RI Democratic Leaders Praise Clinton Speech


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President Clinton and Obama after the nominating speech at the DNC, Sept. 5

CHARLOTTE, NC —  Rhode Island’s two Democratic Senators were effusive in their praise for the barnburner of a speech that former President Bill Clinton delivered last night nominating Barack Obama.

At the delegation’s breakfast meeting this morning, there were a lot of smiles (and more than a few extra cups of coffee, given that Speaker Fox’s own speech delivering the delegation’s votes didn’t happen until well past midnight.)

You may have thought it was a good speech on TV, but from inside the hall, it was electric. It was like watching an actor at the height of their powers give the performance of a lifetime.  The only analogy I can think of – and this will only resonate for some classical buffs – was watching Glenn Gould perform the “Goldberg Variations.”

Clinton held the audience of almost 20 thousand rapt, whipsawed them across a spectrum of emotions, had them ready to laugh and cry, and, effortlessly, had them on their feet cheering. And then, When President Obama made his surprise appearance, the noise level in the Time-Warner area went offscale, a solid wall of sound that you felt rather than  heard.

“No one can do it better than Bill Clinton,” Sen. Jack Reed told the delegates this morning. “He did a great job of laying out clearly the stakes in this election.” With a smile, he said, “If I were a really good lawyer like Sheldon Whitehouse, I’d simply say, ‘I rest my case.”

“It was great to see the master in action,” said Whitehouse. He noted that last night, the Democrats out their last president in a prime-time slot, while during the Republican convention, George W. Bush was nowhere to be seen. It was all about substance, Whithouse argued. “When you [talk about] the policies of the Democratic Party, you get results that made Bill Clinton light up not just the room, but the whole country.”

RI Democratic Party Chair Ed Pacheco echoed that theme. “Clinton was able to articulate not just the genuine, sincere reasons [for supporting the Prsident] but also the depths of his policy.” He urged delegates to take the messages they had heard this week back to Rhode Island. “We need to motivate each and every person in the state to get behind the Democratic team.”

For those who may not have stayed up quite as late as the folks in Charlotte, during the roll call, RI House Speaker Gordon Fox gave an impassioned speech  linking Rhode Island’s motto, “Hope” and how it was reflected in the Democratic platform supporting marriage equality.

You can see a video of the speech here, shot from the convention floor by RI delegation page Jonathan Boucher.

Fox said the theme had developed for him during the past two days. “That’s the power of conventions,” he said. “You’re almost swept up by the speeches and the passion.” Listening to speaker after speaker, like Lily Ledbetter, articulate messages of their hope and dreams crystallized the idea, he told RI Future.

One special guest stopped by to visit delegates this morning. Maryland Senator Barbara Mikulski, who also delivered a powerful speech with the Democratic women Senators last night, popped by to rally folks to continue the work back home, and she promised to do what she could to help. “We need Rhode Island to be true blue, and we’re going to work until we’re blue in the face.”

RI Delegation Welcomes a First-Night Speaker


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Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Kilmartin and Gov. Linc Chafee (Photo by John McDaid)

CHARLOTTE, NC –– The Rhode Island delegation was buzzing this morning over last night’s speeches and events at the Democratic National Convention, and they had a surprise visitor when Gov. Lincoln Chafee stopped by their breakfast.

“We may have our differences back home,” Chafee told the delegates, “But here, we’re all united to support the re-election of Barack Obama”

From inside the hall, last night, probably not visible on tv,  the audience response seemed a bit muted when Chafee started off by talking about being a former Republican. But it was evident that the audience warmed up to him almost immediately, and by the end, he got an enthusiastic round of applause.

Asked how he felt the speech went, Chafee  told RI Future he was happy to have the opportunity.  “Those were some points that I wanted to share with Americans…strong feelings that I’ve had since my time in the Senate.”

But although it was his speech, Chafee was clear that his main mission was supporting the President. “I know conventions, the point is to promote the candidate; I wanted to make sure I did that.”

In addition to a lot of positive words about our our local favorite, delegates were also delighted by the rest of last night’s lineup.

Rep. Frank Ferri thought the whole evening was powerful.  “It was great to hear some positive messages,” he said. “Finally, let’s talk about what Obama has accomplished.”

Former gubernatorial candidate Myrth York particularly liked Cory Booker. “Cory was on fire,” she said. And she offered an observation about the picture offfered by the whole evening. “The party is young,” she said. “It has the look and feel of the future

Democratic National Committee member Frank Montanaro was especially moved by the video memorial to the late Sen. Ted Kennedy.  “As far as I’m concerned,” he said. “that was worth the show.”

