DNC Night 1: Joe Biden Passes The Torch To Next Generation

Primary Topic

This episode covers the first night of the Democratic National Convention, focusing on Joe Biden's endorsement of Kamala Harris as his successor, and the broader theme of generational change within the Democratic Party.

Episode Summary

The episode captures a pivotal moment at the Democratic National Convention, with President Joe Biden passing the leadership torch to Vice President Kamala Harris. It features emotional speeches and a strong endorsement from Biden, emphasizing Harris's capabilities as his preferred successor. The episode also highlights significant speeches from other key figures, including Hillary Clinton, who linked her historical presidential run to Harris’s current campaign. Discussions on various urgent topics like abortion rights, the threat posed by Donald Trump, and the Democratic Party's appeal to the younger generation and working-class voters were central themes. The contrast in rhetoric and campaign approaches between Biden and Harris was also a focus, illustrating a strategic shift in the Democratic Party’s messaging.

Main Takeaways

  1. Joe Biden endorses Kamala Harris, highlighting her as his best decision and the future of the Democratic Party.
  2. The convention underscored a shift from older Democratic leaders to a new generation, featuring emerging figures like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
  3. The episode noted differences in campaign rhetoric between Biden and Harris, with Harris adopting a more optimistic and forward-looking tone.
  4. Speakers like Hillary Clinton emphasized the historical significance of women's roles in politics, aligning it with Harris’s candidacy.
  5. The DNC strategically showcased diverse voices, particularly focusing on the impact of policies like abortion rights on individual lives.

Episode Chapters

1. Introduction

Susan Davis, Tamara Keith, and Mara Liasson introduce the DNC's first night, setting the stage for discussions on generational shifts and political endorsements. Susan Davis: "And it's 11:56 p.m. central time on Monday, August 19."

2. Biden's Endorsement

Joe Biden’s speech serves as a heartfelt endorsement of Kamala Harris, emphasizing his legacy and the future he envisions under Harris's leadership. Joe Biden: "I love the job, but I love my country more."

3. Harris's Campaign Vision

Kamala Harris's campaign strategies are contrasted with Biden's, highlighting a shift towards a more hopeful and inclusive approach. Tamara Keith: "It is a campaign about optimism in the future."

4. Women in Politics

Hillary Clinton and other speakers focus on the role of women in politics, stressing the need for continued progress and the breaking of glass ceilings. Hillary Clinton: "Vice President Harris should make that history that she had tried to make."

Actionable Advice

  1. Recognize the importance of endorsing capable successors in leadership roles.
  2. Embrace generational change by supporting emerging leaders within organizations.
  3. Foster a positive and forward-looking campaign strategy.
  4. Highlight the achievements and potential of women in leadership positions.
  5. Engage young and diverse voters by addressing their specific concerns and aspirations.

About This Episode

Night one of the Democratic convention showcased a party in transition. Hillary Clinton and President Biden shared the stage with a new generation of leaders including Representatives Jasmine Crockett and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, and Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock.

This episode: political correspondent Susan Davis, senior White House correspondent Tamara Keith, and senior national political correspondent Mara Liasson.

The podcast is produced by Casey Morell and Kelli Wessinger. Our editor is Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.

People

Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

Content Warnings:

None

Transcript

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Susan Davis
Hey there. It's the NPR Politics podcast. I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics.

Tamara Keith
I'm Tamara Keith. I cover the White House.

Mara Liasson
And I'm Mara Liasson, senior national political correspondent.

Susan Davis
And it's 11:56 p.m. central time on Monday, August 19. And we're here at the United center in Chicago, where the first night of the Democratic National Convention concluded a short time ago. And, Mara, in a lot of ways, the theme of tonight was about passing the torch, generational change. President Joe Biden was, of course, the keynote speaker, but former democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton also spoke.

Tamara Keith
I wish my mother and Kamala's mother could see us. They would say, keep going. Shirley and Jerry would say, keep going.

Joe Biden
It's been the honor of my lifetime to serve as your president.

I love the job, but I love my country more.

I love my country more.

And all this talk about how I'm angry, all those people said I should step down, that's not true.

