Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

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

C Hardy
I guess I still don’t know what will change all that much in the first 4 years…and really truly hope the one’s who vote for Obama and IF he wins, which I am still not sure he will b/c most American’s aren’t ready…but IF he does I just pray that most know how to act and not let his skin color go to their heads & then get upset when things don’t change as quickly as some think they could….
By C Hardy on 08/28/2008 9:34 am
DeBúrca obj
The change will be that we will have a president who was elected from the ground up by the American people, that we will have a president who will put the people before the neocons, we will have a president who is a wise, intelligent, thoughtful person, and that the American people took control of the system AND the Democratic Party and chose the person THEY wanted. When we were being told what was good for us, we, the grassroots movement that has put Obama where he is, decided what was better.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/28/2008 10:11 am
C Hardy
I dont see how Obama will be a President electred from the ground up b/c didnt I read somewhere that he got the nod not from the votes but from the Party? If I am wrong please tell me but don’t be mean or hateful…
By C Hardy on 08/28/2008 12:19 pm
DeBúrca obj
The Obama campaign was a ground up organization that used the internet to raise money from millions of average voters and trained campaign workers in the thousands to get out the vote, pound the pavement, organize and have teas and gatherings where they could make their case and gather more support . And the Democratic Party backed Hillary Clinton up until it became obvious she did not have the numbers. I know Hillary insisted that she got the popular vote, that’s really isn’t true unless like Clinton you don’t include the Caucus votes and you do include the votes in Mich and Florida (which I don’t want to get into the whole dispute there). But whether you believe Clinton got the popular vote or not, there is no question that Obama won the delegate votes and it is the delegate vote that wins the race. Once it was obvious that Obama had the delegate votes, that the numbers just did not support a Clinton win, that is when the Democratic Party moved to Obama.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/28/2008 1:18 pm
DeBúrca obj
Julia, After watching the 3rd night of the Convention with the history making roll call, the absolutely flawless speeches by Bill Clinton, John Kerry and Joe Biden, and the entrance by Barack Obama it was quite clear in retrospect how the Convention had been organized to build up to the electrifying day yesterday which brings us to today’s climax. Michelle Obama got to introduce her husband and even more importantly, herself on the first day and give people the feel for him as a family man. Hillary and her supporters got some room to celebrate her, and heal from the loss on the 2nd day, and the fact that the Democrats were wise enough to allow that time says great things about the party, not bad. Without the first two days being what they were, the 3rd day never would have happened and it was a great day. I am looking forward to Barack Obama’s speech tonight with little doubt that he will rise to the task.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/28/2008 10:05 am
A T Rock
I’m with your, Julia.
By A T Rock on 08/28/2008 10:28 am
theCHEROKEErose
AT..youre really cute: a MAN dressed like a little old LADY pretending to be a MAN…make up your mind…
By theCHEROKEErose on 08/28/2008 10:45 am
sibelle daubigne
LOL LOL LOL LOL !
By sibelle daubigne on 08/28/2008 12:17 pm
Marjorie C.
CHEROKEE: “… youre really cute: a MAN dressed like a little old LADY pretending to be a MAN…make up your mind…” LOL . LOL . LOL. Shouldn’t be funny, but it is.
By Marjorie C. on 08/28/2008 12:20 pm
sibelle daubigne
Marjorie Shouldn’t be funny if AT is gay,and i would apologize,Cherokee is so candid!
By sibelle daubigne on 08/28/2008 12:53 pm
Frannie Em
Cherokee You have to be brave to come on this site if you are a guy. LOL
By Frannie Em on 08/31/2008 10:55 pm
Buh- Bye
I’d hardly call Biden’s speech flawless. Altho the content was great, the delivery had quite a few flubbing problems. (And he kinda swore - hard core Christians like my mother did not like that. He’ll have to watch that in future.) Nice Democratic ticket. The Flubber and The Snubber.
By Buh- Bye on 08/28/2008 4:25 pm
DeBúrca obj
To me it was flawless, flubbing a few lines is human and a speech can be human and flawless as far as I am concerned. Also, the man had to overcome a stutter and it still shows somewhat now and then in a hesitation, so if people are going to try to make fun of his speaking pattern, they’d better think twice about it, that may backfire. “The Flubber and The Snubber”? For someone who is hell bent on re-electing Bush to a 3rd term with McSame, I would think before trying to label people. And btw, when did he “kinda” swear?
By DeBúrca obj on 08/28/2008 4:43 pm
Buh- Bye
There were 2 points. I can’t remember the 2nd, the first was when he used Hell, or Helluva, not sure which one it was (my mother doesn’t even like the word Fart) he should’ve used ‘heck.” I know it’s totally minor (to me anyway) but to some, it’s foul mouthed. Pass it onto your cronies.
By Buh- Bye on 08/28/2008 4:49 pm
DeBúrca obj
Well God bless your mother for that, it’s very sweet, but I don’t think there are too many people who are offended by “helluva” anymore, not enough to make Biden change his style anyway! ( :
By DeBúrca obj on 08/28/2008 5:05 pm