And, of course, there was praise all around for the job that First Lady Michelle Obama did. Speaker Gordon Fox perhaps summed it up best: “Any man who has the sense to marry that woman deserves to be President.”

Full Text of Gov. Linc Chafee’s DNC Speech


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Gov. Linc Chafee as seen from the press box at the DNC (Photo by John McDaid)

“Good evening, and thank you for having me here to celebrate with all of you. As the nation’s only independent Governor, I am here tonight to join with my Democratic friends, on the eve of an election critical to the future of our children and their country.

As a former Republican, I represent a group of Americans who all too often have no one to speak for them. This group doesn’t necessarily have a name.

We’ve been called “moderates,” but that term can be misleading. There is nothing moderate about our love of country or our passion for America’s future. There is nothing moderate about our desire to work together within the broad political center in which most Americans live.

No matter what you call us though, this is certain: there are a lot of us all over the country, and in November we will once again help elect Barack Obama President of the United States.

We are, at our core, conservatives, in the best sense of the word. Thoughtful, responsible with public resources, and respectful of personal freedom. And we are liberal, in the best sense of the word.

We believe that government can and should be an instrument for the greater good. And although my former party has hijacked the term, there is really nothing conservative about today’s Republican Party. In fact, there is no room there for traditional conservatives like us. But I am proud to say that in my friend President Barack Obama we have found a champion for the principles we hold dear.

First, we love this land — literally. We believe in environmental stewardship… protecting our air and our water. Because despite what big business and this Republican Party would have you believe, destroying these precious resources will cost us far more in the future than preserving them now.

Second, we believe in personal freedom. We do not want the government controlling our personal lives, or our most personal decisions. Believing in freedom, as we do, we don’t think it’s the role of government to pass judgment on a relationship between two consenting adults, regardless of their orientation. Believing in freedom, we believe a woman should make her own reproductive decisions.

Third, we take seriously the decision to enter into foreign entanglements.

During the last Administration, then-Senator Obama and I served together on the Foreign Relations Committee.

There, we shared a mutual desire to end the prevailing attitude of arrogance and recklessness on matters of war and peace that characterized those years.

President Obama knows that wars are not to be entered into lightly; he knows that overseas conflicts don’t only do damage in the land in which they are fought, but in the land of those who  fight them, as well.

Fourth, we believe in using the tools of government to help Americans help themselves. For instance, programs such as Head Start and the Pell Grants have brightened the futures of countless American young people and given them a hand up into the middle class. Now, Mitt Romney and the Republicans are proposing a budget that would squeeze the life out of Head Start and Pell grants.

Let me ask you: Should only children of the wealthy have access to quality early education? Should only children of the wealthy have access to a college degree? The answer — the only answer – is:  No. American education is still the wonder of the world, and we must open the schoolhouse doors, not close them. A strong, educated middle class is what made America the greatest country in the world. Students of America, working families of America: President Obama will not turn his back on you.

Finally, we believe in fiscal responsibility. We think it’s reasonable to pay for a valuable service that the people want by asking everyone to do their part. The lack of fiscal responsibility is one of the main reasons I finally left my old Party.

In 2001 President Bill Clinton handed the Republicans a surplus. They went on to squander this surplus by launching two wars, expanding the cost of Medicare, and giving tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans – and failing to pay for any of these.

Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan want to return us to the fantasy land of never having to pay for the things we buy, such as education, medical research, good roads, and clean energy.

That’s not conservative. That’s not responsible. And it’s not what this country needs.

The values I have spoken of tonight aren’t Republican or Democratic values – they’re American values.

They are the values of Abraham Lincoln, who affirmed the fundamental dignity of all Americans – regardless of the color of their skin.

They are the values of Theodore Roosevelt, who protected millions of acres from development and exploitation, so that future Americans – today’s Americans – could enjoy them as fully as he did.

They are the values of Dwight Eisenhower, who presided over an era of peace and prosperity – because he knew that those two conditions go together.

These are American values.

But because they have no place in today’s Republican Party, neither do I – and neither do millions like me.

But, my fellow traditional conservatives… my fellow moderates… my fellow independents… there is a candidate who shares our values.

A candidate who shares our belief in: Environmental protection. Personal liberties. Smart and responsible American leadership. Growing the middle class. and fiscal discipline.

That candidate is our President, Barack Obama.

Thank you.”

A Tribute to Ted Kennedy


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Democrats honored the late Senator Ted Kennedy on the first night of their convention with a moving video.

Here’s what John McDaid, our correspondent in Charlotte, tweeted about it: “Enormous cheers in the hall for the Ted Kennedy memorial video #dnc2012
Follow all his #DNC2012 tweets here.

