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    DNC Day 3 Live Updates: Democrats And The ‘Fight For Our Freedoms’

    By Bruce C.T. Wright,

    1 day ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2NAkE5_0v4aL6Nt00

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0cZ59A_0v4aL6Nt00

    Source: Chip Somodevilla / Getty

    UPDATED: 11:05 p.m. ET

    S ingers and musicians John Legend and Sheila E performed a musical tribute to the late pop superstar Prince before introducing the night’s headliner, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.

    UPDATED: 10:55 p.m. ET

    M aryland Gov. Wes Moore used part of his DNC speech to share an anecdote about when he enlisted in the Army as a teenager.

    “I don’t have bone spurs,” Moore said in a swipe at Donald Trump, who allegedly ducked the Vietnam War draft by fabricating the injury.

    UPDATED: 10:42 p.m.

    O prah Winfrey is cooking at the DNC.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1ur7zL_0v4aL6Nt00

    Source: Justin Sullivan / Getty

    UPDATED: 10:23 p.m. ET

    P oet laureate Amanda Gorman delivered her DNC speech in poetry form.

    UPDATED: 10:13 p.m. ET

    T ony West, the former U.S. Associate Attorney General in former President Barack Obama’s administration who also just happens to be Kamala Harris’ brother-in-law married to Harris’ sister, Maya, delivered brief remarks at the DNC to similarly dispel assumptions about Harris’ prosecutorial career.

    “When you know what you stand for, you know what to fight for,” West said in reference to Harris’ altruistic approach to prosecuting cases.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=44Vdsf_0v4aL6Nt00

    Tony West. | Source: Chip Somodevilla / Getty

    UPDATED: 10:05 p.m. ET

    L ateefah Simon , attorney and veteran community organizer set to succeed former Rep. Barbara Lee as the next Congresswoman representing California’s 12th Congressional District, credited Kamala Harris’ prosecutorial career that can only benefit her as president.

    UPDATED: 9:45 p.m. ET

    F ormer President Bill Clinton used a significant portion of his DNC speech on Wednesday night to emphasize the narcissistic nature of Donald Trump and how that attribute would factor into another presidency.

    Nearly immediately after taking the stage, Clinton, speaking in a gravelly voice, noted that he just celebrated his 78th birthday two days earlier.

    But, he noted, “I’m still younger than Donald Trump.”

    (Trump turned 78 in June.)

    Clinton said Kamala Harris is “a pretty clear choice” of presidential candidates.

    “Kamala Harris, who’s for the people,” he said, and “the other guy who’s proved even more than the first time around that he’s about me, myself and I.”

    Clinton shared an anecdote referencing how Harris used to work at McDonald’s while a college student, noting that she would ask customers, “how can I help you?”

    Clinton continued: “Now she’s at the pinnacle of power and she’s still asking, ‘how can I help you?'”

    In a moment of levity, Clinton remarked how he secretly wanted Harris elected so that “she will break my record as the president who spent the most time at McDonald’s.”

    Staying on the topic of Trump, Clinton said, “the next time you hear him don’t count the lies – count the ‘i’s.”

    Clinton then compared Trump to an opera tenor who walks on the stage warming up vocal chords by “ singing mi, mi, mi (me, me me).”

    “When Kamala Harris is president,” Clinton added, “every day will begin with you, you you you.”

    Clinton then thoroughly mocked Trump over his stated envy of Harris’ campaign rally crowds and wondered openly about Trump’s “tributes to the late great Hanibal Lecter,” a fictional cannibal.

    UPDATED: 9:24 p.m. ET

    H ouse Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries energized the crowd with a spirited speech making the case for Kamala Harris’ candidacy before switching his attention to Donald Trump and MAGA Republicans with a humourous anecdote that rings true.

    “Donald Trump is like an old boyfriend who you broke up with but he just won’t go away,” Jeffries said. “He has spent that last four years spinning the block trying to get back into a relationship with the American people. Bro, we broke up with you for a reason.”

    Jeffries then ran down a laundry list of Trump’s failures while he was president before doing the same with accomplishments from House Democrats.

