2024 Democratic Convention in Chicago... 1968 Again?

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Previous post from 5/13/24:

:colin:warning-- bibliophiles can get by from just reading the bolded text.


The DNC Is Preparing for the Worst in Chicago — Without the Help of the City’s Mayor​

As Democrats plan their convention, they’ll have to address the elephant in the room: How to mitigate the threat of disruptions and work with a rookie mayor who unabashedly sympathizes with the protesters.

CHICAGO — President Joe Biden’s top advisers are all too aware the ghosts of 1968 may haunt their convention here, but they’re grappling with a pair of more urgent and thoroughly modern-day challenges as summer nears: How far can they go in reprising their virtual 2020 convention to mitigate the threat of disruption inside the arena, and how will they navigate a rookie mayor who unabashedly sympathizes with protesters?

Trumpeting the success of their Covid-era convention four years ago, some in Biden’s orbit are aggressively pushing to make the 2024 conclave a hybrid production. That would mean in-person speeches from the president, party luminaries and rising stars to draw television attention alongside a mix of pre-recorded testimonials and videos from other parts of the country.

The goal: drive maximum viewership on television and the internet while minimizing live programming and openings for protest in Chicago’s United Center. This would mean moving party business, such as rules and platform votes, off the floor and denying would-be demonstrators a chance to seize on contentious debates.

While the Biden campaign, White House and convention planners have only just started hatching plans, senior Democrats tell me they’re discussing whether to conduct such business before the convention even begins or move it out of the arena and across town to McCormick Place, their other Chicago venue. Serendipitously, Biden’s advisers may have a very good reason to move up such housekeeping: If the Ohio Legislature does not relax its ballot certification deadline, which is before the Democrats’ August convention, the DNC may have no choice but to technically nominate the president before the conclave begins.

Also under consideration for Chicago: reviving the pre-taped delegation roll call from each state featured in 2020.

Not only were the clips memorable — who could forget the Rhode Island chef standing on a state beach with a plate of calamari — but a video montage also means one less opportunity for hot mic spontaneity, and therefore disruption, from 50 states and territories worth of delegates.

“If there is one peep in that hall, the networks will be all over it,” a convention planner lamented.

The challenge, of course, is that the delegates attending and, more to the point, the donors financing the convention expect the rites of an in-person convention.
The political convention industrial complex remains strong after centuries of tradition, no matter how much the operative class relished having total control over what was effectively a multi-day commercial four years ago.

So with campus protests over the war in Gaza raging and Biden being disrupted nearly everywhere he goes, Chicago’s organizers are plotting on how to preempt opportunities for heckling and quickly tamp down demonstrators who do get into the arena.

William M. Daley, the former Commerce secretary and son and brother of Chicago mayors, has urged top Biden officials to install a capable convention chair who knows how to wield a gavel and can restore order as needed, I’m told. One obvious possibility is Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi and another is Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who before entering Congress was speaker of the California Assembly.

Convention planners are also considering a different chair for each night of the convention, to both share the burden and showcase as much of the party’s talent as possible.

For all the 1968 clips now being replayed of Chicago police clashing with protesters, it’s the prospect of disorder outside and inside the arena this summer that so alarms Democrats, because either display could hand Republicans fodder.

“The mayor owns the street but the party owns the inside,” Daley told me. “What happens inside the hall is reflective of our party.”

As Daley knows well, it wasn’t just the Grant Park images that conveyed chaos to the American voter. It was broadcasters Mike Wallace and Dan Rather being jostled at the convention, the latter of whom prompted Walter Cronkite on live television to denounce the floor managers as “a bunch of thugs.”


And while people are well aware of the video where then-Mayor Richard J. Daley mouths profanities at Abraham Ribicoff for accusing the police of using “Gestapo tactics in the streets of Chicago,” what’s less remembered is when the Wisconsin delegation used their turn in the roll call to propose suspending the convention and moving it elsewhere. Then-House Majority Leader Carl Albert struggled to keep control of the floor and was replaced as chair by up-and-coming Chicago lawmaker Dan Rostenkowski.

Democrats are quick to point out this is not 1968, when Americans were being drafted, or even 2016, when Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders’ bitter clash led to a summer convention that included thousands of unhappy Sanders delegates. The number of delegates who are attending as “uncommitted” — the write-in protest used by Democrats angry over Biden’s handling of Gaza — will only be in the dozens.

