Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
What to Watch: Democrats Open a New Kind of Convention
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 4 years ago on
August 17, 2020

Share

ATLANTA — The Democratic Party will convene, sort of, amid a pandemic that has upended the usual pomp-and-circumstance of presidential nominating conventions.

Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez will be in Milwaukee, which he’d chosen as the 2020 convention host city. But presidential candidate Joe Biden and his running mate, Kamala Harris, won’t be. Nor will the 57 state and territorial delegations, party activists and media hordes that would have filled a downtown arena to see Biden and Harris nominated to take on President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence in November.

Instead, Democrats will put on essentially an all-virtual convention, broadcasting two hours of prime-time programming starting at 9 p.m. EST, much of it pre-taped, Monday through Thursday. No crowds. No hullabaloo. And no balloons.

What to watch on opening night Monday:

‘We the People’

THE MESSAGE: The theme is deliberately vague, “We the People,” and the lineup doesn’t fit neatly into any box. Viewers will hear from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who finished second to Biden in the nominating contest, and Republican John Kasich, the former Ohio governor and 2016 primary rival to Trump. To underscore the gap: That’s a self-identified democratic socialist who wants a “political revolution” and a conservative Republican who was once a budget hawk in Congress and fought labor unions in the Ohio statehouse. And both will pitch for Biden.

That reflects a key reality of Biden’s candidacy: It’s always been more of a moral and competency case against Trump than about the particulars of Democrats’ policy fights. Hence his campaign pledges to “unify the country” and “restore the soul of the nation.”

That reflects a key reality of Biden’s candidacy: It’s always been more of a moral and competency case against Trump than about the particulars of Democrats’ policy fights. Hence his campaign pledges to “unify the country” and “restore the soul of the nation.” Yet Biden has spent the last several months trying to shore up relationships with the party’s left flank, which remains skeptical about him. He has a lengthy policy slate he touts as the most progressive of any modern Democratic nominee.

The convention’s opening night will test how seamlessly the Biden campaign can spend the next 78 days casting such a wide net across a splintered American electorate.

There’s No Convention Floor to Have a Fight on This Year

SANDERS’ TONE: The Vermont senator is a two-time runner-up for the nomination but by Biden’s own admission has done as much as any losing presidential candidate to shape a major political party. Four years ago, Sanders was at the microphone to nominate Hillary Clinton on the floor in Philadelphia, but the bitterness between their camps was apparent, and it wounded her against Trump.

There’s no convention floor to have a fight on this year. No way for viewers at home to hear delegates jeering at anyone on stage they dislike or disagree with. There are other key differences: Sanders and Biden are personally more friendly to each other than Clinton and Sanders were; Biden sewed up the nomination earlier, giving Sanders less leverage this year; and, of course, Trump isn’t a hypothetical president as he was in 2016. He is the president, and Sanders has made clear that he sees 2020 as an existential election for the country.

Given all that, the question becomes how Sanders balances his own ideological fervor — which highlights distinctions between himself and Biden — with his personal affinity for the nominee and their shared mission to defeat Trump.

Polls Suggest the Former First Lady Is Even More Popular Than Her Broadly Popular Husband

OBAMA. NOT HIM. HER: Perhaps any intrigue about Sanders and Kasich will fall away once the evening’s headliner, Michelle Obama, makes her case. Polls suggest the former first lady is even more popular than her broadly popular husband, who will speak Wednesday night. She managed that, in part, by steering clear of the most obvious fault lines in politics. Remember her speech in Philadelphia four years ago. “When they go low, we go high,” she said, without even mentioning the caustic Republican nominee who years before had helped drive the lie that Barack Obama wasn’t constitutionally eligible to serve as president.

Days before the convention’s opening gavel, Trump recycled the same tactic against Harris, a daughter of immigrants who is the first Black woman on a major party’s presidential ticket and is also of Asian descent. In her case, Trump said he didn’t know if she was eligible but wasn’t pursuing the matter.

Days before the convention’s opening gavel, Trump recycled the same tactic against Harris, a daughter of immigrants who is the first Black woman on a major party’s presidential ticket and is also of Asian descent. In her case, Trump said he didn’t know if she was eligible but wasn’t pursuing the matter.

Michelle Obama is uniquely positioned to talk about Democratic ticket. She knows Biden and his wife, Jill, as genuine friends from Biden’s eight years as vice president. The Obamas also know Harris well, and Michelle Obama almost certainly will speak in personal terms about what it means to see a woman of color nominated for national office.

“I wake up every morning in a house that was built by slaves,” she said at the 2016 convention, “and I watch my daughters, two beautiful, intelligent Black young women, playing with their dogs on the White House lawn.”

The Convention Will Air From 9 P.M. to 11 P.M. Eastern Time

HOW TO WATCH: The convention will air from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. Eastern time. The DNC will provide the official livestream online and on its social media channels. CNN, C-SPAN, MSNBC and PBS will air the full two hours. ABC, CBS, Fox News Channel and NBC will air the final hour, from 10 p.m. to 11 p.m. The event also will be available via Twitch, Apple TV, Roku and Amazon Fire TV.

