At the Democratic National Convention next month, we're going to
kick off the general election with an event that opens up the
political process the same way we've opened it up throughout this
campaign.
Barack has made it clear that this is your convention, not
his.
On Thursday, August 28th, he's scheduled to formally accept the
Democratic nomination in a speech at the convention hall in front
of the assembled delegates.
Instead, Barack will leave the convention hall and join more
than 75,000 people for a huge, free, open-air event where he will
deliver his acceptance speech to the American people.
It's going to be an amazing event, and Barack would like you to
join him. Free tickets will become available as the date
approaches, but we've reserved a special place for a few of the
people who brought us this far and who continue to drive this
campaign.
If you make a donation of $5 or more between now and midnight on
July 31st, you could be one of 10 supporters chosen to fly to
Denver and spend two days and nights at the convention, meet Barack
backstage, and watch his acceptance speech in person. Each of the
ten supporters who are selected will be able to bring one guest to
join them.
Make a donation now and you could have a front row seat to
history:
https://donate.barackobama.com/openconvention
We'll follow up with more details on this and other convention
activities as we get closer, but please take a moment and pass this
note to someone you know who might like to be there.
It will be an event you'll never forget.
Thank you,
David
David Plouffe
Campaign Manager
Obama for America
One thing that it's pretty clear from Obama's campaign, is he's an
amazing PR machine. With this move, he turns his speech into an
event, and already I've read that it will be especially "historic"
because August 28th will be the 45th anniversary of MLK's "I have a
dream" speech. This could provide a huge boost for him heading out
of the convention, and make McCain's speech a week later seem bland
by comparison. On the other hand, it could reinforce the rock star
superficiality of Obama's appeal, and allow McCain to come off as
more mature and serious.