CHARLOTTE — Democrats may face an enthusiasm gap in November, hope and change having lost much of its glow. But you wouldn’t know it from the opening night of the Democratic convention.
Democrats put on a rousing show Tuesday, a program of powerful political oratory and optics, capped by first lady Michelle Obama’s speech. The evening’s speakers built one on another to deliver a consistent message, and the arena was packed with delegates eager to express support for an embattled President Obama.
Democrats need a good convention. Obama’s political vulnerabilities are clear and Mitt Romney’s opportunities obvious. Charlotte can’t be a reenactment of Denver. But anything that conveys loss of hope, disappointment in the president or a slackening of enthusiasm will be magnified manyfold by the media assembled here this week.
The election remains a statistical tie nationally. Romney didn’t get a noticeable bounce in the polls from his convention. But Romney did use his gathering to improve his image, even if that was primarily among Republicans. If Obama can do better than that, if he can actually move the polls a few points with his convention, he would begin the final phase of the election in better shape than many expected.
It’s far too early to make judgments about the overall impact of this convention, but the contrast with the beginning of the Republican convention in Tampa was palpable. That’s why Tuesday’s start was important.
In Tampa, the opening night was marked by a lack of energy on the floor. The aisles in the arena were wide open. Delegates talked among themselves through almost all the speeches, other than those by Ann Romney and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.
One measure: Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker got huge applause when he was introduced, which reflected his widespread popularity in the party. But he rarely roused the crowd once he began speaking and exited the stage to much milder applause.
If the enthusiasm in Tampa was mostly anti-Obama rather than pro-Romney, it was different in Charlotte. On Tuesday, the floor was alive with energy. People crowded into every space available. The Obama convention team had distributed placards and signs to augment the messages from different speakers, and they were used to good effect when both Michelle Obama and San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro delivered their prime-time speeches.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, never given to understatement, offered a predictably bullish assessment of opening night. “We had more energy in one night than they [Republicans] had in four,” he said at a Wednesday breakfast hosted by The Post and Bloomberg News.
Discounting for partisan cheerleading (and the fact that Republicans had only three nights in Tampa because of a hurricane threat), Emanuel managed to sum up something that was unmistakable for anyone roaming the floor at the Time Warner Cable Arena on Tuesday night.
But there was much more than optics and good signage that helped Democrats kick off a convention that is being conducted in the shadow of what took place four years ago in Denver.
Democrats put on a rousing show Tuesday, a program of powerful political oratory and optics, capped by first lady Michelle Obama’s speech. The evening’s speakers built one on another to deliver a consistent message, and the arena was packed with delegates eager to express support for an embattled President Obama.
Democrats need a good convention. Obama’s political vulnerabilities are clear and Mitt Romney’s opportunities obvious. Charlotte can’t be a reenactment of Denver. But anything that conveys loss of hope, disappointment in the president or a slackening of enthusiasm will be magnified manyfold by the media assembled here this week.
The election remains a statistical tie nationally. Romney didn’t get a noticeable bounce in the polls from his convention. But Romney did use his gathering to improve his image, even if that was primarily among Republicans. If Obama can do better than that, if he can actually move the polls a few points with his convention, he would begin the final phase of the election in better shape than many expected.
It’s far too early to make judgments about the overall impact of this convention, but the contrast with the beginning of the Republican convention in Tampa was palpable. That’s why Tuesday’s start was important.
In Tampa, the opening night was marked by a lack of energy on the floor. The aisles in the arena were wide open. Delegates talked among themselves through almost all the speeches, other than those by Ann Romney and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.
One measure: Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker got huge applause when he was introduced, which reflected his widespread popularity in the party. But he rarely roused the crowd once he began speaking and exited the stage to much milder applause.
If the enthusiasm in Tampa was mostly anti-Obama rather than pro-Romney, it was different in Charlotte. On Tuesday, the floor was alive with energy. People crowded into every space available. The Obama convention team had distributed placards and signs to augment the messages from different speakers, and they were used to good effect when both Michelle Obama and San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro delivered their prime-time speeches.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, never given to understatement, offered a predictably bullish assessment of opening night. “We had more energy in one night than they [Republicans] had in four,” he said at a Wednesday breakfast hosted by The Post and Bloomberg News.
Discounting for partisan cheerleading (and the fact that Republicans had only three nights in Tampa because of a hurricane threat), Emanuel managed to sum up something that was unmistakable for anyone roaming the floor at the Time Warner Cable Arena on Tuesday night.
But there was much more than optics and good signage that helped Democrats kick off a convention that is being conducted in the shadow of what took place four years ago in Denver.