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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2008
 
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DNC Chair Howard Dean talks with Leah Daughtry, the lead convention planner, at Invesco Field in Denver. Obama is scheduled to deliver his acceptance speech at the stadium on Thursday. (Photo by Ed Andrieski/AP)


MORE FROM THIS AUTHOR
CHRIS JOHNSON


MORE INFO
Covering the convention
The Blade is sending two reporters to Denver to cover next week’s Democratic National Convention. Be sure to check washingtonblade.com for daily news updates.

Gay events scheduled throughout convention

Sunday, Aug. 24
• Reception by National Gay & Lesbian Task Force, 6 p.m. at Lannie’s Clocktower   Cabaret, 1601 Arapahoe St. Tickets required.

• Reception by Matthew Shepard Foundation and National Stonewall Democrats, 7:30 p.m. at Westin Tabor Center, 1672 Lawrence St. Tickets required.

Monday, Aug. 25
• Democratic National Committee LGBT Caucus meeting, noon at Colorado Convention Center, 700 14th St. Open to the public.
• Luncheon by Global AIDS Alliance, noon at Hotel Monaco, 1717 Champa St. RSVP required.
• Tea party by National Stonewall Democrats, 2 p.m. at Grand Hyatt’s             Pinnacle Club, 1750 Welton St. Tickets required.
• Reception for gay people of color by Human Rights Campaign and others,             4 p.m. at Westin Tabor Center, 1672 Lawrence St. Invitation only.

Tuesday, Aug. 26
• Luncheon by U.S. Reps. Barney Frank and Tammy Baldwin and others, noon at Sheraton Denver Hotel, 1550 Court Place. Invitation only.
• Reception by Gill Action and others, 4 p.m. at Museum of Contemporary Art,          1485 Delgany St. Invitation only.
• HRC Rock to Win Concert, 7:30 p.m. at Fillmore Auditorium, 1510 Clarkson St. Tickets required.

Wednesday, Aug. 27
• Democratic National Committee LGBT Caucus meeting, noon at Colorado             Convention Center, 700 14th St. Open to the public.
• Reception by Democratic National Committee Gay & Lesbian Leadership Council,     2 p.m. at Ellie Caulkins Opera House, 950 13th St. RSVP required.

Source: Democratic National Committee LGBT Caucus






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NATIONAL

All eyes on Denver as Dems seek unity
Record number of openly gay delegates to participate in convention

CHRIS JOHNSON
Friday, August 22, 2008

Tens of thousands of Democrats, including an estimated 360 openly gay participants, will flock to Denver next week for the 2008 Democratic National Convention.

Convention delegates are set to participate in caucuses and hear speeches from party leaders. The 4,400 delegates, including about 277 gay delegates, are expected to anoint Barack Obama as the party’s nominee for the presidential race, but only after Hillary Clinton’s name is placed in nomination.

On Monday, Michelle Obama will be the headline primetime speaker. U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is also scheduled to talk. A tribute to ailing Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), a lead sponsor for the Employment Non-Discrimination Act and hate crimes legislation in the Senate, also is planned for Monday.

On Tuesday, former presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) will be the headline primetime speaker. Other featured speakers are Mass. Gov. Deval Patrick (D) and Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius (D).

Former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner (D), who is running for the open U.S. Senate seat in Virginia, will give the convention’s keynote address.

Warner spokesperson Kevin Hall said Warner is still working on his speech, but the former governor intends to “talk about bringing people together and giving individuals and communities the tools they need to compete in a global economy.”

On Wednesday, featured speakers will include former President Bill Clinton, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D), New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson (D), Sen. Evan Bayh (D-Ind.) and Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.). Obama’s running mate, who had not yet been announced as of Blade press time, is also slated to talk.

The roll-call vote for the nomination the will also take place Wednesday. Delegates are expected to nominate Obama, but Hillary Clinton’s name will also be placed in nomination.

On Thursday, Obama plans to give his acceptance speech at Invesco Field at Mile High, the football stadium for the Denver Broncos. The stadium seats about 76,000 people.

As of Wednesday, the number of gay speakers scheduled to talk on the floor is fewer than the number of gays who spoke at the convention in 2004. The 2004 convention in Boston featured six openly gay speakers, but only one gay speaker was slated to talk in Denver this year as of Wednesday: Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisc.), the only out lesbian in Congress, is co-chair of Obama’s gay steering and policy committee.

Baldwin, who plans to speak Tuesday night, is not expected to focus on gay issues and will talk instead about women and health care. She is scheduled to share her time with Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-N.Y.), Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-Calif.) and Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.).

Baldwin spokesperson Jerilyn Goodman said the lawmaker is still working on her speech, which is expected to focus on how the high cost of health care is detrimental to women, and could not say whether gay issues would be mentioned.

In 2004, Baldwin similarly held a primetime speaking slot and talked about health care and did not discuss gay issues, although she did say health care coverage should include “domestic partners.”

The other gay speakers in 2004 were U.S. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.); Cheryl Jacques, then-president of the Human Rights Campaign; Andy Tobias, treasurer of the Democratic National Committee; Roberta Achtenberg, a civil rights attorney and assistant secretary of housing for President Clinton; and Jim Stork, a Florida candidate for Congress who later who quit his race because of a heart condition.

HRC spokesperson Trevor Thomas said current president Joe Solmonese will not speak at the convention this year.

Tobias said the schedule for the convention had not yet been finalized and he expects more gay speakers would be invited to talk.

“If [it] turns out there’s only one, that will be odd, and I don’t think that’s likely to happen,” he said.
For the 2004 convention, Tobias said he didn’t receive notice that was he invited to speak until about two days before he arrived on site.

“This is chaotic, they’re trying to figure out a billion things with 55,000 people coming,” he said. “So I think they start with things like the main speakers, and Tammy is a big deal.”

A major component of the convention Wednesday will be the address from Obama’s running mate. A number of Democrats are said to be on Obama’s short list for the position, including Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine, Bayh, and Biden.

Dan Pinello, a gay political science professor at the City University of New York, said he didn’t think it was unusual for Obama to wait until the eve of the convention to announce his running mate choice.

Pinello said historically the presidential nominee “has waited until the convention itself” to identify his running mate. In 1988, then-Republican presidential candidate George H.W. Bush didn’t announce that his running mate would be Dan Quayle from Indiana until after the Republican convention started.

The Obama campaign’s decision to send out the name of Obama’s vice presidential pick by text-messaging supporters would cause “a media frenzy for a couple of days” after the announcement had been made, Pinello said.

The gay caucus meetings for the convention, where delegates will meet to discuss gay-related issues, are scheduled for Monday and Wednesday.

Rick Stafford, chair of the Democratic National Committee’s (DNC) gay caucus, said the caucuses ...

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