“They’re going to be so small in numbers, this is not like 2016 or even 2008, with the PUMAs,” said former DNC Chair Donna Brazile, alluding to the Hillary Clinton diehards who refused to back Barack Obama and created a vivid acronym for Party Unity My Ass.

What alarms some Democratic strategists is the evolution of this era’s protests. Protesters are savvier — they’ve managed to get inside dozens of events featuring the president and vice president — and their demonstrations also include some bad actors who are determined to provoke a reaction.

In anticipation of some protesters obtaining tickets, convention organizers said they’ll stage a war room and be prepared to drown them out with chants — “four more years” is always a standby — and block any banners with Biden-Harris signs.

That’s all how to manage the convention itself.

Just as complicated is how to handle the protesters beyond the walls of the United Center.


There’s already a joke going around Democratic strategist circles that the main difference between 2024 and 1968 is that the Chicago mayor this year will be on the side of the protesters, not the cops.

Forty-eight-year-old Brandon Johnson, who was elected mayor last year after incumbent Lori Lightfoot failed to even make the runoff, was an organizer with the Chicago Teachers Union and has yet to fully make the jump from activist to mayor of one of America’s largest cities.

It’s ironic because soon after he became mayor, he hosted DNC Chair Jaime Harrison for lunch and, according to a Democrat familiar with the conversation, immediately pronounced that “nobody else represents the city but me.” He also asked if Harrison would have his back as a fellow Black man (Harrison, I’m told, tried to delicately explain that the convention would be a partnership between the party, the city and the state of Illinois).

“If there’s any mayor that understands the value of protest and demonstration, it’s me,” Johnson told reporters earlier this week at a groundbreaking, dismissing a question about Sen. Dick Durbin’s (D-Ill.) concerns over unrest in the city during the convention. Johnson said, “Without protests and real demands of a government, people of color and women do not have a place in society.”

More striking was how Johnson responded to whether he thought it was appropriate for police to have been dispatched last weekend to a protest at one of Chicago’s art museums. He spoke in a detached manner — the museum “made that request and the police department reacted,” the mayor said — evading the question and leaving the impression he somehow wasn’t in charge of the city and its police department.

Johnson praised the importance of protecting free speech and initially said that was paramount to safety, which he called “second most important,” before seeming to recognize his error.

When I asked him what his vision of a successful Democratic convention looked like, Johnson repeated the same formulation — “safe, vibrant and energetic” — before saying he wanted young people to “see what democracy really looks like.”

At no point did he mention Joe Biden or the importance of the convention in helping the president’s reelection.

It was an eye-opening exchange. And it made clear why so many Democrats, in Chicago and beyond, respond to questions about Johnson with a sigh and hope that he’ll recognize the weight of this moment, both for his career, the city and the country.

Exacerbating matters, Johnson and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who lobbied the White House relentlessly for the convention, have a strained relationship. They’ve disagreed on issues from immigration to a new, subsidized stadium for the Chicago Bears.

When I first saw the governor and mayor earlier in the week, it was at the Field Museum for an unveiling of an exhibit on a newly discovered bird fossil. As the two sat in the front row before the event got underway, just a single seat separating them, they looked straight ahead in silence and did not speak to one another in the way politicians of the same party almost always do in such moments.

With the demise of longtime Illinois Democratic boss (and state house speaker) Michael Madigan, though, there’s no semblance of a political machine here. What’s left is Pritzker, a billionaire who’s won two terms and can bankroll the party, and a handful of public employee unions, most notably the teachers from which Johnson emerged.

The best Democrats could say about the Johnson-Pritzker dynamic was that, well, at least it’s not as bad as the Andrew Cuomo-Bill de Blasio relationship in New York.

“It’s an event that’s critical to the Democratic Party, so we’re all going to work together to make it a success,” Cook County President Toni Preckwinkle, a veteran of Chicago’s political wars, told me when I asked about the mayor and the governor.

Preckwinkle was far less enthused about a disruptive cacophony of free expression in the city. While noting she was “old enough to have been in a lot of anti-war marches,” she said that although people are free to protest, “the challenge, of course, is when people decide that expressing their opinion involves impeding other people’s ability to go to work, or go to school or acts of vandalism.”

Senior Democrats made clear they’ll mostly lean on Pritzker and his canny chief of staff, Anne Caprara, this summer.

