Posts tagged "2012 DNC"

The annual Values Voter Summit in Washington is always pulsating with worry that God and Christianity are being pulled from the national fabric at a frightful pace. That concern was more elevated than ever this year at the social conservative confab hosted by the Family Research Council, thanks to an ordeal that took place during the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte earlier this month.

Christian leaders have been warning for years that modern elections boil down to a fight between those who would have God as part of the United States and those who would not. But the DNC episode — in which Democrats added the word “God” and support for Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, to a chorus of boos from some of the audience — was all the evidence social conservatives needed to prove they’ve been right all along.

Though most Americans who watched the Democratic convention didn’t catch the brief and chaotic fight over the amendments, which came early on the second night of festivities, Values Voter Summit attendees were intimately acquainted with the episode. And just about all the speakers on stage at the conference were clear on its ramifications.

“Let us not mistake: The fight for religious freedom starts here at home, because we are one nation under God,” House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said Friday. “This is despite what that other party has put in their platform.”

Cantor wasn’t the only speaker to make an issue out of the Democratic platform fight. It was mentioned in countless other addresses, and was on the lips of attendees throughout the conference. Mainstream Republicans have attempted to leverage the Democratic platform changes — which were reportedly pushed by President Obama — to attack the president’s campaign, to limited effect. Mitt Romney was widely criticized after he seemed to suggest Obama would remove the phrase “In God We Trust” from U.S. currency.

For “values voters,” the three votes required in Charlotte to get the platform amended are just the kind of thing its base needs to get fired up before the election. Democrats, social conservatives say, are now unabashed in their support for the removal of God from the national conversation.

H/T: Evan McMorris-Santoro at TPM

thepoliticalfreakshow:

Fox News’ Charles Krauthammer didn’t like Bill Clinton’s convention speech. At all.

While so many commentators, including Republicans, praised the address as perhaps the best Clinton had ever given, the conservative columnist reassured Fox News viewers that not only had former president’s “self-indulgent” speech failed to soar, it had actually flopped  “beyond the hall.” 

According to Krauthammer, Clinton made his speech extra long just to annoy Obama; just to get back at him for defeating Hillary Clinton in the 2008 Democratic primary.

It was that kind of week in the right-wing media. As Democrats gathered in Charlotte to officially nominate Obama, the conservative press tapped into its bottomless reservoir of resentment and slowly came undone, while all the time insisting the Charlotte production was a big failure.

Packed with strange public pronouncements about “slave blood,” imprisoning the president, vaginas, aborting people, as well as rancid race-baiting, the right-wing Week in Review captured the unhinged element that powers the conservative movement on the eve of the final election push. And oh yeah, Fox’s Dick Morris said Bill Clinton actually wants Obama defeated but won’t say so because his “wife is a hostage” and “they’ll kill her” if Obama loses.

The reason the meltdown matters is because of the conservative media’s outsized influence within the GOP. Since Obama’s inauguration, the conservative movement has become, first and foremost, a media-based one. The Republican Party and its presidential campaign now take commands from the far-right press. And don’t forget, in May, Romney met for two hours with conspiracy-minded GOP bloggers to map out how the group could help his campaign.

This week, those conservative guiding lights couldn’t contain their visceral contempt for all things Democratic. And they didn’t even try. Rather than provide analysis (even the sharp-elbowed variety), commentators routinely stooped to embarrassing lows in an effort to tout their hatred.

There was CNN contributor Erick Erickson’s off the wall, anatomical convention comparison:

CNN’s Dana Loesch, wondering whether Democratic activist Sandra Fluke had been “aborted” from the convention lineup (she was not):

Accuracy in Media’s Don Irvine, tweeting misogynistic taunts, also aimed at Fluke:

Meanwhile, the Washington Post’s Jenifer Rubin opted for juvenile name-calling instead of analysis.

Then there was Rush Limbaugh, the proud Voice Of The GOP.

Limbaugh: Obama “Wasn’t Down With The Struggle. He Doesn’t Have Slave Blood.”

Limbaugh: Venue Change For Obama Speech Means He Can’t Fill “Black Panther Stadium”

Limbaugh: “Feminazis” Won’t Like Michelle Obama’s Speech Because “Loving Your Husband” Isn’t In Their “Playbook”

Has trolling for shock-value relevance ever been more awkward or more unsightly?

Another telltale element of the conservative coverage this week was the eager embrace of delusion; a very weird compulsion to misstate simple facts as a way to prop up the preferred GOP Noise Machine narrative that the Obama campaign is in free fall. (Nate Silver, the respected polling data-cruncher at the New York Times, currently gives Obama a 77 percent chance of being re-elected; not exactly the portrait of a campaign in decline.)

