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Julia Reed | 08/27/2008 10:45 am

Julia Reed Asks: Where's Obama in This Convention?

Julia Reed

My overarching thought last night watching the convention was this: By the time Obama speaks on Thursday, people will have all but forgotten he is the candidate. Yes, Michelle had her moment on Monday (and she did a good job), but so did Teddy Kennedy. Now it is Clinton time. Last night, watching the Hillary video, even I almost teared up, which given my seriously mixed feelings about her, is saying something. The best she could do in her speech was to say, essentially, "Vote for Obama because he’s a Democrat," and the rest of the time it was all about her — her personal history, why she ran, what she has done for women, etc. And then there was the attendant soap opera — what Bill meant earlier in the day with his "hypothetical," his tears in the stands, Chelsea’s support of Mom, the Hillary supporters outside with their "18 million votes" placards.

Tonight, it will be worse, with Bill the Bloviator taking the stage. He fills up a stadium, he will be the only subject of the talking heads. If the Obama people had any sense, they would have offered to pay her debt with his many millions and cut a deal — put them both on Monday night, dispense with the roll-call vote, anything to relegate the Clintons to a smaller spotlight, as hard as that is. (McCain is fortunate that he does not have remotely the same problems — when Romney speaks, it will not end up being all about him to say the least.)

Hillary was saying, "This ain’t over, not by a long shot." She’s right. Last night, at least, I thought, "McCain can win this." I have never lived through a Democratic convention week when there was so much talk of the Republican candidate — and not just from the podium where he is the subject of attacks. McCain’s ads are breaking through, The Clintons are introducing him into the conversation. It is uncanny. On the second night of the Democratic Convention, a Gallup tracking poll had the Republican candidate two points ahead for the first time since Obama sealed the nomination in June. Obama is going to have to be the biggest guy in the room on Thursday, an effort made harder by his campaign’s now possibly dubious decision to have him speak not in a room at all, but in a huge open-air stadium. In the meantime, it is still the Clintons’ show.

397 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Frannie Em
Hi Bonnie, A little while ago I saw an overview picture of the speaking venue, and it does look like a Classical Greek building. What are they thinking? I don’t get it , aren’t they listening to the criticism that he is being viewed as a god? What are they thinking? Their campaign has been pretty smart so far, so we shall see.
By Frannie Em on 08/27/2008 8:15 pm
Bonnie Oliver
Frannie - Senator Obama’s campaign was very intuitive and savvy up until the time he actually won the vote among the super delegates. It seems as if when Senator Cinton was beaten, all the intelligence in the Obama campaign just evaporated. I am sure he will give a good speech (it would be hard for him to give a poor one) but that backdrop is insane. I watched the Andy Rodderick tennis match this evening so I did not see any of the Convention coverage. Will turn on the Charlie Rose lShow ater on and see what happened.
By Bonnie Oliver on 08/27/2008 10:29 pm
James the Game
Obama still holds the key on Thursday night…does he embrace the Clinton-ites, or try to go it alone? He must do more than give Hillary token nod of appreciation, and announce that she’s going to part & parcel of the Obama Administration. Otherwise, there may not be an Obama Administration. He needs a large percentage of those who voted for her in the primary to do the same for him on 4th November.
By James the Game on 08/27/2008 3:35 pm
EKA -
All right, angry democrats, just go vote for McCain, and tell yourself ” That will show him for ignoring Hillary ! ” Feel good for a day ! Then come back 2 years from now and see what sorry state this country is in, the Supreme Court will have two more Scalias, more of our precious young people will be dead in some OTHER ridiculous war, the rich will be richer, we will be pumping more oil and adding more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the Chinese, and the rest of the world will be laughing at us, but, oh, we we got our revenge for poor Hillary ! Damn Democrats !! No wonder a moron like George Bush became President. We get the leaders we DESERVE !
By EKA - on 08/27/2008 3:58 pm
DeBúrca obj
You said it EKA! Although, I don’t think most of these naysayers are really Democrats.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/27/2008 4:01 pm
Star Lawrence
I am an icksayer, not a naysayer. Yes, registered Dem. 45 yrs. Never missed an election. Many of my friends have switched to Independent. But I still think there is hope for the party down the road. That is MY hope.
By Star Lawrence on 08/28/2008 12:23 pm
DeBúrca obj
I can understand not being happy with a certain Democratic Candidate, but I do not buy that a person is a Democrat, whether or not they had been for the past 45 years, when they work hard to tear down the Democratic nominee for president. Because the party platform stands for more than an individual candidate, whether he was your choice or not. So I think you have left the party and are officially an Independent.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/28/2008 1:24 pm
Buh- Bye
when your party goes corrupt (michigan and florida) you gotta take action, even if it irks you
By Buh- Bye on 08/28/2008 5:03 pm
DeBúrca obj
Go complain to the Democratic Parties of Florida and Michigan for screwing up and screwing their own citizens. THEY did not follow DNC rules, rules that had consequences, rule they knew. That is not Obama’s fault and the fact that Hillary was willing to take advantage of that situation will always be a black mark against her as far as I am concerned.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/28/2008 5:14 pm
Buh- Bye
oh deburca, you know full well that the republican leaders of their states changed their primary dates on them and the parties had no control. puh-lease. don’t make me keep writing it over and over again
By Buh- Bye on 08/28/2008 5:38 pm
DeBúrca obj
I’m not going through this with you anymore, we’ve been there more than once. If you need to cling to this issue to justify not supporting the person who is clearly better for this country than the one who will bring us four more years of Bush policy and ideology, so be it.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/28/2008 6:10 pm
theCHEROKEErose
dear EKA….’scuse me, but isnt dubya a REPUBLICAN???(and a moron)….you’re not making sense….
By theCHEROKEErose on 08/27/2008 8:39 pm
EKA -
Because Democrats do this all the time, they don’t get solidly behind a candidate, or they don’t elect the right candidate ( Dukakis, Kerry ), or they do something stupid ( Bill-Monica ), or they give in ( Gore 00) They LET Republicans win. There is no way George Bush should have ever gotten near the oval office.
By EKA - on 08/27/2008 9:14 pm
theCHEROKEErose
fear EKA..just exactly what is it that we democrats do??? i hate to point this out but ‘REPUBLICans DO the exact same things…you’re awfully vague..
By theCHEROKEErose on 08/28/2008 9:16 am
theCHEROKEErose
EKA…sorry…it should be ‘dear’..however, some people may ‘fear’ your opinions..freudian slip there…
By theCHEROKEErose on 08/28/2008 9:17 am