November 9th, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Obama tells huge Dem crowd he’ll fix Washington


(Denver) Surrounded by an enormous, adoring crowd, Barack Obama promised a clean break from the “broken politics in Washington and the failed policies of George W. Bush” Thursday night as he embarked on the final lap of his audacious bid to become the nation’s first black president.

“America, now is not the time for small plans,” the 47-year-old Democratic Illinois senator told an estimated 84,000 people packed into Invesco Field, a huge football stadium at the base of the Rocky Mountains.

He vowed to cut taxes for nearly all working-class families, end the war in Iraq and break America’s dependence on Mideast oil within a decade. By contrast, he said, “John McCain has voted with President Bush 90 percent of the time,” a scathing indictment of his Republican rival – on health care, education, the economy and more.

Polls indicate a close race between Obama and McCain, the Arizona senator who stands between him and a place in history. On a night 45 years after Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I have a Dream Speech,” Obama made no overt mention of his own race.

“I realize that I am not the likeliest candidate for this office. I don’t fit the typical pedigree” of a presidential candidate was as close as he came to the long-smoldering issue that may well determine the outcome of the election.

Campaigning as an advocate of a new kind of politics, he suggested at least some common ground was possible on abortion, gun control, immigration and gay marriage. [Of gay marriage, he said: "I know there are differences on same-sex marriage, but surely we can agree that our gay and lesbian brothers and sisters deserve to visit the person they love in the hospital and to live lives free from discrimination."

[Former vice president Al Gore also mentioned anti-gay discrimination in his prime-time speech, noting that if the 2000 election had ended differently, "We would not be showing contempt for the Constitution; we'd be protecting the rights of every American regardless of race, religion, disability, gender or sexual orientation."]

Fireworks lit the night sky as Obama, his speech concluded, accepted the cheers of supporters. His wife, Michelle, and their daughters Malia and Sasha joined him as the country music anthem “Only in America” filled the stadium. Vice presidential running mate Joseph Biden and his wife, Jill, joined them onstage.

Depicted by McCain as too young and inexperienced to sit in the Oval Office, Obama responded with an oblique reference to his rival’s temper.

“If John McCain wants to have a debate about who has the temperament, and judgment, to serve as the next commander in chief, that’s a debate I’m ready to have,” he said

Obama delivered his 44-minute nomination acceptance speech in an unrivaled convention setting, before a crowd of unrivaled size – the filled stadium, the camera flashes in the night, the made-for-television backdrop that suggested the White House, and the thousands of convention delegates seated around the podium in an enormous semicircle.

Obama and his fellow senator, Biden of Delaware, leave their convention city on Friday for Pennsylvania, first stop on an eight-week sprint to Election Day.

McCain countered the stadium extravaganza with a bold move of his own, hoping to steal some of the political spotlight by spreading word that he had settled on a vice presidential running mate. Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman were in the running.

Rep. John Lewis of Georgia spoke from the convention stage of the anniversary of King’s memorable speech.

“Tonight we are gathered here in this magnificent stadium in Denver because we still have a dream,” said the Georgia lawmaker, who marched with King, supported Obama’s primary rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton, then switched under pressure from younger black leaders in his home state and elsewhere.

Obama’s aides were interested in a different historical parallel from King – Obama was the first to deliver an outdoor convention acceptance speech since John F. Kennedy did so at the Los Angeles Coliseum in 1960.

In his speech, Obama pledged to jettison Bush’s economic policy – and replace it with his own designed to help hard-pressed families.

“I will cut taxes for 95 percent of all working families. Because in an economy like this, the last thing we should do is raise taxes on the middle class,” he said.

The speech didn’t mention it, but Obama has called for raising taxes on upper-income Americans to help pay for expanded health care and other domestic programs.

He did not say precisely what he meant by breaking the country’s dependence on Mideast oil, only that Washington has been talking about doing it for 30 years “and John McCain has been there for 26 of them.”

Criticized by the GOP for his thin foreign policy portfolio, Obama said he welcomed a national security debate with McCain.

“We are the party of Roosevelt. We are the party of Kennedy. So don’t tell me that Democrats won’t defend this country,” Obama said. “I will never hesitate to defend this nation.”

He said McCain had no standing on foreign policy, not after backing the Iraq war from the start and rejecting timetables for withdrawal now accepted by Bush. “John McCain stands alone in his stubborn refusal to end a misguided war,” he said.

Obama’s pledge to end the war in Iraq responsibly was straight from his daily campaign speeches.

“I will rebuild our military to meet future conflicts. But I will also renew the tough, direct diplomacy that can prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons,” he added.

As he does so often while campaigning, Obama also paid tribute to McCain’s heroism – the 72-year-old Arizona senator was a prisoner of war in Vietnam – then assailed him.

“Sen. McCain likes to talk about judgment, but really, what does it say about your judgment when you think George Bush was right more than 90 percent of the time?

Former Vice President Al Gore picked up on the same theme. “If you like the Bush-Cheney approach, John McCain’s your man. If you want change, then vote for Barack Obama and Joe Biden,” he declared.