In case you missed the tribute, you can watch it here:

Livestream: Democratic National Convention


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Watch the Democratic National Convention live from Charlotte, North Carolina right here on your computer.

Recovery Caucus Pushes for Mental Health Parity


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From left: Carol Dhue, David Wellstone and Patrick Kennedy. (Photo by John McDaid)

CHARLOTTE, NC — Former RI Representative Patrick Kennedy was a guest speaker at this afternoon’s Recovery Caucus meeting at the Democratic National Convention and he brought his message of full mental health parity to a standing-room-only session.

The panel was chaired by RI delegate Tom Coderre, who works for Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed. It also featured David Wellstone, son of the late Senator, and former cable network anchor Carol Dhue.

Coderre recognized the work of Kennedy in backing the Recovery Caucus, which is sponsoring recovery rooms every day in all of the DNC’s venues. “This is the most recovery-friendly convention ever,” he said, and praised the 2012 Democratic platform which “recognizes recovery as the public-health crisis that it is.”

But Coderre and the other speakers also stressed how much work remains to be done.

Although legislation ensuring parity in mental health coverage was signed into law, Kennedy argued that it was time for the department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to issue the final rules that would enable enforcement.

“We expect implementation that will not have any loopholes,” he said. “Right now, these issues affect a new population: veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.” Kennedy expressed outrage that more veterans are now dying  by suicide than enemy action.   “Our vets are being caught behind the enemy lines of addiction and depression,” he said.

Closing potential loopholes is especially critical, Kennedy said,  for those members of the National Guard and Reserve returning to their jobs after deployment.

And veterans are only part of the “besieged minority” affected by these diseases, said Wellstone, quoting his his father, who was an early advocate. “It is not just the right thing to do, it’s the fiscally responsible thing to do,” Wellstone said, given the estimated $400B yearly cost of untreated addiction and mental health issues. Without the final HHS rule, said Wellstone, “we don’t have the teeth.”

“If your father was here,” Dhue told Wellstone, “we’d already have teeth in the bill.”

She lamented the fact that unlike other diseases, addiction and mental health are improperly overlaid with moral attributes.

“It comes down to science,” she said. “I was wired to be an addict.”

Carol McDaid, a DC-based advocate, asked caucus-goers for their support in launching a petition to fight for the final regulations, and announced a web site for the effort, parityispersonal.org.

Rhode Island Delegates Prepare for Opening Day

CHARLOTTE, NC — With official proceedings beginning tomorrow at the Democratic National Convention, members of the Rhode Island delegation met at a reception this evening where Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse urged them to have take advantage of the next three days.

“There will be a lot of good material to bring back to Rhode Island and send a strong message about President Obama and the work to be done to get this country moving again,” said Whitehouse to his fellow delegates. “Have fun, but pay attention for those telltale moments that you can take home.”

Before the reception, RI Future caught up with RI Democratic Party Chair Ed Pacheco and Executive Director Stephanie Mandeville at their temporary office in the delegation’s hotel in Concord, about 20 miles north of the city.

Both were still excited from the delegation’s first look at Time-Warner Cable Arena convention site yesterday. According to Pacheco, the RI delegation has prime spot behind Pennsylvania and just about 100 feet from podium. If you’re looking for Rhode Island on TV tomorrow night, they will be to the left of the podium. How did our state score such a good location? “I don’t reveal my secrets,”said Pacheco.

The delegates were delighted to finally be in the convention hall, said Mandeville. “It was like a kid’s first trip to Fenway.”

They had a chance to tour the convention floor, get the feel for Rhode Island’s space, and participate in a rehearsal of the roll-call process led by Convention Secretary Alice Germond. In something that sounds like it could be either a bit of wisdom from a ten-time convention veteran — or perhaps a wee bit of a prompt to keep things moving — Pacheco reported her advice to the delegations: “Pretend it’s 1:30 in the morning.”

According to Pacheco, delegation Chair Gordon Fox is still working on his roll-call announcement. “He’s trying to work in they typical things, like coffee milk,” said Pacheco, “But also wants to recognize that in Rhode Island, we stand on the shoulders of great senators like Claiborne Pell, whose policies we not just important for our state, but the whole country.”

Demanding Progress in Charlotte at DNC


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I’m en route to the Democratic Convention in Charlotte, where I’ll be doing a combination of work for Demand Progress, taking part in assorted progressive rabble-rousing, and hopefully blogging for RIFuture and the Daily Dose.