The governor already prevailed in a proxy war with the mayor over who would run the host committee. Pritzker installed another of his lieutenants to oversee the local organization that helps put on the conclave along with the convention directors, national party and Biden campaign. Johnson was, though, able to make a member of his inner circle a senior adviser to the host committee as part of an agreement to keep peace between the mayor and governor.

It’s a détente Pritzker is eager to sustain, at least through August.

Asked at the groundbreaking this week if he was open to calling in the National Guard for the convention, the governor said he didn’t think “we’ll need it.” But Pritzker made sure to note the Chicago police had jurisdiction and he’d only call in the guard if “the city asks us to — it would be completely inappropriate to just march into a city.”

 
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:popcorn:

Chicago Wilding out.
Don't they know about Trump and his evil Republicans!?
Man, you should change your name to One Note On Deck! @Stay On Repeat

You and I agree about the Democrats— where you and the hosts of that clip I posted depart is you fail to comprehend that the Republicans really are evil.

Two things can be true at once. Democrats are terrible for always using Republicans as an excuse, sometimes being just as bad, sometimes being corrupt and cowardly. And Republicans really can be just as bad as they say.

They get a couple more Supreme Court nominations and that’s the end of progress for our entire lives. It ain’t quite “They’re gonna put yall back in chains” and Biden is a dumbass for talking like that, but it isn’t total fiction either (consequences as far as mass incarceration, equal opportunity, etc).
 
merlin_175839456_7a4c7216-51f2-4b1c-af06-9b0f2e724245-articleLarge.jpg

Trumpeting the success of their Covid-era convention four years ago, some in Biden’s orbit are aggressively pushing to make the 2024 conclave a hybrid production. That would mean in-person speeches from the president, party luminaries and rising stars to draw television attention alongside a mix of pre-recorded testimonials and videos from other parts of the country.

The goal: drive maximum viewership on television and the internet while minimizing live programming and openings for protest in Chicago’s United Center. This would mean moving party business, such as rules and platform votes, off the floor and denying would-be demonstrators a chance to seize on contentious debates.

I hope I am gone by then, these political rallies are the pinnacle of American hypocrisy. Don't chase after me or cling on, I find the people they got in the DNC are repulsive.
 
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DNC plans to hold virtual roll call to nominate Biden before convention​


The Democratic National Committee is planning to hold a virtual roll call ahead of the party’s August convention to nominate President Joe Biden in order to meet an Ohio ballot access deadline.

The move comes after the Republican-controlled Ohio legislature failed to pass legislation to move back the state’s August 7 deadline for political parties to submit their official nominees. The Democratic convention is taking place August 19-22.

“Joe Biden will be on the ballot in Ohio and all 50 states, and Ohio Republicans agree,” DNC Chairman Jaime Harrison said in a statement Tuesday. “But when the time has come for action, they have failed to act every time, so Democrats will land this plane on our own.”

The decision by the DNC comes after Republican Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine last week called for a special session starting Tuesday to pass legislation to fix the ballot issue.

The DNC’s plans were first reported by the Columbus Dispatch and the Washington Post.

A virtual roll call would resolve an ongoing struggle between the Biden campaign and GOP officials in the Buckeye State. Last month, legal counsel for Ohio’s Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose warned the campaign that the convention, when the party is expected to formally nominate Biden, will occur after the state’s certification deadline.

Democrats held a remote vote before the convention during the pandemic in 2020. Under that process, delegates were sent individualized ballots, with all votes cast and counted before the convention officially began. During the convention, the party played a virtual roll call which featured videos and live shots from around the country.

The party is planning to formally introduce a resolution to allow for a virtual roll call next week, before sending the measure for a vote by the whole committee.

In previous cycles, early certification deadlines were resolved without much fanfare. States have either accepted provisional certification from the parties ahead of their conventions or passed legislation to move back the deadline to accommodate late conventions.

Earlier this month, Alabama’s Republican-led legislature moved back the deadline to clear the way for Biden to make the ballot there. Officials in Washington, which also has an earlier deadline than most states, said they would accept a provisional certification.

Ohio officials declined to accept a provisional certification and efforts to resolve the issue legislatively failed. State lawmakers in Ohio voted to move back the deadline ahead of the 2012 and 2020 party conventions.