    He ended by quoting the Bible — “Weeping may endure during the long night but joy will come in the morning” — before laying out a blueprint for accomplishing that feat and defeating Trump.

    Then, staying on-brand, Jeffries — who frequently quotes rappers — paraphrased Fat Joe and Remy Ma’s hit song when he told the audience: “Nothing can stop us, we’re all the way up.”

    UPDATED: 9:05 p.m. ET

    C omedian and actor Kenan Thompson, wielding an oversized book that is Project 2025, emphasized the contents of what’s been described as the Republican playbook to enact a series of bans that would impede on personal freedoms, including reproductive health.

    He conducted a series of interviews with people like an OB-GYN and a civil servant working in the U.S. Department of Education in an effort to demonstrate the very people who would be affected by the enactment of Project 2025.

    While the interviews were conducted under the guise of humor, the possibility of Donald Trump enacting such sweeping laws is no joke.

    UPDATED: 9:00 p.m. ET

    S uperstar soul singer Stevie Wonder made a surprise appearance at the DNC and delivered a strong endorsement of Kamala Harris’ presidential candidacy while also calling for global peace in no uncertain terms.

    “The choice is clear, clearer than anyone else is saying, you feel me?” Wonder asked the audience. “We need to choose joy over anger, kindness over recrimination and peace over war – every time!”

    He added later: “We must keep on keeping on until we truly are a united people of the United States” before taking the audience: “Are y’all ready to reach a higher ground?”

    With that, Wonder launched into an inspired rendition of his classic song, “Higher Ground,” and said, “you know we need Kamala Harris.”

    UPDATED: 8:45 p.m. ET

    M ississippi Rep. Bennie Thompson, the chair of the Jan. 6 Commission, addressed the topic of political violence and repeated a familiar refrain at this year’s DNC: “We will not go back.”

    UPDATED: 8:22 p.m. ET

    A ttention has turned to immigration, a topic that Republicans have disingenuously vilified Vice President Kamala Harris, who was charged with examining the root cause of illegal immigration — not stopping it, as conservatives have falsely claimed in an effort to fearmonger and peddle in conspiracy theories like the racist Great Replacement Theory.

    UPDATED: 8:14 p.m. ET

    W ith an unexpected appearance, media mogul Oprah Winfrey is expected to peak at the DNC on Wednesday night, MSNBC reported.

    Winfrey brings a similarly high level of star power that was on display Tuesday night when a parade of superstars also participated at the DNC, including former President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama.

    Aside from Winfrey, Kamala Harris’ running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries are also among the night’s speakers slated to take the DNC stage on Wednesday.

    UPDATED: 8:02 p.m. ET

    S en. Cory Booker is effectively serving as the host of the night, sharing personal anecdotes while delivering brief speeches that touch on issues at stake before he introduces speakers and performers.

    UPDATED: 7:43 p.m. ET

    M innesota Attorney General Keith Ellison mentioned the police murder of George Floyd before addressing the conflict in Gaza, one of the few times that topic has been broached at the DNC, outside of which pro-Palestine protests have been taking place since Sunday.

    Ellison called for a ceasefire one night after Sen. Bernie Sanders did the same and sought to clear up any misconceptions about where Kamala Harris and Tim Walz stood on the issue.

    “Let me assure you, Kamala and Tim hear you,” Ellison said. “They listen. They care. And everyone is included in their circle of compassion. They believe that everybody counts, and everybody matters.”

    UPDATED: 7:23 p.m. ET

    C ongresswoman and the likely next U.S. Senator from Delaware, Lisa Blunt Rochester, delivered a lively speech rallying the audience and encouraging them to vote for Kamala Harris in November.

    UPDATED: 7:20 p.m. ET

    M ilwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson’s brief speech addressed the topic of environmental justice and the role Vice President Kamala Harris played in securing attention to infrastructure for his city.

    UPDATED: 7:10 p.m. ET

    K elley Robinson, President of Human Rights Campaign, took the stage and told the audience that Donald Trump’ plans to carry out Project 2025 as president are very real.

