All posts by David Dayen

This Incredible Moment

I don’t want to rush past this moment too quickly.  Today Barack Obama became the first African American nominee of a major party in history.  That is a tremendous accomplishment that I honestly wasn’t sure I’d see in my lifetime.  I talked to some California electeds about the meaning of this moment.

Steve Westly jumped aboard with Obama early.  He told me that he decided to support him in 2006 when he saw Obama appear at a rally in 2006 for Phil Angelides.  All that year prospective Presidential candidates were coming through the state to campaign.  John Kerry got maybe 100 people to events.  Hillary Clinton got 300 or 400.  Barack Obama had practically the entire USC campus out on the Quad that day.  And Westly saw that this was something special, the kind of moment that you saw with the Kennedys.

My seatmate Debra tells me that this whole election cycle has almost been beyond belief.  These are things that she never thoght she would see.  “I was a girl who wasn’t allowed to take a drafting class in high school.  The world has changed.”

Kamala Harris has her own story.  She was the first African-American district attorney in the history of San Francisco.  In a speech for the new majority PAC Vote Hope, she spoke on this, and the fact that Obama’s nomination represents a hope for every person of color in America.

Let’s stop and reflect on this for a second.  An African American nominee.  Of our party.  The party of inclusion.  The party of all Americans.

Kerry Speech Liveblogging

He’s supposed to rip into McCain, so let’s see how it pans out.  Debra told me that, when he ran into Kerry along with Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner, he said to her, “where were you in 2004?”

The Bush/McCain Freudian slip was kind of funny, in a “Kerry can’t give a great speech” kind of way.

This is definitely a red meat speech.  He said that Bush misled us into war, that Obama and Biden would shut down Gitmo, respect the Constitution, and never, ever torture.  He started slow but he’s got some passion tonight.

“Every day now I learn something new about candidate McCain.  To those who still believe in the myth of a maverick… look at candidate McCain and Senator McCain.”

This is good.  “Talk about being for it before you’re against it.”

“Before debating Obama, he should debate himself.”

Explicitly calls out the Rove-McCain tactics… mentioned how McCain said “next stop, Baghdad” after 9/11.

“Who can we trust to keep America safe?  Barack Obama!”

Now he’s headed into how the Bush foreign policy is now finally coming around to Obama’s position time and again…. this is a magnificent speech.  “McCain-Bush Republicans have been wrong again and again… they can’t win on the issues so they go into the gutter.”

Great stuff.  I don’t know if TV is even showing this, but Kerry just introduced Obama’s gerat-uncle, Charlie Payne, the WWII vet who helped liberate Europe.  The room is really liking this speech.

“You don’t decide who loves this country, you don’t decide who’s a patriot… that flag doesn’t belong to any ideology or party, it belongs to all of us.”

Well, that was a SPEECH.  

Clinton Speech Liveblogging

I expect him to hit McCain hard.  They’ve given out flags to the whole audience.  Debra has eighteen of them.

…he comes out to “Don’t Stop.”  It must be interesting to be personally associated with a pop song.

…Wow, that was a LONG standing ovation.  And after he announces his support for Obama, even longer.  “I love Joe Biden, and America will too.”

…”Last night, Hillary said she’d do everything she can to elect Sen. Obama.  That makes two of us.  Actually, that makes 18 million of us.  Like Hillary said, I want all of you who supported her to vote for Barack Obama in November.

…Clinton is making the argument.  Why America is in a perilous moment in history, and why we can’t afford more of the same.  He explicitly says that Barack Obama is the man for this job.  But what about his facial expressions?

…This has gone into a direct testimony, and the Obama campaign must be beaming.  He is making the national security argument, the economic argument, and the argument that Obama has been tested by the primary wars and is ready to lead America.  “He is ready to honor the oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.”

…I like that he specifically cited Obama’s desire to fight AIDS/HIV at home.

…FANTASTIC LINE: The world is always more impressed by the power of our example than the example of our power.

…it would be better if he tied this stuff to Bush and McCain and not Republicans for political purposes.  Now he’s getting into it, of course after saying that McCain is wrong on the two key issues of the day.  It is GOOD for the country for him to paint this as a REPUBLICAN failure, though.  Because Republican orthodoxy, the wrecking crew, is the key problem.  “Despite all this evidence, their nominee is promising more of the same.”

…Good framing: they want us to reward them for the last eight years by giving them four more.  In this case, the third time is not the charm… they said I was too young and inexperienced.  It didn’t work in 1992 because we were on the right side of history.  And it won’t work in 2008 because Barack Obama is on the right side of history.

…Debra Bowen’s reaction: “He’s still awesome.”

…The final point: “I still believe in a place called hope.”  Showing that, as we know, all political themes are timeless and repeated over and over.

