Politics

Blackest Takeaways As Democrats Rally Kamala Harris


2024 Democratic National Convention: Day 2

Rapper Lil Jon (R) performs with the Georgia delegation during the Ceremonial Roll Call of States on the second day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 20, 2024, in Chicago. | Source: Chip Somodevilla / Getty

UPDATED: 11 a.m. ET, Aug. 21

Day 2

Whew!

If Day 1 of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) was full of surprises and energy, Day 2 took it to a whole ‘nother level and then some as the festivities took on a decidedly Black feeling.

From the music to the speakers to the now-legendary roll call and seemingly everything in between, Black people were front and center at the DNC on Tuesday night.

Keep reading to find the biggest and Blackest moments from the second day of the DNC.

Roll call

This ceremonial rite of passage at political conventions took on more of a symbolic note this time around since Kamala Harris had already been formally nominated by Democrats to be their presidential candidate. In light of that, the roll call of states casting votes to solidify the nomination took on a much more festive feeling than ever before, including DJ Cassidy playing state-specific songs when it was their respective times to speak.

And while all the songs weren’t by Black artists, it seemed as though most were, including Kendrick Lamar’s iconic “They Not Like Us,” which was played while California was casting its votes for Harris. The audience in the United Center and on social media lost their collective minds.

The same thing happened when Texas voted as Beyoncé’s “Texas Hold ‘Em” blared from the speakers.

Check out the playlist of DNC roll call songs below:

Even each state’s designated speakers seemed to be Black or brown, including those like New Hampshire that are not necessarily readily associated with racial diversity.

State Rep. Justin Jones turned the DNC into a house of worship during Tennesee’s roll call as a church organ played.

And rapper Lil Jon emerged from wherever he’s been hiding to perform a medley of his hit songs as his native Georgia took part in the roll call.

President Obama’s hand gesture

Former President Obama’s mastery of physical comedy is something to behold. He’s shown us plenty of times in the past his ability for uncanny timing with punchlines, but he outdid himself on Tuesday night — at the expense of Donald Trump, of course.

While addressing Trump’s propensity for childish behavior, Obama mentioned the Republican nominee’s “weird obsession with crowd sizes.”

As Obama said that, he motioned and gestured with his hands in a suggestive way that may or may not have implications about Trump’s, er, manhood.

The crowd roared in acknowledgment of what Obama was doing and the moment was immediately immortalized on social media.

The DNC’s house band

An underrated aspect of Day 2 of the DNC was the musical group that was sitting above and behind the stage and entertaining the audience in between speakers taking the stage.

The unidentified troupe of Black musicians played an assortment of funk songs much to the audience’s delight, and their performances resonated with viewers at home, too.

Michelle Obama’s speech

Last, but far from least, we can’t forget to recognize our Forever First Lady Michelle Obama’s moving speech on Tuesday night. She interwove powerful messages of “hope” and honored her late mother, Marian Robinson, before turning her attention to Trump.

Mrs. Obama delivered an iconic call to action for the 2024 election in part by brilliantly contrasting Trump’s record with Harris’ irrefutable qualifications to be president. She did so by calling out Trump by his name, ripped his xenophobic and racist rhetoric and fearmongering about anyone who isn’t white, and placed a glaring spotlight on the white privilege that has defined his life and career.

“No one has a monopoly on what it means to be an American,” Mrs. Obama told the audience. “No one.”

Harris, on the other hand, “understands that most of us will never be afforded the grace of failing forward,” Mrs. Obama added. She said Harris understands people who “will never benefit from the affirmative action of generational wealth,” noting that average people who “bankrupt a business or choke in a crisis … don’t get a second, third or fourth chance.”

Tell us what you really mean, Mrs. Obama!

Read Michelle Obama’s full DNC speech by clicking here.

Original story:

2024 Democratic National Convention TW

Vice President Kamala Harris addresses the Democratic National Convention at the United Center in Chicago on Aug. 19, 2024. | Source: Tom Williams / Getty

Day 1

The Democratic National Convention opened Monday night with a rousing lineup of speakers taking the stage in front of an adoring crowd at the jam-packed United Center in Chicago.

And while every speaker stressed the importance of making sure Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz are elected in November, each one also took the time to explain to the audience and viewers at home why it was so important.

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

As such, a parade of card-carrying Democrats including elected officials, business leaders and other dignitaries alternately took turns sounding the alarm about the consequences of Donald Trump having a second term in the White House, underscoring the urgency of the moment.

Among those speakers were notable Black people who raised awareness on a variety of pressing issues pertinent to the 2024 election.

Keep reading to find the Blackest takeaways from the first night of the 2024 DNC.

Black women are leading

Obviously, Democrats are rallying around Kamala Harris, who would become the first Black and Asian woman president in the history of the United States, should she and Walz be elected in November. But a veritable who’s who of Black women leaders are not only expected to grace the DNC stage this week, but a handful of them were there on day one to open the convention in ways that only they could.

