The Democratic National Convention is less than two weeks away and it is official everything in a presidential campaign has to have a theme. The Democratic National Convention will have a different one for each night, officials announced today. The first night -- Monday, Aug. 25 -- will be "one nation," and will feature potential First Lady Michelle Obama.
The second night--Aug. 26-- will be on "renewing America's promise," and the keynote speaker will be Hillary Clinton. Wednesday night--Aug. 27-- will be on "securing America's future," highlighted by former President Bill Clinton and the vice presidential nominee's acceptance speech.
And the final night--Aug. 27-- will be "change you can believe in" -- Barack Obama's most-used campaign slogan -- as he formally accepts the nomination. "The 2008 Convention is about ensuring that those peoples’ voices are heard and their call for change is heeded,” Kansas Governor and convention co-chairwoman Kathleen Sebelius said in a statement.
“From Monday through Thursday, our Convention program will highlight the people of this country who want positive change and who believe Barack Obama is the leader who will listen to their concerns and get our country moving in the right direction again.” The timing of the speeches will be full of symbolism and touched by history.
Clinton, who nearly became the first woman to be nominated by a major party, will speak on the 88th anniversary of women being granted the right to vote. And Obama, the first African-American to win a major party nomination, will give his address on the 45th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" speech.
So with unity, security and change as the Democratic National Convention themes. It is clear that in order for America to become better it must be unified and secure in order to bring about the proper change that will last generations to come. Clearly with Michelle Obama taking national stage at the Democratic National Convention on the opening night, it should provide fireworks for what should be the most talked about convention since perhaps 1992. Michelle has to show grace and pose as she delivers perhaps a momentum builder of a speech that will be featured around the "one nation" theme. Michelle has to show the American people that through one nation we can accomplish things never seen nor heard of before.
While on the second night of the Democratic convention, Hillary Clinton, who will be speaking on the 88th anniversary of women obtaining their right to vote, has to renew America's promise in women's rights and rights for all. Clinton must show that if the American people renew its promise to the basic foundations and equal rights for all people that America can be a "Great Nation" and can continue to be a beckon of "HOPE" for other nations to look at. Clinton must show energy as well as Presidential swagger when delivering her speech as well as unity in the sense that she is supporting Barack and can be the next President after Barack. Hillary has to show women that she is women hear them roar and that's when the women should really give Hillary and the Democratic Party a major boast that should be heard across not only America but the world.
The third night of the convention should be really intriguing since former President Bill Clinton will be speaking on the same night as the Vice Presidential nominee who will be delivering a VP acceptance speech. So it is clear that the former President must show that by securing America's future, the world will be a better place and America will be better off. the Vice Presidential nominee must showcase has credentials and public speaking skills by delivering an acceptance speech that showcases that through being unified as one nation, we can renew America's promise for securing America's future by believing in a change that all Americans can believe in. That's the type of focus that the Vice Presidential acceptance speech must showcase.
The last night of the convention should be fireworks as Senator Barack Obama delivers his acceptance speech and becomes the Democratic Presidential candidate officially. That's why Sen. Obama must deliver perhaps the "Greatest" speech he has ever delivered as he encompasses the theme of his campaign with the themes of the convention. Obama must be more gracious, more entertaining, more stunning, more exciting, and more energizing than he was 4 years ago when he entered the National spotlight at the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston, Massachusetts. Obama must deliver as great as speech as the "I have a Dream" speech that MLK delivered on the same night that Obama will be accepting the Democratic Presidential nomination.
It is clear that if we as Americans become one unified nation, we can renew America's promise in our basic foundations and principles that our founding fathers built our great nation on and by renewing America's promise, we can secure America's future so that our future Generations can live out the America's promise for equal rights, democracy, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Thus this is the type of "Change that We Can Believe In" as we become ONE NATION with one goal, one mission and one purpose.
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