At Breitbart.com,  Mike Flynn rushed in this week to announce that “not many people saw” Michelle Obama’s convention speech and that the Democratic convention was attracting a drastically smaller audience, as compared to 2008. Flynn saw that as more proof that Obama’s campaign faced a “a very significant enthusiasm gap.”  

Right, except none of Flynn’s claims about the convention audience reflected the reality that 26 million viewers tuned in on the night Michelle Obama addressed the delegates, compared to the roughly 22 million who watched on the night Ann Romney spoke at the GOP convention. And instead of a shrinking audience this year, Democrats over the first two nights in Charlotte actually grew their convention audience as compared to 2008, according to rating estimates.

At Breitbart.com, the story being sold to partisan readers was that the Obama convention was a ratings flop. Nielsen numbers confirmed the opposite was true.

That type of obfuscation goes beyond loyal spin and enters a realm of aggressive delusion.

It was that kind of week for the right-wing press.

(via theweaversweb)

Tart-tongued Democratic Rep. Barney Frank mocked Mitt Romney’s claims that his private-sector success makes him the better candidate to revive the economy, deriding the Republican candidate as “Myth Romney” in a speech to the Democratic National Convention on Thursday.

Frank joked that Romney, who served as governor of Frank’s home state of Massachusetts, was portraying himself as a “superhero of job creation” and a “wizard of private-sector financial engineering.”

“What we should have had as governor was Myth Romney. Myth Romney is a wonderful private-sector executive” who successfully harnessed his skills to foster job growth in Massachusetts, Frank said.

“We would have seen that in Massachusetts, [but] in fact the record is that during his term our job growth was only about 1.4 percent, which was a quarter of the national average,” Frank said, adding that the state ranked 47th in job growth nationally.

“I wish Myth Romney had been governor of the state I lived in,” said Frank. “But we had Mitt Romney.”

h/t: Yahoo! News

I wish Myth Romney had been governor of the state I lived in. If it had been Myth Romney I’d probably be riding the commuter train from Bedford to Boston right now. But, we had Mitt Romney so we had to wait for the great Deval Patrick to get that started.
Representative Barney Frank (D-MA) on Tricky Mitt’s reign as Massachusetts Governor.

CHARLOTTE — Democrats finished a strong convention with President Obama’s speech on Thursday, but his address was the culmination of a variety of powerful themes set up by the previous night’s speakers and reinforced throughout.

Taken together, these fronts will define the final stage of the election, providing a guiding light for campaign ads, speeches and surrogates’ talking points in the weeks to come. Each is designed in its own way to appeal to different demographics — from the young and socially liberal to the old and the blue collar — to play up Obama’s strengths, and to exploit Romney’s softest spots — or reveal new ones.

• Obama Cares About You, Romney Cares About Balance Sheets

Perhaps even more than policy, what stood out in many of the biggest speeches was the idea that Obama cares — beyond just the term the GOP has used (and Democrats have sought to re-claim) to describe the Affordable Care Act.

Mitt Romney’s awkward, private and sometimes prickly personality has been one of his biggest vulnerabilities since his earliest days in politics. Democrats picked at this scab at every opportunity, portraying him as cold, calculating and at his core incapable of feeling for others because of his wealthy upbringing and wealthier career in business. For contrast, they played up Obama’s own empathy, connecting many of his policies directly to his humble roots.

A Ted Kennedy tribute film showed Romney running as a pro-choice candidate in 1994. It resonated not because it made Romney appear like a closet moderate, but because it made him appear soulless and unprincipled.

• Economic Patriotism

Every convention needs some red meat, and this was it for the Democrats. The convention featured a number of populist barnburners, each portraying Romney as out of touch with average Americans and actively disdainful of the nation’s values.

Not surprisingly, Romney’s foreign assets advanced the theme. Former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland zeroed in on the issue for one of the biggest applause lines of the week.

“Mitt Romney has so little economic patriotism that even his money needs a passport,” Strickland said Wednesday. “In Matthew, Chapter 6, Verse 21, the scriptures teach us that where your treasure is, there will your heart be also. My friends, any man who aspires to be our president should keep both his treasure and his heart in the United States of America.”

• Romney’s Untested Foreign Policy

Foreign policy hasn’t figured big in this election — Romney didn’t even feel compelled to mention Afghanistan in his convention address. But Democrats brought it back in a major way at their own gathering, opening a new front attacking Romney and Paul Ryan as dangerously inexperienced.

This angle figured most prominently in the convention’s final night. Sen. John Kerry set the table with a speech that figuratively and literally echoed the attacks lobbed at him at the 2004 Republican convention, accusing Romney of flip-flopping over Afghanistan and Libya.

“Mr. Romney — here’s a little advice,” Kerry said. “Before you debate Barack Obama on foreign policy, you better finish the debate with yourself!”