They included California Rep. Maxine Waters, who made the historic connection between Harris’ candidacy and the resilience of voting rights icon Fannie Lou Hamer 60 years earlier at the DNC in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

2024 DNC in Chicago

Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., walks on the stage during the 2024 Democratic National Convention at United Center in Chicago on Aug. 19, 2024. | Source: Robert Gauthier / Getty

Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett — a former public defender — laid out the argument of why Harris is a more qualified candidate than Trump:

“One candidate worked at McDonald’s, while she was in college at an HBCU. The other was born with a silver spoon in his mouth, and helped his daddy in the family business: Housing discrimination. She became a career prosecutor, while he became a career criminal, with 34 felonies, two impeachments, and one porn star to prove it.”

“Kamala Harris has a résumé. Donald Trump has a rap sheet. She presides over the Senate while he keeps national secrets next to his thinking chair — y’all know what I said the other time — in Mar-A-Lago.”

Other Black women — often described as the backbone of the Democratic Party — who spoke on night one of the DNC include Los Angeles Mayor and former Congresswoman Karen Bass; California Sen. Laphonza Butler; former U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Marcia Fudge; Illinois Rep. Lauren Underwood; Minyon Moore, Chair of the 2024 Democratic National Convention Committee; and Stacey Johnson-Batiste, Harris’ lifelong friend from Berkeley, California, where they met as kindergarteners.

Black women will continue to lead at the DNC as former First Lady Michelle Obama is scheduled to speak on Tuesday night.

2024 Democratic National Convention

Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, speaks during the 2024 Democratic National Convention at the United Center in Chicago on Aug. 19, 2024. | Source: Bill Clark / Getty

Tribute to Jesse Jackson

Rev. Jesse Jackson, the iconic civil rights leader, appeared at the DNC in his hometown to a standing ovation 40 years after waging his own presidential campaign. While Jackson did not address the audience, likely due to his Parkinson’s disease diagnosis, he did flash two thumbs up to the crowd as his sons, Yusef and U.S. Rep. Johnathan Jackson and Rev. Al Sharpton accompanied him on stage.

Pro-Palestinian protests were raging

A series of pro-Palestinian protests have been going on in Chicago since Sunday night. And while they continued outside of the United Center on Monday, some protesters managed to gain access inside the arena and interrupted President Joe Biden’s speech in an effort to raise awareness of the Israeli-led violence in Gaza that critics have called “genocide.” The issue is particularly near and dear to the hearts of Black Americans, many of whom have found a parallel between the Israeli treatment of Palestinians and the colonialization of the U.S. that involved slavery.

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - August 19: A protest banner is covered with

A protest banner is covered with signs in support of President Joe Biden as he delivers the keynote speech during the first day of the Democratic National Convention on August 19, 2024, at the United Center in Chicago. | Source: The Washington Post / Getty

Sen. Raphael Warnock’s speech

One of the many highlights of night one of the DNC was the impassioned speech delivered by Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock, whose words could have been mistaken for a sermon being preached to a faithful congregation

“I’m convinced tonight that we can lift the broken even as we climb,” Warnock, who is also the senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta — Martin Luther King Jr.’s former church — told the audience. “We can heal the wounds that divide us. We can heal a planet in peril. We can heal the land.”

2024 Democratic National Convention: Day 1

Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA) speaks onstage during the first day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 19, 2024, in Chicago. | Source: Andrew Harnik / Getty

Warnock also took the time to express sympathy for those who have been killed in the ongoing conflict in Gaza.

“We are as close in our humanity as a cough. I need my neighbors’ children to be okay so my children will be ok,” Warniock said. “I need the poor children of Israel and the poor children of Gaza. I need Israelis and Palestinians — those in the Congo, those in Haiti, those in Ukraine, I need Americans on both sides of the track to be okay. Because we are all god’s children.”

Biden passes the torch to Kamala Harris

The first night of the DNC doubled as a victory lap for Biden, whose selflessness was celebrated for stepping aside to allow Vice President Harris to run in his stead. Chants of “Thank you, Joe” rained down from the rafters and spread throughout the audience, particularly after he was introduced and took the stage. After running down the list of some of his most notable accomplishments as president, Biden passed the proverbial torch to Harris.

“Selecting Kamala was the very first decision I made when I became our nominee, and it was the best decision I made my whole career,” Biden told the crowd. “She’s tough, she’s experienced and she has enormous integrity.”

Biden added later: “Her story represents the best American story. And like many of our best presidents, she was also vice president.”

The DNC is scheduled to end on Thursday.

Follow NewsOne’s coverage of the DNC via The Black Ballot.

SEE ALSO:

‘Is This America?’ Maxine Waters Links Kamala Harris, Fannie Lou Hamer In Triumphant DNC Speech

Kamala Harris’ Economic Speech Was A Good Start, But The Woes Of The Working Class Can’t Be Forgotten

Joe Biden and Running Mate Kamala Harris Deliver Remarks In Delaware

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