Holding a virtual roll call is one of several options Democrats weighed to keep Biden on the ballot. While holding part of the convention virtually could distract from the in-person activities, it is less contentious than a possible legal challenge. Legislative efforts failed after Ohio Republicans sought to extract concessions from Democrats.

And while Ohio is no longer a presidential swing state – former President Donald Trump won there in 2020 by 8 points – Biden’s presence on the ballot could be decisive in down ballot races, including Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown’s reelection bid.


 


I’m surprised to see Obama speaking earlier in the week than Bill Clinton. Maybe they wanted not to have Clintons speak on back to back nights.


 
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The ‘Killer Kamala’ Convention​

William McGurn, Wall Street Journal

While Kamala Harris spoke to campaign donors inside San Francisco’s Fairmont Hotel on Sunday, protesters expressed their displeasure outside: “Killer Kamala, you can’t hide, we charge you with genocide,” they chanted. Variations of the same jingle dogged her at rallies last week, from Las Vegas to Detroit.

The San Francisco Chronicle estimated the crowd at roughly 250. That’s only a fraction of what awaits her next week in Chicago, where tens of thousands of activists will be in town for the Democratic National Convention. They are showing up to hold Ms. Harris to account for the Biden administration’s policy in Gaza, where they accuse Israel of “genocide” against the Palestinian people.

“Democratic Party leadership switching out their presidential nominee does not wash the blood of over 50,000 Palestinians off their hands,” reads a statement from the March on the DNC 2024, one of the coalitions behind the planned protests. All that has changed is the groups’ target.
With President Biden’s withdrawal from the race, “Genocide Joe” has given way to “Killer Kamala.”

At a rally in Detroit last Wednesday, Ms. Harris took on protesters after they interrupted her with genocide accusations. “You know what?” she said. “If you want Donald Trump to win, say that. Otherwise I am speaking.”

There’s her dilemma. Ms. Harris is trying to quiet protesters on her left flank who would probably vote for her if it weren’t for Gaza. The problem is that the protesters don’t believe deflecting to Donald Trump is any kind of answer to their concerns about the vice president’s complicity in “genocide.” Zainab Hakim, one of the activists who interrupted Ms. Harris in Detroit, put it this way in an interview with Mother Jones: “What people seem to be forgetting is that she’s not just like some random person who decided to run for president. She has been the vice president for all 300-plus days of this genocide, and could have said something in all of that time. She deliberately chose not to do that.”

Such protesters intend to make Ms. Harris pay for it at the convention.
While party leaders hope for a show of unity, protests—especially if they are accompanied by chaos and violence—would paint a different picture for millions of Americans watching from their living rooms. Meanwhile, although Ms. Harris has taken a harsher tone toward Israel than Mr. Biden, her policy is largely the same, including rejecting the protestors’ demand for an arms embargo against the Jewish state.

Meanwhile, a virtual who’s who of the far left is planning for Chicago. Those groups range from Code Pink, the Democratic Socialists of America and the U.S. Palestinian Community Network, who have rallied under the March on the DNC coalition, to the Poor Peoples Army, Thank God for Abortion and Jewish Voice for Peace Chicago, which are part of the Bodies Outside of Unjust Laws coalition. The latter has been given a permit for its own march. These groups have different priorities and don’t operate in lockstep, but almost all have included Gaza in their protest messaging. Many have been haggling with the city over permits.

In a February ruling by an administrative judge upholding the city’s denial of one permit, an activist is quoted as saying that organizers are determined to have a “family friendly” protest. If so it would be one of the first. From Columbia University to Washington’s Union Station, anti-Israel protests have often been accompanied by vandalism, intimidation and, sometimes, clashes with police.

With less than a week before the DNC begins, it all ties back to an issue the Harris campaign thought it had put to rest by selecting Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate. Mr. Walz has explicitly rejected the centrist label and, in the recent “White Dudes for Kamala” Zoom call, said Democrats shouldn’t “shy away from our progressive values.”

Unfortunately for Democrats, the cause that most excites progressives this election is Gaza. For them Ms. Harris’s choice of Mr. Walz, not to mention her own progressive past, only highlights her hypocrisy. Even worse for her, at least some protesters see the Democrats’ 1968 Chicago convention as their model. That was the year a Democratic Party divided by the Vietnam War nominated Hubert Humphrey while outside the convention television cameras captured images of cops beating protesters.

