By Philip Klein on 8.25.08 @ 12:08AM
Can't they all just get along?
DENVER -- Dozens of Democrats in town for this week's convention
gathered around flat screen TVs at the bar area of the downtown
Hyatt on Saturday afternoon, cheering as Barack Obama introduced
his new running mate, Joe Biden, at an Illinois rally.
Biden's performance was a hit with these convention-goers, who
especially liked the presumptive vice-presidential nominee's quip
suggesting that McCain didn't understand the nation's economic
struggles because he'd "have to figure out which of [his] seven
kitchen tables to sit."
To many Democrats still traumatized by John Kerry's inability to
respond to Republican attacks in 2004, it was taken as a signal
that Obama planned to fight back hard, and in Biden, had found just
the right partner to help.
After Biden's speech, an Oregon Democrat who knew I worked at a
conservative magazine, confidently taunted, "You guys are in
trouble."
AS DEMOCRATS assemble in the Mile High City this week, they have a
bit more of a bounce in their steps than they did the last time
they convened four years ago.
Their party now controls Congress, the Republican brand name is
badly damaged, and they have a candidate who has built a strong
organization that they feel will carry them to victory in
November.
The prospect of nominating the first black presidential
candidate from a major party has created an added layer of
excitement to many attendees who believe they will be a part of
history.
Matthew Peter, 23, came from Albany, New York to assist his
state delegation, and said that as a younger voter, he's excited to
have a candidate who he feels is listening to the concerns of
voters under 30.
"I think that unless the Republicans get out some really good
scare tactics and trick people on what Obama really stands for,
Obama will win, because I think he's bringing something different
that nobody else has," Peter said.
BUT NOT EVERYBODY has been swept up in Obamamania. Just a few
blocks away from the Sheraton hotel where I spoke to Peter, two
women sitting in the sidewalk seating section of the Hard Rock Cafe
on Denver's 16th street outdoor mall caught my eye.
They had "Hillary for President" signs resting on empty chairs,
and were eager to talk about their disgust with the nominating
process.
"I am objecting to the way Obama was chosen as the nominee,"
said Nancy Kiblen of San Diego, California, who supported Hillary
Clinton throughout the primaries and volunteered in Pennsylvania,
Oregon and Texas.
"He didn't win, because he didn't have enough delegates. The
superdelegates chose to select him through pressure from the DNC
and Democratic Party leaders like Pelosi, Dean, and Donna
Brazile."
Kiblen said Obama blew an opportunity to unify the party by not
selecting Clinton as his running mate.
"He added further salt into the wound by not picking her as VP,"
she said. "I think that is a slap in the face to Hillary
supporters, and all women should realize what he just did. He ran
on change and to get rid of old Washington, and he chooses someone
who voted exactly like Hillary on the Iraq War, his big issue.
"He's an old white man from Washington with years and years and
years of Washington experience. How is that change? How is that
going to win Hillary supporters? It just made me even more
mad."
As I spoke to Kiblen, a man walked by and asked her if she
wanted a "John McCain for President" button. She accepted it, and
immediately affixed it to her "Hillary" t-shirt. "That's who I'm
going to vote for," she told me.
MANY DEMOCRATS I spoke to told me that Clinton supporters will
ultimately decide that Obama agrees with them on most issues,
including abortion, health care, and the Iraq War and get behind
the ticket in November.
Kiblen told me that argument didn't matter to her, because she
was voting for McCain merely as a protest vote. "It isn't about
Hillary anymore," she said. "It's about sexism and the way they
treated her." She also noted that Obama was "tanking in the polls"
and she complained about his big ego.
She was dining with a fellow disgruntled Clinton supporter from
North Carolina, who she met while registering at the convention
offices of P.U.M.A. (a group of Clinton dead-enders which
alternatively stands for People United Means Action or Party Unity
My Ass).
P.U.M.A., as well as the group Rise Hillary Rise plan a series
of protests on Monday and Tuesday as well as a march, and the
turnout at those events will be an indicator of how large of a
constituency they actually represent.
WHEN I RAISED this issue with one-time Clinton backer Gale Brewer,
a city councilwoman from New York City who represents the Upper
West Side of Manhattan, she told me that Obama had a deeper
challenge.
"To be honest, I don't think it's just a Hillary Clinton
problem, I think you have a race problem, and that's what we're
going to have to overcome in addition," Brewer said.
"If you talk to people in Idaho and Indiana and parts of
Pennsylvania, I don't think they totally understand that when they
get Obama, they get a whole package of people trying to make a
better country for all of us -- and race shouldn't matter."
She pegged Obama's chances at 50/50.
Bob Vandereto, a delegate from Los Angeles, Califonia, was
cautiously optimistic that Obama would pull it out because of a
strong organization.
"[Obama] has the best political organization I've ever seen in
40 years of Democratic politics, and I have confidence that in the
end they're going to squeak through," Vandereto said.
If the Democrats can't win in this favorable electoral
environment, it's hard to see under what circumstances they ever
could.
topics:
Health Care, John McCain, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, Abortion, Environment, Iraq