    Robinson said: “Donald Trump wants to erase us! He would erase our marriages, ban our healthcare, belittle our stories, but we are not going back! We’re fighting for joy! Somebody say joy!”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2XnaxW_0v4aL6Nt00

    President of the Human Rights Campaign Kelley Robinson. | Source: Justin Sullivan / Getty

    UPDATED: 7:00 p.m. ET

    D ay 3 of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) is underway as Democrats roll out the “fight for our freedoms,” the theme of the third day.

    Already, the Democrats’ racial diversity is on display as Rev. Leah Daughtry and Sri Rakesh Bhatt began things with a prayer.

    That was followed by the 2019 National Teacher of the Year Jess Davis performing the national anthem.

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    Jess Davis performs. | Source: MANDEL NGAN / Getty

    Next, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker led the United Center in commemorating the life of former New Jersey Congressman Bill Pascrell, who died on Wednesday.

    Building on the theme of the day, the President of Reproductive Freedom for All Mini Timmaraju spoke to the audience about the importance of reproductive justice.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3IiiEa_0v4aL6Nt00

    Mini Timmaraju. | Source: Kevin Dietsch / Getty

    That paved the way for the President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Alexis McGill Johnson to warn about what Donald Trump would do for the reproductive justice movement.

    Day 2

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    Democratic presidential candidate, Vice President Kamala Harris, speaks onstage during the first day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 19, 2024, in Chicago, Illinois. | Source: Andrew Harnik / Getty

    UPDATED: 10:46 p.m. ET

    M ichelle Obama has taken the stage and is delivering her speech before an adoring crowd that gave her a minuteslong standing ovation.

    UPDATED: 10:35 a.m. ET

    S econd gentleman Doug Emhoff shared a touching story about how he met Kamala Harris as part of a larger, very personal speech that was greeted warmly. Emhoff shared anecdotes about his upbringing and brilliantly wove in a mention of his wife’s laugh — the same laugh Republicans try to mock — and said how much he love it.

    UPDATED: 9:55 p.m. ET

    I conic business leader Kenneth Chenault made the case for voting for Kamala Harris by endorsing her economic plan and contrasting it with the economic policies of Donald Trump that reward the rich .

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0TcZDW_0v4aL6Nt00

    Source: MANDEL NGAN / Getty

    “Kamala Harris will navigate this country through the inevitable challenges while also leading with the hope and value that America was founded on,” Chenault said before adding later: “This is why I believe Kamala Harris should be the next president of the United States.”

    UPDATED: 9:45 p.m. ET

    B ernie Sanders on Tuesday night became the DNC’s first speaker to officially call for a ceasefire in Gaza in no uncertain terms.

    Sanders’ call for peace came one night after pro-Paletinian protesters briefly interrupted President Joe Biden’s DNC speech.

    Despite the outsize number of Black officials at the DNC — from audience members to state delegates to elected Democrats — none of the DNC calls for a ceasefire have come from them. There has long been a reciprocated solidarity between Palestinian people and Black people in the United States, even with the U.S. government’s longstanding support of Israel.

    Critics have said Kamala Harris needs to address the conflict in Gaza during her speech on Thursday night. That said, analysts have noticed a shift in Harris’ shift tone on the topic, suggesting she could say the right thing during her DNC speech.

    UPDATED: 9:37 p.m. ET

    V ermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent politician, spoke at the DNC Tuesday night and drew attention to the COVID-19 pandemic and placed blame squarely on Donald Trump for mismanaging the public health emergency. Conversely, Sanders thanked President Joe Biden and Kamala Harris for “effectively” delivering for the American people.

    Despite those facts, the overwhelming response to Sanders on social media was to post the viral images of him wearing those iconic knitted mittens at Biden’s inauguration.

    Sanders’ appearance at the DNC came eight years after the Democratic Party effectively elbowed him out of the presidential primary race against Hillary Clinton in 2016.

    UPDATED: 9:25 p.m. ET

    S enate Minority Leader and New York Sen. Chuck Schumer during his DNC speech Tuesday night placed a spotlight on the racial diversity of the latest slate of U.S. Senate candidates, saying that more than half of the people on that list of people running for that office are people of color.