Mara Liasson
Biden's speech was a real valedictory moment. He talked a lot about his legacy, a lot about what he's accomplished, but he understands that part of his legacy is going to be whether or not he can prevent Donald Trump from coming back into the White House, meaning he has to elect Kamala Harris. And he did say my very first decision and my best decision was picking her. So he endorsed her.

He talked about all the things they'd done together.

But the other thing that really struck me was, first of all, how emotional he was. It was very personal. It was bittersweet. The crowd was giving him minutes long ovations. Thank you, Joe. We love you, Joe. But I couldn't help thinking that the translation of those chants were, we love you, Joe, for stepping aside before we had to shove you out the door ourselves.

Susan Davis
Tim, it's a really small point, but we should note that Biden started extraordinarily late tonight.

Tamara Keith
It was very late, and it was because the program slipped. Vice President Harris was a surprise visit. She came out on stage earlier in the night, spoke briefly, and the crowd went absolutely wild when that happened. That, of course, meant that she was in the room for President Biden's speech. His speech speaking, spent a lot of time going over territory that we've heard him go over before.

Susan Davis
It almost sounded like the speech he would have given had he been the number.

Mara Liasson
It was his stump speech in many respects.

Tamara Keith
It was the speech he would have given. And I think that what that points out is the speech that he gave tonight was darker. It was less joyful.

There were moments of anger. There were broadsides on Trump that Harris is not delivering in the same way. I think that it was a very clear reminder of the campaign that would have been and that that campaign is not the campaign that will be, because Vice President Harris, as she likes to say, is running a joyful campaign. It is a campaign about optimism in the future. And Biden's speech, you know, went over the, it talked about Charlottesville and why he ran and the Nazis with the tiki torches, all of this stuff that Harris just doesn't dwell on in the way that Biden does and did in this speech and has in all of his speeches.

Mara Liasson
She has a different way of describing the danger that Trump poses instead of a threat to democracy, which is the formulation that Biden uses. That's pretty abstract for most voters. She talks about how Trump is going to take away your freedoms, whether it's reproductive rights or your freedom to have your kids free from the fear of gun violence in school. So she has a different way of coming at this.

Susan Davis
The rhetoric between Biden and Harris, you really saw the difference tonight. Like, both the tone, the message, they really are very different in delivering the same ideas, essentially the same ideas, the.

Tamara Keith
Same policy proposals, more or less, and yet with totally different vibes, if you will.

Susan Davis
Yeah, tam, I also think it's worth focusing for a minute tonight on Hillary Clinton, because for those of us who all three of us covered 2016, it was almost a moment of deja vu. She came out dressed in all white, which she also did in 2016. And during her acceptance speech, very symbolic for women, obviously. But she received, I think, one of the loudest and most raucous receptions of the evening and gave a speech that really did focus on women and this moment for women in politics.

Tamara Keith
And she drew a line from Shirley Chisholm to Geraldine Ferraro, who was the vice presidential nominee in 1984, to her own campaign that didn't break that highest, hardest glass ceiling to now, Vice President Harris making the case that every time someone shows what is possible, it makes it possible for other people to follow. And she made the argument, and then the room was on board with it, that Vice President Harris should be the first female president, that Vice President Harris should make that history that she had tried to make.

Mara Liasson
However, Vice President Harris is not running to break any glass ceilings not at all.

Tamara Keith
She never talks about it.

Mara Liasson
Identity politics are not part of her playbook. And that, to me, is really interesting. First of all, they're kind of obvious that she's the first african american south asian female president if she's elected. But I think that she understands that people don't vote for you because you're the first of anything. They vote for you because they think you can make their lives better. I think to be running as a woman after Hillary Clinton means that the choices are more obvious, and we know the choice that Kamala Harris has made. But, you know, I want to make this point that there is one person running on identity politics in this race, and it's Donald Trump. There is nothing that beats white identity politics in America, and he is a master practitioner at it. He injects race and gender all the time.

Susan Davis
One of the things to me about tonight, too, and this is true of all conventions, but it is a spotlight for next generation who are going to be the stars of the convention. And there was a couple standout speeches tonight from people like freshman Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett of Texas and also Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, the Democrat from New York.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
And I, for 01:00 a.m. tired about, of hearing about how a two bit union buster thinks of himself as more of a patriot than the woman who fights every, every single day to lift working people out from under the boots of greed trampling on our way of life.