The much-discussed stage built for the program was evocative of the West Wing at the White House, with 24 American flags serving as a backdrop. A blue carpeted runway jutted out toward the infield, and convention delegates ringed the podium. Thousands more sat in stands around the rim of the field.

The wrap-up to the party convention blended old-fashioned speechmaking, Hollywood-quality stagecraft and innovative, Internet age politics.

The list of entertainers ran to Sheryl Crow, Stevie Wonder and will.i.am, whose Web video built around Obama’s “Yes, we can” rallying cry quickly went viral during last winter’s primaries.

In a novel bid to extend the convention’s reach, Obama’s campaign decided to turn tens of thousands of partisans in the stands into instant political organizers.

They were encouraged to use their cell phones to send text messages to friends as well as to call thousands of unregistered voters from lists developed by the campaign.

In all, Obama’s high command said it had identified 55 million unregistered voters across the country, about 8.1 million of them black, about 8 million Hispanic and 7.5 million between the ages of 18 and 24.


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  • Bud Evans Said: August 29th, 2008 at 9:00 am
    • Page Six of the New York Post is reporting that “gay media czar” Paul Colichman 46, (owner of The Advocate and Out magazines, GayWired.com, and Here, the premium cable network for gays) has ruffled more than a few feathers within his own group of fellow Democrats and fellow media moghuls by saying that he will never endorse or vote for Barack Obama in the upcoming Presidential election.

      Colichman’s reason for turning a cold shoulder to Obama? It was because of Barack Obama’s answer to Rick Warren’s question (at the Saddlebrook Forum) about how, exactly, the Democratic nominee for President defines marriage; Obama said that he defined marriage as a union only between a man and a woman…not between people of the same gender.

      “I had literally written out a check to the Obama campaign. And then I saw him in front of an evangelical group in Anaheim,” he said.

      Before Rick Warren at the Saddleback Civil Forum, both Obama and McCain defined marriage as a union between a man and a woman. “I thought, ‘Wow! He just threw the gay community under the bus,’ ” Colichman said. “My partner looked over at me, and we tore up the check.”

      “If we always vote for the lesser of two evils, if we accept their crumbs and platitudes, if we write checks to candidates who don’t stand up for us, aren’t we being self-destructive?” he argues.

      (source: New York Post)

  • Todd Said: August 29th, 2008 at 10:57 am
    • Yeah I agree, especially after the way he spoke of gay marriage in his speech during the Democratic Convention. It was a little chilling to hear people roar and cheer in support of what he said when it wasn’t about full equality for gay people but some kind of second class status.

  • Chris Sullivan Said: August 29th, 2008 at 11:23 am
    • This is naive. Maintaining a strict ideology and LOSING is grossly counter-productive. ALL politics is INCREMENTAL. Only one of the two nominees is going to win. Period. There are NO other options. NOT voting is a vote FOR McCain in a tight election. Yes, it sucks to have to settle for less than your ideal but what is the alternative? LOSE to someone who is far more against you? That is simply naive and ridiculous. Better to elect someone who is FAR CLOSER to your school of thought and encourage people in that direction, than to withhold your support and by default, support someone who is FAR AWAY from your school of thought. It’s easy for Paul Colichman, who is rich, to pontificate and prop himself up as some pure idealist – but living in a fantasy world helps nobody. Sure we all WANT what he states – but it is NOT AN OPTION with these two people this time out! THE REALITY is that there is HARD, INCREMENTAL WORK TO BE DONE and Colichman views do nobody any good. WE KNOW PAUL AND YES, WE AGREE THAT IN AN IDEAL WORLD, THINGS WOULD BE THE WAY YOU SAY – BUT WE AREN’T RICH LIKE YOU (though you are probably rich because of US!) WE HAVE TO LIVE IN THE REAL WORLD DEAR! So please, do us a favor and S.T.F.U.

  • Todd Said: August 29th, 2008 at 10:18 pm
    • If you settle for less, that is exactly what you are going to get. Human rights do not improve for the better by fighting for mediocrity.

  • Trace Said: August 30th, 2008 at 9:23 am
    • I had been a life long Republican at one point. Then, during one State of the Union Address, I heard George W. Bush speak about how marriage is between one man and one woman. The following day I changed my voter registration.

      There was no way that I could support someone that did not believe that I deserved all the rights of any straight person.

      Obama does not believe we deserve those rights. He’s said it repeatedly

  • Todd Said: August 30th, 2008 at 7:28 pm
    • How can Obama who is half-black and coming from an interracial couple treat gay couples the same way his parents were treated less than 60 years ago?

      I was appalled and disgusted when he mentioned gay marriage and support for less than equal treatment in the same sentence about no discrimination – and the people in the stadium just cheered and applauded it, it was terrible.. :\

  • Trace Said: August 30th, 2008 at 8:25 pm
    • Well Todd, it’s quite possible he never saw how inter-racial couples were treated. His parents didn’t have anything that you could consider to be a long term relationship. His father basically impregnated his mother and then went off and impregnated another woman.

 
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