    Schumer, who is Jewish, also reminded people of Trump’s apparent allegiance to white supremacists and antisemites.

    However, Schumer notably did not mention the conflict in Gaza where tens of thousands of Palestinians have been killed, many of them women and children.

    UPDATED: 9:15 p.m. ET

    I n a surprise, Vice President Kamala Harris was shown live via satellite from a rally in Milwaukee. Harris acknowledged the completed roll call, accepted the DNC’s invitation to formally accept the democratic nomination on Thursday, and thanked her supporters.

    It is apparently the first time such a thing has happened at a political convention.

    Tuesday was Harris’ second straight unexpected appearance at the DNC, suggesting she may again appear on Wednesday before she will for sure arrive on Thursday to accept the Democratic nomination.

    UPDATED 9:05 p.m. ET

    D uring California’s roll call, rapper Kendrick Lamar’s ubiquitous hit song “They Not Like Us” blared in the background — the latest signal that Lamar not only won but continues to win — by a landslide — his battle against rival rapper Drake.

    UPDATED: 8:55 p.m. ET

    A side from this roll call primarily featuring Black and brown people, women and other minorities, they’re accompanied by a really Black soundtrack supplied by DJ Cassidy. As such, Beyonce’s hit song “Texas Hold ‘Em” was playing as the Lone Star state’s delegates cast their votes for Kamala Harris.

    The song set off a firestorm on social media.

    Beyonce is rumored to be making an appearance at the DNC this week.

    UPDATED: 8:50 p.m. ET

    N ot for nothing, a good number of people speaking for each state’s delegations are Black people or people of color. It’s a clear contrast with the optics at the Republican National Convention last month.

    Even New Hampshire, which boasts 10% of its minuscule population as identifying as Black, featured a Black woman as its primary speaker announcing the votes its delegation would cast.

    UPDATED: 8:40 p.m. ET

    L egendary filmmaker Spike Lee joined the New York delegation in casting its 298 votes for Kamala Harris in another state flexing its star power.

    Meanwhile, the DNC DJ, DJ Cassidy, is playing state-specific songs as each state participates in the roll call. Many of the songs he’s playing are hip-hop, including North Carolina casting their votes as Petey Pablo’s song “Raise Up” played in the background.

    UPDATED: 8:20 p.m.

    T here is tons of star power on hand for the DNC on Night 2.

    Case and point: During Louisiana’s roll call, actor Wendell Pierce joined the state’s delegation to cast its votes for Kamala Harris.

    The audience roared with applause when the New Orleans native introduced himself.

    UPDATED: 8:06 p.m.

    A tlanta rapper Lil Jon surprised the crowd by performing a brief medley of his hit songs while introducing Georgia’s delegation during roll call.

    DJ Cassidy, meanwhile, is spinning hip-hop songs like the iconic “900 Number” by the late DJ Mark the 45 King.

    UPDATED: 7:55 p.m. ET

    T he DNC conducted its roll call, defined by the DNC as “all 57 delegations will deliver remarks and cast ceremonial votes for Vice President Harris and Governor Tim Walz as the Democratic nominees for President and Vice President of the United States, a powerful symbol of the party’s diversity, unity, and overwhelming support for the Harris-Walz ticket.”

    This year, though, despite its historic nature, the roll call was symbolic because Harris was already formally nominated as the Democrat’s presidential candidate earlier this month.

    UPDATED: 7:45 p.m. ET

    T he DNC’s house band is rocking again following a brief photo shoot of the audience.

    And judging from the reaction on social media, not only are the folk at the DNC enjoying it but so are folks elsewhere.

    UPDATED: 7:18 p.m. ET

    K enneth Stribling, retired Teamster from Milwaukee and the past president of the National Committee to Protect Pensions told the DNC how he had to fight Donald Trump’s administration while his pension was being threatened. He said he organized a nationwide grassroots movement for more than six years.

    But once Biden was elected, Stribling said, Biden’s signature American Rescue Plan was enacted in legislation that he said saved pensions and secured retirements for many.

    “They got it done without one single Republican vote in Congress,” tribling said. “They saved over 1 million pensions including 33,000 from Wisconsin.”