Biden retold the decision to go after Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, and depicted Romney as weak and vacillating.

Finally, Obama pushed Romney on foreign policy as forcefully as anyone.

“My opponent and his running mate … are new to foreign policy,” he said. “But from all that we’ve seen and heard, they want to take us back to an era of blustering and blundering that cost America so dearly.”

In another sharp line, Obama brought up Romney’s much-criticized trip abroad last month, in which he drew condemnations from British leaders for disparaging their Olympic preparation.

“You might not be ready for diplomacy with Beijing if you can’t visit the Olympics without insulting our closest ally,” Obama said.

H/T: Benjy Sarlin at TPM

Last night during Sandra Fluke’s speech at the DNC, radical right-wing moron Dana Loesch took to her twitter account to attack Flukeas expected. She also attacked former Texas Governor Ann Richards’s daughter, Cecile, simply because she is the President of Planned Parenthood. Not surprising given Loesch’s repeated and vehement anti-choice rhetoric.

(Cross-posted from DanaBusted.blogspot.com)

Eight years ago in Boston, I introduced you to a state senator from Illinois with a name that was hard to pronounce. Four years ago in Denver, I asked you to give him our party’s nomination for president. Tonight in Charlotte, I ask you to join me in giving President Barack Obama four more years to finish the job he started.

I was there that cold January afternoon when Barack Obama lifted his hand from Abraham Lincoln’s Bible and looked out on an America facing an economic collapse. These last four years have been hard. Too many families are still hurting. But today, our economy is beginning to recover, jobs are returning, businesses are expanding and America is coming back.

Our friends in the other party have a theory about America. They tell us we’re all in this alone. They say builders never need a helping hand. Democrats know better. America knows better. History and this president have shown us we are stronger when we are all in this together.

Come to Belvidere, Illinois and meet 5,000 proud Chrysler UAW workers. Some said let GM and Chrysler go bankrupt. President Obama said let those workers go back to work. Meet the working families all across our nation who will finally have a chance for affordable health care and college loans. And I am proud of our president’s fight for justice for women in the workplace and ending the discrimination of “don’t ask, don’t tell” in our military. Eleven years ago, I authored the DREAM Act. It took President Obama to finally bring these kids out of the shadows and into the America they have always called home.

One hundred and fifty years ago, another president from Illinois brought justice to his day with the Emancipation Proclamation. His critics told him he had gone too far and he should undo what he had done. But Lincoln said, “I hope to stand firm enough not to go backwards.” We cannot build a better, stronger, fairer America by walking backwards. We must walk forward, together. With President Obama in the White House, we will. President Obama: Your values, your vision, your commitment to a just America are still worth fighting for.

h/t: HuffPo

My recap of the DNC by day. <3 the Dems.

Day 1 | Day 2  | Day 3

Top 5 speeches:

1. Barack Obama
2. John Kerry
3. Jennifer Granholm
4. Joe Biden
5. John Lewis
Close Calls: Barney Frank, Eva Longoria, Tammy Baldwin, Charlie Crist, Scarlett Johansson

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — There were no fireworks on Thursday night — at least not of the literal variety. There were no Greek columns or open-air stadiums surrounded by majestic mountains. There were no calls for a new type of politics or for a turning of the page on the George W. Bush administration.

There was some glitz, some Hollywood stars and immaculate stagecraft. But the idea that a presidential candidate could himself become the embodiment of change was replaced with something less lofty but, perhaps, just as politically poignant. When President Barack Obama addressed the Democratic National Convention here at 10:25 p.m., both he and the crowd were animated by protectiveness for what’s been accomplished so far in his presidency and hope to build on those achievements.

It was reflected not just in the tone of the week — from a rousing and unexpected defense of the president’s health care law on Tuesday night, to an invocation of the GOP-maligned clean energy subsidies, to a repeated reference to Vice President Joe Biden’s favorite line “bin-Laden is dead and General Motors is alive” — but in the arc of Obama’s speech as well.

“I recognize that times have changed since I first spoke to this convention,” Obama said. “The times have changed –- and so have I. I’m no longer just a candidate. I’m the president.

“I know what it means to send young Americans into battle, for I have held in my arms the mothers and fathers of those who didn’t return. I’ve shared the pain of families who’ve lost their homes, and the frustration of workers who’ve lost their jobs. If the critics are right that I’ve made all my decisions based on polls, then I must not be very good at reading them. And while I’m proud of what we’ve achieved together, I’m far more mindful of my own failings, knowing exactly what Lincoln meant when he said, ‘I have been driven to my knees many times by the overwhelming conviction that I had no place else to go.’” 

“America,” Obama offered at the conclusion of his speech, “I never said this journey would be easy, and I won’t promise that now. Yes, our path is harder — but it leads to a better place. Yes our road is longer — but we travel it together. We don’t turn back.”