Before Ms. Harris announced Mr. Walz as her running mate, the odds-on favorite was Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro. He seemed a moderate from a swing state who could temper Ms. Harris’s image as a San Francisco liberal. Yet she went with Mr. Walz, apparently believing it was more important to avoid angering the party’s left-wing base than to appeal to moderate working-class Democrats and independents in Midwestern battleground states.

In Chicago next week, we’ll see how protesters reward her for it.

 

What's on the agenda?​

Each day of the convention features a theme related to the tagline, "For the People, For Our Future." Monday's theme is centered on the "For the People" element, where the party will outline how they argue Democrats have put the people first under the Biden-Harris administration while contrasting the record and the Harris-Walz ticket with former President Donald Trump's record.

Mr. Biden's time in office and decades in Washington are also expected to be featured prominently on Monday, as the party seeks to honor the president — and his decision to step aside — while celebrating its new standard bearer.

Anita Dunn, a former senior adviser to Mr. Biden who left the White House last month to join the main super PAC supporting Harris, said the president sees his role in the campaign as "volunteer-in-chief" and is determined to ensure Trump is defeated in November.

"Where we are today is a unified party that is excited, that is energized, that is looking forward but also recognizes that this is a very tough race and that we have to go out and do the work and win it," she said in an interview with "CBS Mornings" before the convention kicked off Monday.

Convention programming will be held from 6:15 p.m. to 11 p.m. ET, or 5:15 p.m. to 10 p.m. CT, on Monday. The ceremonial roll call vote is slated to begin on Tuesday, when delegates from around the country will come together to nominate Harris.

Who's speaking?​

While the official schedule has not yet been released, convention officials have confirmed a handful of speakers who are set to kick off the first day of the convention.

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson will address the convention Monday night, as will first lady Jill Biden and Mr. Biden, who will deliver the keynote address on the first night. A source familiar with the planning also told CBS News that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the party's 2016 nominee, is also expected to speak on Monday night.

How to watch the 2024 DNC without cable​

CBS News 24/7 will have coverage of the convention throughout the day and will stream each night's keynote speeches, and can also be viewed on your mobile or streaming device. A livestream of the convention will be available on the DNC's website, along with platforms like Instagram, YouTube and TikTok.

 
She has called for a permanent cease fire, she currently is the VP and her hands are tied as to else she can do until she becomes president. As a candidate she has met with the large Palestinian communities in Michigan and Illinois, so what more do they want her to do. This protest just further proves how historically black people globally have been in solidarity with the Palestinian struggle from Malcolm, Huey, Mandela, to Malema. From my experience most of these people are not truly on the side of Palestine and just anti black. The consider themselves Arabs (ask any of them from the North African countries and the will identify as Arabs, not African)who set up shop in our communities and leach off us just like the Chinese and the Jews.

 
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Not true.


Mar 3, 2024 — The vice president urged Hamas to agree to a six-week cease-fire proposal and called on Israel to increase the flow of aid into the enclave.
Nice try. You post something from March. How about her most recent statements. More disinformation being spread on this platform.
 
Nice try. You post something from March. How about her most recent statements. More disinformation being spread on this platform.

How about you post where she called for a PERMANENT ceasefire?

I'll apologize if I'm wrong... But I'm not.

I posted one sentence which included the date of the article and your dumbass calls the news I shared disinformation because of the date. :smh:
 
Dems project images on Trump Tower ahead of DNC

Trump International Hotel and Tower is the 2nd-tallest building in Chicago

By Michael Lee Fox News
August 18, 2024


DNC-projects-images-on-Trump-Tower-in-Chicago.jpg

The Democratic National Committee projects images on Trump Tower in Chicago, on the eve of the Democrats' national convention, on August 18, 2024
 
No, if you define aftermath of the war.
Reading is in the details.
“And she also argued at the time that the administration needed to begin making “day after” plans for how to handle the aftermath of the war.”


“The first phase of the deal would bring about a full ceasefire, including a withdrawal of the Israeli military from population centers in Gaza. In the second phase, the Israeli military would withdraw from Gaza entirely, and it would lead to a permanent end to the hostilities.”
 
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Ex-Sniper Who Infiltrated The KKK, Reveals What The Group Secretly Talks About
August 18, 2024

Ex-Army sniper and FBI informant Joe Moore, who infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan, says the group's members discuss using violence to take over the country in private.

 
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