Demand Progress’s efforts to secure Internet freedom language in the Republican platform were successful: Anybody abiding by the new platform would’ve opposed SOPA and CISPA — the privacy obliterating cyber-security bill that passed the House a few months ago, but is dead (at least for now) in the Senate.  Now it’s the Democrats’ turn.  You can read more about our work on this front over here.  (Yep, that’s a link to Fox News.)

I’ll be spending a lot of time at the Progressive Central hub, sponsored by Progressive Democrats of American, The Nation, and others.  There’s an impressive series of speakers and panels which you can watch live here.

The line-up includes the likes of Rev. Jesse Jackson, Michael Dukakis, and several of our progressive champions in Congress, like John Conyers and Raul Grijalva, who’ll be speaking to critical issues that aren’t likely to get much play on the main stage: Wall Street run amok, the narrow concentration of wealth in America, corporate control of government, and more.

I’m speaking on this panel tomorrow morning:

10:15 to 11:10 Guided Discussion: We the People, Not We the Corporations—Ending Corporate Rule.

John Nichols—Moderator

Steve Cobble—Progressive Democrats of America (PDA)

David Cobb—Move to Amend

David Segal—Demand Progress

DNCC Lays Out Convention Themes in Opening Presser


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Left-right, Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx, DNCC Secretary Alice Germond, Obama for America press secretary Ben LaBolt, Conventn Chair LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, and DNCC CEO Steve Kerrigan (Photo by John McDaid)

CHARLOTTE, NC — The Democratic National Convention kicked off this morning with a press conference previewing the week and repeatedly stressing two key messages: that the convention is the most open and accessible in history, and that a key Obama campaign theme  will be “rebuilding America from the middle class out.”

The 50-minute presser featured DNCC Chair Steve Kerrigan, Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx, Convention Chair Los Angeles Mayor Antionio Villaraigosa, DNC Secretary Alice Germond, and Obama for America Press Secretary Ben LaBolt.

The main news from the session was that the draft platform will be distributed to all delegates when they arrive in the hall tomorrow, and that Georgia Rep. John Lewis has been selected as Sergeant-at-arms for the proceedings.

“It’s been incredible to see the ground energy for this convention and this President,” said Foxx, who expressed pride that Charlotte was hosting its  first major political convention in 150 years, and while he predicted a close race, he expressed optimism about Obama carrying the state again in 2012.  “The people of North Carolina understand that this President has had their back.”

Just as the convention four years ago in Denver helped the campaign focus the energy of its 25,000 local volunteers, Villaraigosa said that Charlotte would do the same for North Carolina.  “This is the start of a new way to engage in the political process,” he said, promising a “working convention,” that would engage and energize volunteers and participants as well as laying out a vision and articulating a path forward.

And the people doing that work on the  delegate side represent a true cross-section of America, said Germond, noting that among the 5,556 delegates and 407 alternates — 50% of them women– there were increases in African-American, Latino, and youth representation, with a record 644 young delegates, including 285 students. “In many cases, this is their very first convention,” she said. “We will learn from them.”

In the Q&A, LaBolt responded to a question about the significance of today’s Gallup results which found Romney’s convention speech last week produced only a marginal bump.  “Most Americans who tuned in were looking for answers,” he said, “but the Romney convention speech didn’t address their questions.” He promised that President Obama’s speech — which he said is still being fine-tuned — would “lay out the pillars for rebuilding the economy from the middle class out.”

Hundreds March on “Wall Street South” at DNC

CHARLOTTE, NC — On the eve of the Democratic National Convention, over 800 participants joined in the “Coalition to March on Wall Street South” and took their message to the streets of the city, parading past the Charlotte Convention Center about 2:30 this afternoon. Charlotte is a major financial center, with Bank of America and Duke Energy among the major corporations headquartered here.

In a release, the Coalition (Facebook, Twitter) identified dozens of participating groups, and there were banners and chants across a spectrum of “People power” themes: peace, economic fairness, money for education, justice for immigrants and oppressed peoples, foreclosures, social security, ALEC, and clean energy.

There were chants of “We want housing, not war…we won’t take it any more,” and “Drone strikes are war crimes…Obama should do prison time.” That last came from a group who fielded a spookily accuracy Predator with a 12-foot wingspan. (View photos and video on Flickr)

Marchers were well-organized and peaceful, and the police presence was massive, with steel fencing lining the parade route, and uniformed officers stationed along the route every hundred feet. Motorcycle and bicycle-riding officers bracketed the marchers, and although they all sported fanny packs bristling with zip-tie handcuffs there were no visible confrontations.

Delegates have already begun arriving for the Democratic Convention, which kicks off tomorrow with “CarolinaFest,” a public street festival which will feature music, free arts, vendors and exhibits celebrating Charlotte community programs.


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