Small signs

During Hillary Clinton's speech on Tuesday, you probably saw that sea of posters bearing her name being waved by enthusiastic convention delegates. It was a very cinematic moment, big, dazzling, and generally considered a very fitting tribute to the woman who remains the pivot of this election.

It's the small print that gives a hint of how unified this party actually is.

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Agitating in Denver

One key reason why our team travelled to enver was to bang the drum and toot the horns on our top electoral goal in this state in this cycle, liberating the state Senate from its anachronistic republican majority. Bloggers at the national level as a rule don't pay too close attention to state politics, but in this case, we may have been able to change that, because this state election will have profound consequences far beyond our borders. Simply put, if the third-largest state of the country suddenly becomes a laboratory for Progressive policies after this election, much as we became one after Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected in 1928, it will resonate far beyond places like Islip and Poughkeepsie.

Consider, for example, the impact of Democratic control of this state on the financial sector, not a marginal consideration given that the country's largest banks are headquartered here and transact a disproportionate share of their business from their Wall Street offices and the New York Stock Exchange. That mortgage lending crisis didn't need to happen - and if we had had control of the Senate, it might not have.

These are the seeds of our national communications strategy: imagine a second California enacting Progressive goals and benchmarks for its territory, and then think about the impact of, say, California's vehicle efficiency standards on other states. In practice, Sacramento has provided something of a balance to Washington's rabid republicans, and Albany can do the same.

We as New Yorkers know that Joe Robach, Caesar Trunzo, Kemp Hannon and Dean Skelos are figures we'd like to not see in public office. People outside the state - and, in fairness, many of us even, due to the legislature's low profile - don't have the same appreciation of that. But hopefully, we have now changed that with a key constituency.

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Poor Mitt

I'm actually sitting in Barry Goldwater Airport in Phoenix, Arizona, and it's really fun to be writing about John McCain from his own home turf. Or the turf that some of his homes rest on, apparently.

This morning, John McCain announced the choice of his running mate, Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska. Trapper John calls the choice Worse Than Quayle. The New York Times says Old Man John is "shaking up the political world at a time when his campaign has been trying to attract women."

What's truly remarkable here is just how much Hillary Clinton continues to form the political dialogue of the Presidential race. From the lavish praise heaped on her in Obama's aceptance speech yesterday to now providing the obvious rationale for John McCain's selection of a potential chief executive - Booman notes John McCain's age and health issues, impolite, but necessary - Hillary Clinton is still driving the narrative of this campaign.

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In 2012, how about a new head for our delegation?

This year, the head of the New York delegation to the convention is, as he has been every four years since 1996, Sheldon Silver, the Speaker of the Assembly.

The man can't give a decent speech to save his life. How well he represents a state on the cusp of real change, given his ironfisted control of the Assembly, with all that implies - abysmal approval ratings, legislative gridlock, unaccountable legislators, the most dysfunctional state government in the union - is open to question. Whether Sheldon Silver is really the face we want to present to the world, when we have real superstars - Hillary Clinton, Chuck Schumer - really isn't debatable. He's not. If it's possible to exude stasis, Silver has managed it.

The head of the New York State Democratic Party is David Paterson, the governor. He should be the one to lead the party to the next convention.

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Seen...

Senator Schumer with Markos Moulitsas and contributing editor brownsox of Daily Kos.

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Liberation, maybe

The narratives emerging from last night's nomination spectacle are complex, but here's one that may be overlooked amidst all the unity hype and Clinton genuflection: speaker after speaker drew an arc of emancipation that stretched from women through native Americans to blacks and, now finally included in the line-up, gays and lesbians. John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, Bill Clinton, Joe Biden, all mentioned the fight for equality that has taken gays and lesbians out of the shadows of American life, and embedded it firmly in the long history of other Americans fighting for equality before the law.

Considering that history - Bill Clinton signed the so-called Defense of Marriage Act, a discriminatory piece of legislation unconstitutional on its face, and even ran ads campaigning on that signature - that's a remarkable development.

And today, on the 45th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King's I Have a Dream Speech, as America somewhat disbelieving prepares to elevate a black person to the pinnacle of power, the American family continues to expand. There's still a rocky road ahead, and we may never reach the conclusion of it; it's naive, for example, to believe that Barack Obama's nomination alone will exorcise forever the demons of racism. But today, this great, troubled nation of ours stands on the mountaintop and looks towards a promised land.

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Convention observations

Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, rehearsing his glittering oratory.

Harlem Senator Bill Perkins, one of Obama's original (and at the time, few) backers in New York, in the Pepsi Center, having the last laugh.

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Inside the Big Tent

Governor Deval Patrick (D-MA) liveblogging.

Governor Christine Gregoire (D-WA), addressing the hippies bloggers.

Senator Jon Tester, Democrat of Montana.

And here's our very own Deni Frand.

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Craig Johnson in Denver

Via Albany Project, Craig Johnson in Denver.


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Deadenders detected in Denver

Oh, here they are: Hillary deadenders, traitors and republicans, chanting on the streets. Not ready to move on, apparently.


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Michael Bouldin is a consultant to the NY DSCC on web strategy and netroots stuff. Rock Hackshaw consults with Congressman Ed Towns' re-election campaign. Liza Sabater has recently done work on Norman Siegel's campaign for Public Advocate. Mole333 is a member of the board of IND and a member of the Brooklyn Democratic Committee.

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Only in New York

Just as dispiriting, party regulars chose as the convicted Norman's successor Assemblyman Vito Lopez, an old-time ward heeler from Bushwick who has never shown a zeal for reform until, gee whiz, now. He vows the party will consult a panel of learned men and women, such as Brooklyn Law School's dean, about picking quality judges.

We've seen this movie before, and the ending stinks. Two years ago, Norman and party district leaders, Lopez included, pledged they would never support a candidate for a judgeship who had not been approved by an independent screening commission. This year, for the first time, the panel reviewed Civil Court candidates.

And guess what? The party shoehorned two lawyers onto the bench without any screening. Kenny Sherman, son of district leader Roberta Sherman, will get a 10-year Civil Court term without so much as a primary. And Canarsie Assemblyman Frank Seddio was awarded an uncontested ballot line for Surrogate's Court. So much for quality control. So much for keeping your word.

Daily News (quoted from "It Takes a Blogger")