RATINGS: Perez, the DNC chair, has promised an “inspiring” convention. But people must watch to be inspired, and no one knows what kind of audience will tune in. Conventions have declined in relevance for years. So, in one sense, the pandemic has given Democrats a license to experiment with what amounts to a slickly produced party infomercial. But lost are the rare big, even viral moments when a nominee, a party luminary or an up-and-comer, perhaps even veering off the teleprompter, makes a searing connection with both the party faithful in the arena and the millions watching at home.

DON'T MISS

SEC Sues Elon Musk, Saying He Didn’t Disclose Twitter Ownership on Time Before Buying It

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Man Faces Murder Charges in Crash That Killed Four

DON'T MISS

An Important Reservoir Was Offline When California Fires Began

DON'T MISS

Freshman Congressman Adam Gray Lands on Ag, Natural Resources Committees

DON'T MISS

Biden Moves to Lift State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation for Cuba, Part of Deal to Free Prisoners

DON'T MISS

Capital One Sued by US Watchdog Alleging Bank Cheated Customers Out of $2 Billion

DON'T MISS

Millions Under Extreme Fire Weather Alert as Strong Winds Lash Southern California

DON'T MISS

How the CIA Director Helps the US Navigate a World of Spies, Threats and Geopolitical Turbulence

DON'T MISS

Gov. Newsom, Mayor Bass Targeted in Wildfire Witch Hunt

DON'T MISS

Clovis Police Officer Injured While Responding to Suspected DUI Call

UP NEXT

IRS Issues Stimulus Payments Again. Who Is Getting Them?

UP NEXT

Meathead Movers Fill Trucks with Donations for LA Fire Victims. Fresno Can Help

UP NEXT

Google to Track Every Device Starting February 16

UP NEXT

TikTok’s Fate Arrives at Supreme Court in Collision of Free Speech and National Security

UP NEXT

Riverside County Sheriff’s Deputy Dies in On-Duty Traffic Accident

UP NEXT

Italian Journalist Freed From Detention in Iran, Returns Home

UP NEXT

Washington Post Lays Off 4% of Its Workforce

UP NEXT

Jimmy Carter Will Be Honored in Washington, a City Where He Remained an Outsider

UP NEXT

Even MAGA Needs Immigrants, It Seems

UP NEXT

First US Bird Flu Death Is Announced in Louisiana

Freshman Congressman Adam Gray Lands on Ag, Natural Resources Committees

15 hours ago

Biden Moves to Lift State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation for Cuba, Part of Deal to Free Prisoners

16 hours ago

Capital One Sued by US Watchdog Alleging Bank Cheated Customers Out of $2 Billion

16 hours ago

Millions Under Extreme Fire Weather Alert as Strong Winds Lash Southern California

16 hours ago

How the CIA Director Helps the US Navigate a World of Spies, Threats and Geopolitical Turbulence

16 hours ago

Gov. Newsom, Mayor Bass Targeted in Wildfire Witch Hunt

17 hours ago

Clovis Police Officer Injured While Responding to Suspected DUI Call

17 hours ago

A Possible TikTok Ban Is Just Days Away. A List of Other Apps Available

17 hours ago

Karen Bass Faces Growing Backlash Over Handling of LA Fires. Will She Resign?

18 hours ago

Before Taking Office, LA’s Mayor Said She Would Not Go Abroad

18 hours ago

SEC Sues Elon Musk, Saying He Didn’t Disclose Twitter Ownership on Time Before Buying It

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has sued billionaire Elon Musk, saying he failed to disclose his ownership of Twitter stock in a...

12 hours ago

12 hours ago

SEC Sues Elon Musk, Saying He Didn’t Disclose Twitter Ownership on Time Before Buying It

13 hours ago

Fresno County Man Faces Murder Charges in Crash That Killed Four

The smoldering wreckage of beachfront structures destroyed by the Palisade Fire in Malibu, Calif., on Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025. The threat of more fires propelled by blistering Santa Ana winds hung over southern California on Friday as firefighters battled to contain the raging blazes that have killed at least 10 people and destroyed thousands of structures. (Loren Elliott/The New York Times)
15 hours ago

An Important Reservoir Was Offline When California Fires Began

15 hours ago

Freshman Congressman Adam Gray Lands on Ag, Natural Resources Committees

16 hours ago

Biden Moves to Lift State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation for Cuba, Part of Deal to Free Prisoners

16 hours ago

Capital One Sued by US Watchdog Alleging Bank Cheated Customers Out of $2 Billion

16 hours ago

Millions Under Extreme Fire Weather Alert as Strong Winds Lash Southern California

16 hours ago

How the CIA Director Helps the US Navigate a World of Spies, Threats and Geopolitical Turbulence

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend