
before the speech occurred, the day was filled with excitement and a little confusion, hope and a little anxiety.
we are met this morning with news that we have further closed the gap between barack and hillary, with the latest series of polls showing barack polling within the margin of error of the recent polls [pdf]. for a week out, the size of the undecided vote is the real harbinger -- and explains hillary's attempts to swiftboat barack. perhaps more interesting is the sudden interest in the pennsylvania democratic party's intervention in the primary. "Has [Democratic Party Chair TJ] Rooney crossed ethical line by backing Clinton?" asks one lehigh valley paper (which is supposed to be a hillary stronghold). i guess hillary is now doing to the pennsylvania democratic party what she and her husband previously did to the florida democratic party -- kill it with "kindness." it's the killing it, though, that should concern us.

back in wynnewood, tuesday started with the phones ringing off the hook. "have any tickets?" people wondered. it's become the replacement for, "do you have any yard signs?" more to the point, though, is that the office was packed with volunteers tuesday morning, including one lady who is vehemently anti-abortion etc and changed her registration from republican to democrat because, basically, she has a crush on barack. unlike the republicans supporting hillary because of rush limbaugh's desire to wreck havoc in the democratic party, this woman is eager to help -- even if what she says can make many of us cringe. it's a dilemma.

slowly but surely, the office got less and less crowded, until noon, when it basically emptied out. first went the advance person. then went laura and hannah. then hy and bill. then the volunteers started to filter out. in the end, we left only two out-of-state volunteers, both whom felt that they came to pennsylvania to work towards barack's elections and not go to special events. of course, the two are not mutually exclusive, but we all understand their point. despite the event, we still had people come into the office throughout the day, either to volunteer or to sign up to volunteer.

haverford college itself is set back off of lancaster (the main road in the mainline) in a spacious, "leafy" campus. strangely, it is not populated with all rich kids, as some in the media have inferred (although i'm sure it is expensive). interestingly -- before i saw the reports that basically called the haverford student body elitism -- i ran into a young man who works at the cafe at haverford. "i have to find someone to sub for me because i'm singing for michelle," he told me. geez, i said. will anyone be here while michelle is speaking? it seemed like an odd demand, but it also demonstrated the lengths that smart young people will go to to get a good education. i was glad to see him when they started singing the national anthem. he seemed pretty desperate to find a replacement -- "this is why i'm here," he said, meaning the singing, not working behind a counter.

the first person to speak was hy, the local field organizer. hy's job was to point out that we had volunteers with volunteer sign-up sheets, just in case they had missed the volunteers outside or the two volunteer tables that were set up as you walked into the field house. we had given people the opportunity to volunteer, but hy was supposed to pushed those who had passed them by to re-think their decision. "we need you," hy declared. "this is how we will win pennsylvania." almost every time i've heard hy's rap, he mentions that "my job is to organize myself out of a job," emphasizing the self-organization nature of the obama campaign -- and how it will continue to build even after the primary is over. that is the purpose. even though the democratic primary has been reduced to a bitterly divisive, increasingly shrill contest (at least on one side), the whole point of this exercise is to elect barack president. and we do that by building up a formidible political infrastructure that is independent and more grassroots than the local democratic party which has proven to be rather elitist and structured hierarchically.

michelle entered the hall, stepped onto the stage and immediately noticed this darling little baby in the vip section. "oh, she's cute," michelle said of the little girl that is contrasted against michelle later on in her speech. she was completely taken by the little girl and seemed a little flustered. but if she was, it sure didn't stop her from launching into an amazing speech. michelle mocked hillary's assertion that barack was out of touch with the values of regular americans. in a friendly, positive manner, michelle took all the clinton's recent accusations head on, dismissing them with fact and logic. barack's upbringing in rural kansas, the black son of an 18 year old single mother contrasts significantly with hillary's upbringing in upper class park ridge, a bastion of right-wing elitism.

appropriately, no one will be calling her a "cxxx" or "trollop" -- and especially not her husband. comparisons to jackie kennedy may be just emerging, but the point is valid. michelle gives off more than just class and grace, she promises a return to competence as well as the lifting up of strong women to a higher standard. she is raising the bar for acceptance in america of strong women who struggle to have successful careers while juggling the demands of raising a family, as well as the issues raised by doing so. no need to be bitter or get nasty, michelle did it with class and grace -- just like jackie kennedy. camelot awaits.

her speech lasted longer than i expected. one of our young volunteers mentioned that she had to go at 4:10. michelle started pretty much around 3:30 and finished right around 4:10. but when michelle was done, she came down to shake hands and spent a considerable amount of time doing so. by the time i looked at the clock again, it was 5pm. she had probably shaken over two hundred hands! the rather large gentleman (probably a local politician) who had talked himself into the second row and then hurled himself toward the rope line didn't really need to do so, as michelle spent a considerable amount of time shaking hands and talking to people. it was simply amazing.

indeed.
the race in pennsylvania is tightening considerably. we are told by local folks, who don't necessarily know, that the polls show pittsburgh and philadelphia to be mirror images of each other. i don't (personally) see how barack can possibly win pennsylvania without winning pittsburgh. philly, alleghany (pittsburgh), montgomery, delaware and bucks counties all seem like must win to me if we are to counter the vote out of "alabama," as james carville calls "the t." you can still help barack win. donate here to reunite the democratic party behind a strong nominee who can beat mccain; you can help barack win in pennsylvania and across the country by making phone calls now. with the pennsylvania democratic party intervening in the democratic process, anything you can do to obviate their interference would be welcome!
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