    It was the latest show of union support at the DNC for Harris, who on Monday had six labor union president pledge their support .

    UPDATED: 7:05 p.m. ET

    A construction worker and then former White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham are among the former Trump supporters who are speaking to the DNC Tuesday night. Both admitted the errors in their previous ways and publicly pledgied their support for Kamala Harris. The duo followed a brief video montage of Trump’s gaffes and contradictory statements.

    UPDATED: 7:00 p.m. ET

    T here’s an all-Black band at the DNC playing funk music in between speaker and performance. As the television cameras pan across the crowd, it’s apparent they’re enjoying themselves to the tunes as they dance and have a good time.

    UPDATED: 6:55 p.m. ET

    C hicago native and rapper/actor Common performed the song “Fortunate,” an inspirational single off his new album with hip-hop producer Pete Rock. The audience didn’t appear to be a hip-hop crowd, but they cheered Common all the same as he dropped positive bars of rhymes in front of his hometown crowd.

    Common even incorporated Kamala Harris’ name into one of his rhymes.

    UPDATED: 6:50 p.m. ET

    P ennsylvania State Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta used his time to speak at the DNC to address the irony of Project 2025 — a 900+ page book and “plan to drag us backward” — being embraced by the same Republicans who have rallied behind efforts to ban books in the U.S.

    Kenyatta, who is the first openly gay candidate of color to win a state house primary in Pennsylvania, ended his speech by urged everybody to support Kamala Harris a the next president of the United States.

    UPDATED: 6:45 p.m. ET

    S uperstar singer Patti LaBelle opened the second night of the DNC with a performance.

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    Source: Joe Raedle / Getty

    Original story:

    T he second day of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) comes on the heels of a hard act to follow after Day 1 saw President Joe Biden pass the proverbial Democratic torch to his vice president, Kamala Harris , as she seeks to become the first Black and Asian president of the United States.

    The entire United Center in Chicago was eager, engaged and energetic as a parade of Democrats took the stage to explain the urgency of Harris’ candidacy and why America can’t “go back” to a Donald Trump presidency.

    MORE: The Blackest DNC Takeaways As Biden Passes The Democratic Torch To Kamala Harris

    It’s a safe bet to expect more of the same, and then some, as another crop of influential speakers make their pleas to the American public.

    And while the list of impressive speakers could include a number of surprises, those who are already confirmed include Harris’ husband and second gentleman Doug Emhoff; Democratic Illinois Congresswoman Sen. Tammy Duckworth; Republican mayor of Mesa, Arizona, John Giles; New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham; Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who was reported as being on Harris’ shortlist of running mates; Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders; and Senate Majority leader and New York Sen. Chuck Schumer.

    However, two other people are later to appear and are expected to receive the loudest of ovations: Former President Barack Obama and his wife, former first lady Michelle Obama.

    Each night of the DNC carries a different theme, and Tuesday’s is “A Bold Vision for America’s Future.”

    A roll call vote that typically is used to formally nominate the party’s preferred candidate will also take place Tuesday night. The vote will be in name only as Harris was already formally nominated by Democrats earlier this month.

    On Monday, Congresswoman Maxine Waters was among an impressive list of Black women leaders who each took to the stage to make the case for Harris’ candidacy while also drawing a stark contrast with Trump.

    Later this week, Exonerated Five member and New York City councilman Yusef Salaam is expected to speak at the DNC as well.

    There is a deep significance there as Salaam was among the five Black and brown teenagers falsely accused of raping a white woman in Central Park in the 1980s. Back then, Trump took out a full-page ad in a newspaper calling for the teenagers to receive the death penalty.

    Decades later and Salaam could have a full circle moment at the DNC.

    SEE ALSO:

    DNC: Democratic Leaders Push For Deeper Connections With Black Male Voters

    Tan Suit: Kamala Harris Channels Her Inner Obama With Wardrobe Choice For DNC’s Opening Night

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4CchgT_0v4aL6Nt00

    The post DNC Day 3 Live Updates: Democrats And The ‘Fight For Our Freedoms’ appeared first on NewsOne .

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