Susan Davis
Tim? To me, this speech was notable because Ocasio Cortez was one of Biden's loudest, strongest defenders for why he should stay in the race and pivoted tonight to giving a bit of a barn burner for why the party needs to rally behind Kamala Harris.

Tamara Keith
Well, and part of her argument for Biden staying in the race is that all the people who were calling for him to get out didn't have a plan of what would come next. Well, it turns out Biden ultimately had a plan of what would come next, and that was Vice President Harris, who he endorsed right away.

Ocasio Cortez is an interesting figure in the Democratic Party because, you know, shes part of the squad. Shes, you know, this liberal firebrand or whatever. But actually, she is like, she is a good party soldier who falls in line and delivers it in a way that makes it seem like shes edgy.

Susan Davis
And doesn't lose credibility with the base.

Tamara Keith
Yeah, yeah, right, right.

Mara Liasson
But preserves her viability within the system, as Bill Clinton once famously said, because unlike other members of the squad. She has a political future in New York and she understands that.

Susan Davis
Also Biden getting out and Biden when he was in the race, there was this whole debate about age and generational change in the party. But tonight, to me, also shown that there is a ton of generational talent within the Democratic Party. Andy Bashir, the governor of Kentucky, spoke. Rafael Warnock, the democratic senator from Georgia, is someone that people talk about, someone who could run for president one day. It did seem like Biden getting out has lifted the cap off the enthusiasm jar.

Mara Liasson
There's been a big, big lid on the democratic party, and it was the Democratic Party which has tremendous strength with young voters, minority voters.

There were so many old people that made up that lid, the Clintons, you know, Biden. And now that they, that that's been lifted, look how much pent up enthusiasm there was. I mean, it was, it was incredible. You know, one other thing, one other theme that I, that I felt was present tonight is this whole battle for working class voters.

Obviously, Donald Trump's making a big play. He wants to transform, he and JD Vance want to transform the Republican Party into the working man's party without being for or raising the minimum wage and all sorts of other economic things that might help working class people. But tonight we heard from Sean Fain, who was the UAW president, who did a kind of Hulk Hogan style reveal when he took off his jacket and his t shirt, said Trump is a scab.

And that I think, I think he really laid down the gauntlet to say, you're for working people. Well, let's do something more than just give them some cultural war red meat.

Susan Davis
There was union leaders who were featured tonight, and to me it seemed a little bit of a tit for tat for the fact that the Teamsters had spoke at the Republican National Convention and there was some disturbances in the union, in the labor movement.

Mara Liasson
Right. Well, the Teamsters have in the past endorsed many republican candidates. But yes, it was two seans, you know, and this tonight, Sean Fain really laid it down so that, that, I thought was another theme.

Susan Davis
All right, let's take a quick break, but please remember to hit the follow button on our show if you haven't already. We're going to be bringing you all the news from the convention this week. More in a bit.

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Susan Davis
And were back. And tonight also made clear in very stark terms how much democrats are focused on abortion and reproductive rights in this election. Several women spoke about their experiences, including Hadley Duvall. She's a Kentucky woman who became the face of reproductive rights in the state during democratic governor Andy Bashir's successful reelection campaign last year. Duvall was raped at the age of twelve by her stepfather, and she ultimately miscarried.

Hadley Duvall
I can't imagine not having a choice.

But today, that's the reality for many women and girls across the country because of Donald Trump's abortion bans.

He calls it a beautiful thing.

What is so beautiful about a child having to carry her parents child?

Susan Davis
Tam that was a very jarring message to hear. And it was also a moment where you could sort of feel the energy shift inside the convention hall.

Tamara Keith
The screens that had been blue with stars were all black.

It was somber. It was, you could hear a pin drop in the room. It was so quiet. There was a couple that started out this section talking about their pregnancy challenge, where the mother had to be actually too ill to receive treatment because of abortion restrictions in their state and the father washing nearly in tears. It was really powerful. And it is quite something to put these abortion stories in primetime on television into people's homes. This is an issue that we know Democrats are going to run on. They've been running on. We saw it in 2022. It is ever so much more present in 2024, in part because there are all of these ballot measures in key swing states, among others, that would enshrine a right to abortion in state constitutions.