My Seatmate For The Night

Secretary of State Debra Bowen.   She just gave me a Fig Newton!

Antonio Villaraigosa’s son is to my right.

Everyone was looking up at one point, but it was unclear at what.  I asked Debra what the commotion was, and she said “I don’t think anyone knows what they’re looking at.”  It’s a herd mentality to the extreme. (Turns out they were looking at the Clinton box.  Maybe the press was studying the facial expressions of those assembled for signs of disunity).

…if anyone has questions for Debra, she’ll answer them in this thread.  Liveblogging!

UPDATE from the floor

Just saw Melissa Etheridge give a great performance to a standing ovation.  Then Harry Reid came on to talk about energy.

That’s the political equivalent of a hairpin curve.

Earlier, some of California’s finest women addressed the convention, as every Democratic woman in the US House hit the stage.  Hilda Solis, Maxine Waters and Lois Capps gave remarks.  Waters had a good line saying that McCain doesn’t understand the housing crisis because none of his seven homes are in foreclosure.

I had some good chats with some electeds.  I asked state Board of Equalization member Judy Chu about how the budget is affecting her office, and she replied that they’re just trying to collect revenue wherever possible to paper over the crisis, but sales tax revenue is down because of the struggling economy.  Kamala Harris and I chatted about blogging and how the traditional media is covering this election.  She said that every single interview she’s had has a question about disunity in it.  What a false meme.

Netroots hero Patrick Murphy from my parent’s district is up now, and he’s doing great.

…Boy, Evan Bayh ate his Wheaties today.

Controller Chiang on the budget

I just chatted a bit with John Chiang about the ongoing budget stalemate.  He was unaware that Gov. Schwarzenegger remarked yesterday to the SacBee that he would be fine with a budget in November or December.  Chiang’s reaction was that it would cost the state hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to wait that long.  Basically, there are two types of borrowing systems – one that assumes an imminent budget, with a discount rate, and one that does not, which has the normal rate.  If we keep delaying the budget, we will be funneling hundreds of millions of dollars to the financial services industry, and in the words of Chiang, “put Wall Street above Main Street.”

This is another aspect of the Yacht Party’s holding hostage of the budget process – enriching a key constituency.

On the coming lawsuit over the slashing of state employee pay to the minimum wage, the hearing is scheduled for September 12.  Chiang has asked for the case to be moved to federal court, which would delay it a couple months, but the main reason is because California would have no immunity if the state upholds the wage cut, and the federal courts overturn it.

About speaking at the convention yesterday, Chiang felt pretty good about it, and he offered a little secret that may explain why a lot of people are speaking over their applause lines.  Apparently the speakers get a very strict set of time at the podium.  After they go over, they start beeping and flashing lights at the podium speaker to get them to wrap up.  

Final California Tally

Though Barack Obama has been nominated by the Democratic Party by acclamation, the delegate counts still are tabulated.  And I just heard that the final count here in California was 263-169.

FWIW.

…let me update.  Apparently it was 273 for Obama, 166 for Clinton, with two superdelegates not voting, one of them DiFi, who isn’t here.

…the fact that California was the only state of the ones that went through the roll call that had to pass because they didn’t have all the votes cast… well, the word “disorganization” comes to mind.  Of course, it’s also the largest delegation, so it’s maybe understandable.

Presidential Nominating Process: It’s On

Speaker Pelosi has just hit the floor, and the Presidential nominating process has begun.  Dolores Huerta is making the nominating speech for Hillary Clinton right now.  People are pretty rapidly taking their seats.

It’s important to note that a roll call vote is a completely perfunctory and normal process.  Some may have been outraged by the fact of a roll call, but it’s wholly unsurprising and will end with Barack Obama as the nominee, just as Bill Clinton became the nominee on the third night of the convention in 1992, and Clinton in ’96, and Al Gore in 2000, and John Kerry in 2004.  It’s a nominating convention.  This is how it works.

UPDATE: Hillary released her delegates, making them free to vote for whoever they want.  As many feel the obligation to vote the way their constituents asked them to vote, Hillary will still get a lot of votes.  Also, Hillary signed her ballot for Barack Obama this morning.

UPDATE: Obama is about to be nominated.  The applause for Obama’s nomination is defeaning.  There will be no fight on this floor.  A registered Republican from Tennessee, Michael Wilson, is offering the nomination.  He’s an Iraq war vet.  “I support Barack Obama because America needs a President with the strength, wisdom and courage to talk with our enemies and consult with our allies.”

UPDATE: Apparently everyone in the West wears a bolo tie.

UPDATE: Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a strong Hillary supporter in the primaries and co-chair of her campaign, is seconding Obama’s nomination.  “No matter where we stood during the campaign, Democrats stand together today.”  Seriously, the disunity idiots need to stuff it.

