue (Democratic Party), we picked up the red late Sunday when we went to see - with his red suit - "Iron Man" (which only Stephanie had not seen).
-- Perry

How 'bout that Biden family?



-- Perry

Foreign policy night


I missed much of the Democratic National Convention goings on because I was giving Vincent a ride and at a church meeting. Late night CSPAN viewing helped me catch up to watch most of the roll-call vote (including Senator Clinton’s dramatic call - on the convention floor as part of the New York delegation) for the convention to make Senator Obama’s nomination unanimous – “by acclamation” – timed to be during the 6:30 p.m. network newscasts). When I watched the roll-call vote, I was interested not only to see who represented their states (Governor Beshear helped represent KY) and what they said about their states but also to see what the margin was. Some Clinton delegates obviously chose to vote for Obama, as she had asked them to do. For example, a majority of delegates from KY – where Clinton won big – voted for Obama.





I had trouble accessing the videotape of President Clinton’s very well received 9 a.m. speech last night on YouTube (I got home at 9:30 p.m. – after he finished – and only caught the last 2/3 of the speech later in the evening on CSPAN). President Clinton and Michelle Obama have clearly been the two best speakers so far, from what I’ve seen. Clinton talked some about economic policy, but the night was supposed to be about foreign policy, and (except for preventing 9/11 and stopping the killing in Rwanda and perhaps Haiti), Clinton has a pretty solid foreign policy record, which he could tout. He also could explain that many of the things Republicans are saying about Obama they also said about him: young, experienced (next to the older and much more experienced President Bush (“Poppy”)).






Also giving a tough speech was Senator John Kerry, the man whose 2004 convention didn’t give him enough of a bounce for him and running mate John Edwards to win Ohio and the presidency, but who helped introduce then state Senator Barack Obama to the world by making him the 2004 convention keynote speaker. Kerry blasted Bush and his friend John McCain (who he supposedly asked to be his running mate in 2004) in a way that – the talking heads said – was much more direct than most of his 2004 speeches – and, had he made speeches like this, he might have won Ohio.


The next half an hour or so was devoted to the war and foreign policy issues. On the schedule was another one of my favorites for Obama’s running mate, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, who endorsed Obama soon after dropping out of the race for the presidency. But he apparently did not appear. Instead, a Steve Spielberg-produced and Tom Hanks-narrated – a la “Saving Private Ryan” and “Band of Brothers” – documentary on Iraq veterans that took the middle ground between “Ryan” and some of the hard-hitting anti-Iraq war documentaries I’ve blogged about earlier. Then a series of retired military people and Iraq war vets – including double amputee Tammy Duckworth who Republicans had the audacity to attack as soft on national security issues when she ran for Congress.

What came next was one of the high points of the evening. A beaming young man approached the podium who turned out to be one of Senator Biden’s two sons: Joseph Jr. (“Beau”). With even more emotion than Senator Obama told the story on Saturday afternoon in Springfield, Beau Biden told the story of his father and their family, going back to the senior Biden’s speech disability growing up working-class in Scranton, PA, to the now oft-told story of Beau’s mother and sister dying in a car accident soon after Biden senior, at age 29, won election to the U.S. Senate (and Biden nearly turning down the seat and compromising and being sworn at his injured sons’ bedside and coming home every night to Wilmington instead of Washington).

(Biden Jr. didn’t go into the interesting story of Biden Sr.’s courtship of his second wife Jill, a schoolteacher who friends set up with the then first-term senator, friends who didn’t realize that Jill had already caught Biden’s eye (not knowing who she was) when she appeared in a local television ad. Jill Biden has a doctorate in education – “which is a problem,” Joe Biden said Saturday – apparently joking) and now teaches community college (and was apparently critical in persuading him to run again for president in 2008).)

Biden Jr. didn’t really say much about his own story, but alluded in passing that he wouldn’t be around for all of the fall election campaign. In fact, Biden, a young Delaware attorney general, and a lawyer and officer in the Army National Guard, is slated to be deployed with his unit to Iraq, starting the day after the vice presidential debate between his father and Governor Pawlenty or Romney or Senator Ridge.

Beau Biden’s heartfelt delivery – which seemed to draw tears from many – and his youthful look quickly made him a star of the night.




Biden, Sr’s speech was solid. He delivered a strong pitch for Senator Obama and indictment of his friend Senator McCain. He has a strong voice but his delivery is sort of bumpy. Instead of plowing through applause lines, he sometimes mis-times then, and his speech seemed to end suddenly. It’s possible that – like Senator Clinton – he was conscious of the time. I couldn’t figure out why they were ending with 10 minutes to go in prime time. But they had to make time for a brief “surprise” appearance by Senator Biden before 11 p.m. Eastern time – a la the Clintons in 1992, when they waded through the crowd and appeared on stage with Al Gore – in what was more surprising – and a break with tradition – at that point. (Obama came from back stage – after Jill Biden told Biden they had a surprise for him.)







Biden was much better last night than he was on Saturday – when he was reading a typed speech. But I suspect he will get much better as he begins to deliver versions of this speech over and over again. Afterwards, the talking heads debated the speech. Was it a bad speech or was it a solid speech – with talking points for Democratic Party officials throughout the country – which nicely ended a great night on the whole for the Democrats? Mediocre speech; great night.

One anxiety hanging over the Obama-Biden campaign now is how the Republicans – in their anti-Obama the “celebrity” might spin his stadium appearance before 75,000 – which they apparently might NOT have scheduled had they known how the GOP was going to blast his appearance before a similar sized crowd in Berlin. Colorado is a battleground state and getting that many people in a stadium in Colorado can’t be all bad. But Obama essentially has to give a less inspiring than usual speech in order to buck the Republicans’ “cult of personality” attack.

-- Perry