Saturday 30 July 2016

Lessons from Democrats’ rowdy presidential convention in Philadelphia

By the time tens of thousands of red, white and blue balloons cascaded down on Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine at the end of the Democratic National Convention, history had been made, political shots had been fired and the general election had begun.

Democrats held a far more conventional convention this week in Philadelphia thanRepublicans did last week in Cleveland — an expected contrast reflecting the differences between Clinton, the establishment Democratic presidential nominee, and Donald Trump, her insurgent Republican counterpart.

Philadelphia, however, still managed to deliver an astonishing amount of news for such a scripted event. Taken together, it’s difficult to remember another pair of recent conventionsquite as tumultuous. If conventions are supposed to present a sort of dialogue between the nation’s top two political parties, then what Cleveland and Philadelphia offered was more of a shouting match — in which each side yelled completely past the other.

Welcome to the ‘anti’ election. Both candidates know many voters don’t want to be for Clinton or for Trump. No matter. Perhaps they’ll be persuaded to be against one or the other. For the full article click here 



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