“Day after day, night after night, I sat beside him, as he made one gutsy decision after another — to stop the slide and reverse it,” said Vice President Joe Biden, in remarks that set the stage for the president’s address. “I watched him stand up to intense pressure and stare down choices of enormous consequence. Most of all, I saw what drove him: His profound concern for the American people.”

In one of the most rousing one-liners of the night, Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) reminded Americans of the president’s top national security accomplishment while deftly skewering a top Republican talking point.

“Ask Osama bin Laden if he is better off now than he was four years ago,” said the 2004 Democratic presidential nominee.

Obama himself didn’t mention the economic stimulus he pushed early in office. But former President Bill Clinton made that defense the night before. On Thursday, meanwhile, veterans, auto workers, college students and gay rights advocates all appeared on stage to thank the president for what he’s done. Former Michigan governor Jennifer Granholm credited Obama with making the “tough calls” that saved the American auto industry. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) was brought on stage to talk, in part, about the dangers of repealing financial regulatory reform, but he meandered hopelessly off-script and ended up lampooning Mitt Romney’s record in Massachusetts instead.

“After all that we’ve been through, I don’t believe that rolling back regulations on Wall Street will help the small businesswoman expand, or the laid-off construction worker keep his home. We have been there, we’ve tried that, and we’re not going back,” said Obama. “We are moving forward.”

The comments concluded a three-day convention that was equal parts proudly unapologetic about the president’s record and hostile to Mitt Romney’s. There were mishaps: one self-inflicted (platform language over Jerusalem’s status as the capital of Israel), the other a force of nature (concerns over thunderstorms forced the campaign to move the final night into the much more confined Time Warner Cable Arena). But by the count of most observers, including some Republicans, it was a bigger hit than the GOP conventions that preceded it.

“If you turn away now — if you buy into the cynicism that the change we fought for isn’t possible — well, change will not happen,” said Obama. “If you give up on the idea that your voice can make a difference, then other voices will fill the void: lobbyists and special interests; the people with the $10 million checks who are trying to buy this election and those who are making it harder for you to vote; Washington politicians who want to decide who you can marry, or control health care choices that women should be making for themselves.

“Only you can make sure that doesn’t happen,” he urged. “Only you have the power to move us forward.” 

h/t: Sam Stein and Amanda Terkel at HuffPo 

CHARLOTTE, N.C.—Vice President Joe Biden has famously distilled President Barack Obama’s argument for re-election to a simple phrase: “Osama Bin Laden is dead, and General Motors is alive.” On Thursday evening, the scrappy former senator delighted Democrats gathered at their national convention in Charlotte with a long-form version of that slogan.

Speaking from his “ringside seat” to Obama’s struggles since January 2009, Biden praised the president he has watched at work and told Americans worried about the still-sputtering economy that “America has turned the corner.”

“Yes, the work of recovery is not yet complete, but we are on our way,” said Biden. “The journey of hope is not yet finished, but we are on our way. The cause of change is not fully accomplished, but we are on our way. So I say to you tonight, with absolute confidence, America’s best days are ahead of us, and, yes, we are on our way.”

he vice president roughed up Mitt Romney, suggesting that the former Massachusetts governor would have failed both the GM and the bin Laden tests (though it’s worth noting that Biden himself has said he opposed the bin Laden raid).

He cited Romney’s comment that it was not worth “moving heaven and earth” to get the elusive al-Qaida mastermind. And he savaged the Republican standard-bearer for opposing the auto bailout.

After noting that Romney’s father, George Romney, had led American Motors, Biden said that Romney opposed the rescue because “he saw it the Bain way,” a reference to Bain Capital, the private equity firm Romney founded and built into an investment powerhouse.

“I mean this sincerely, I think he saw it in balance sheets. And write-offs,” said Biden. “Folks, the Bain way may bring your firm the highest profits. But it’s not the way to lead your country from its highest office.”

“President Obama and Governor Romney they’re both loving husbands they’re both devoted fathers. But let’s be straight. they bring a vastly different vision and a vastly different values set to the job,” the vice president said.

h/t: Yahoo! News 

The Obama family. #obama2012 #obama #barackobama #maliaobama #michelleobama #sashaobama (Taken with Instagram)

We know that churches and charities can often make more of a difference than a poverty program alone. We don’t want handouts for people who refuse to help themselves, and we don’t want bailouts for banks that break the rules. We don’t think government can solve all our problems. But we don’t think that government is the source of all our problems – any more than are welfare recipients, or corporations, or unions, or immigrants, or gays, or any other group we’re told to blame for our troubles.
stop blaming welfare recipients, unions, immigrants, gays for your problems.
A good quote from Barack Obama