And Vice President Harris is much more comfortable talking about abortion than President Biden, which we saw even tonight, where he sort of stumbled in that section later. He did say the word abortion, but it was not an area of comfort in his speech, and it is something that Harris talks about. They included, in fact, in an earlier video introducing Harris and talking about her standing up for her friends in elementary school. They also talked about her coming to the aid of a friend who was being abused.

Mara Liasson
Yeah, Arizona and Nevada are the two states that have abortion related referenda. And we know that every single place that there's been an abortion rights ballot measure, even in red states, abortion rights has won since the Dobbs decision. But I also thought it was interesting that with the exception of Hadley Duvall, which is a horrific story, the other women were all women who needed abortions because something had gone wrong with their pregnancies and they needed the abortion in order to preserve their fertility because they wanted more kids, not because they didn't want kids, they wanted more kids.

Susan Davis
I think that's a very important point and very compelling to a lot of people because these were women who were seeking abortions for pregnancies that they did not want to lose. I want to ask you both this because I was in DC for the republican national convention, hosting for there, but I know you were both there. We're obviously all in Chicago tonight. I'm curious about just your sense about the vibe and what it feels like to be here. I will say it seems like there is a level of enthusiasm that could not have compared if Joe Biden had stuck on and been the nominee. It's well attended. The place was packed tonight. There does seem to be a lot of enthusiasm, and I'm curious how you feel about it.

Mara Liasson
Well, you know, if Biden had stayed in, I think this convention would have been like awake. Actually, James Carville, who is a good Catholic from New Orleans, said that it would have been like sitting shiva for four days in Chicago. But now, you know, they're full of hope. I don't think it's irrational exuberance. I don't think they have it in the bag, which is how Republicans felt in Milwaukee. I think they understand that they have a fighting chance. And boy, for them that is so much better than how they felt, especially after the debate performance, when they really felt that all was lost.

Susan Davis
Tim, in Milwaukee, the term landslide was thrown around a lot, that there was going to be this huge red wave coming. And to me, it seems like Democrats are trying to send a much more cautious message. The head of the forward future super PAC, which is the main super PAC aligned behind Kamala Harris's campaign, had a briefing today that was like, hey, it's not as rosy as the polls suggest. Like, everybody needs to remember that this is still a tight race. Like, they're sending a very different message to their people.

Tamara Keith
Yeah. And the Harris campaign is running like they're behind. And I think that in Milwaukee, you have to remember this was a couple of days after an assassination attempt on Trump, where he rose up and said, fight, fight. And they were chanting, fight, fight.

And then people were putting on fake bandages on their ears to look like Trump.

Mara Liasson
It was a literal martyr, not just a figurative martyr and victim.

Tamara Keith
And so they believed that he had been saved to win. He had been saved to go and save America. Yes. And so this is a different vibe than that.

Susan Davis
And, tam, we should note the night ended on a very visually symbolic moment. Kamala Harris and her husband Doug came onto stage with Joe and Jill Biden. They embraced. They were hugging. It was, he didn't physically pass a torch, but that was the visual that the convention hall was looking for.

Tamara Keith
And I am a little bit of a lip reader. And Harris very clearly said as they were hugging, I love you to President Biden. And as I look down on that stage with multiple generations of Bidens and President Biden holding little baby Bo Hunter's son, I kept thinking, there are no balloons falling from the ceiling for him. You know, this was his only real in person convention because, you know, four years ago, there was Covid. This was his convention. But it wasn't his convention that said, everyone held up these signs that said, we love you, Joe, or we heart you, Joe, including Nancy Pelosi, who was right in the front, who held up the sign and was chanting, we love you, Joe, even as she very clearly had a role in pushing him out.

Mara Liasson
But those two things are not in contradiction. They love him for doing the right thing, for stepping aside and giving them a chance.

Susan Davis
All right, let's leave it there. We'll be back in your feeds tomorrow night after former President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle address the convention hall. I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics.

Tamara Keith
I'm Tamara Heath. I cover the White House.

Mara Liasson
And I'm Mara Liasson, senior national political correspondent.

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