UPDATE: The roll call is beginning, and it will continue until there is a nominee.  Alabama is kicking it off, so it looks like they’ll go alphabetically.

UPDATE: Alabama – 48-5 for Obama.  Alaska – 15-3 for Obama.  American Samoa – 9-0 Obama.  Arizona – 40-27 Obama.  Arkansas – 47-0 for Obama (in a call for unity; Clinton crushed Obama there).

UPDATE: So Barbara Boxer and Art Torres announced that California passed on its roll call vote.  There’s a very good reason for that.  First of all, the floor is being managed so that a certain state puts Obama over the top.  Second, if California voted now, less states would be part of the process, because when Obama reaches the threshold for nomination the roll call immediately ends.  So don’t go reading anything into this.

UPDATE: Actually, Chairman Torres just explained it to me a little differently.  A lot of the superdelegates never checked in with their vote with him ahead of time.  He’s legally required to go to their delegated proxies for a vote, and a lot of them didn’t know about the voting either, so he would have had to announce significantly less votes than the 441 California is granted.  Anyway, that’s what he told me.

UPDATE: I haven’t been totally keeping up with the count, but the overwhelming majority of votes are going to Sen. Obama. It’s kind of fun to be in the room for this, but calling it a “floor fight” would be kind of absurd.  I’m going to try and talk to Sen. Boxer soon.

UPDATE: Right next to me, Bob Mulholland and some CDP staffers are frantically tabulating votes from Representatives and their proxies.  So that appears to be the reason for the pass.

UPDATE: Gasbag emeritus David Gregory is chatting with Boxer and Torres right now.  I’m sure that, after the explanation, Gregory will claim that the pass was because of disunity and Democrats who hate one another.

UPDATE: Word is that New York will ask for a voice vote and Obama will be put in by acclamation.

UPDATE: They should really have a running total somewhere in the hall.  Mistake.  I guess Obama was up to 744 by the time they got to Kentucky, but it’s hard to keep track.

UPDATE: New Hampshire, Arkansas, and a couple others have gone entirely for Obama out of unity.  New Jersey is up now and they just did the same thing.  Let’s see if that rumor about New York is true.  

UPDATE: So New Mexico yielded to Illinois.  And Illinois will yield to New York.  And there will be a voice vote… and Hillary has come out to call for it.  The whole crowd is on their feet.

UPDATE: It’s over.  Pelosi moved quickly to do the ayes and nays.  It was a nice moment.  Lest California delegates worry, all votes will be counted.

From The Floor: Day 3

I just got settled in my seat here in the Pepsi Center.  State Senator Leticia Van de Putte is calling the session to order.  The room is more crowded than usual this early because there’s going to be a roll call vote on the nomination around 3:45MT.  The California delegation actually already did their vote back at the hotel, but any delegate who hasn’t will be able to cast a ballot on the floor.

I want to thank the DNC for offering this type of access for state bloggers.  I know that the national bloggers are stuck in some windowless room, a step backward from 2004.  And that’s not right.  But the state blogger access is really a mirror of politicians going to the local press instead of the national press.  They are getting great blogging press in the localities, and I think it’s offering a far better perspective of the convention than the traditional media, which came up with their headlines two weeks ago and is now just filling in their words.  Maybe it’s because I’m here, but this is the most shameful job I’ve ever seen from the media in terms of a disconnect between their own paranoid fantasies and reality.

As for the local and state blog strategy, it’s an extension of the Dean 50-state strategy.  I hope they only increase the access in the future.

Ladies And Gentlemen, Welcome To Tuesday

So I’m hanging out at the California delegation area while waiting to do an interview.  Jimmy Carter is giving an interview to CNN.  Terry McAuliffe just walked by.  And there’s some country band doing a soundcheck.

Having not been inside a Democratic convention facility before, it is undeniably impressive and it came through nicely on television last night.  The buzz over the Michelle Obama speech seems to be generally good, with the pull quote “stop doubting, start dreaming” seeming to be the one all over the newspapers this morning.

Teddy Kennedy obviously gave a powerful, emotional speech.  Many people I talked to didn’t know he was coming out at all.  I’m a little perturbed that Jim Leach’s speech was passed over by the media so quickly.  Here’s a Republican who served in the US House for 30 years, now completely excoriating his party, particularly in the area of foreign policy, and it didn’t raise an eyebrow.  Even though it was in prime time I’m not sure anyone showed it.  If the tables were turned, you can be sure it would be a major story.

Lots of Californians on stage tonight, but obviously all the focus will be on Sen. Clinton’s speech.  I saw James Carville by Radio Row and he said to the assembled media that they would “all be disappointed” tonight, because it would be a unifying speech.  I’m sure the media will latch on to some word or facial tic and relentlessly hype it.

Anyway, Lucas will be taking you through this evening from the floor.