The Democratic National Convention ended on history.
Hillary Clinton became the first woman to lead a major American political partyâs ticket as a presidential nominee. Now, to complete her game of ultimate womenâs-history bingoâfrom Ivy leaguer to first lady of Arkansas to first lady of the United States to senator from New York to secretary of stateâall Clinton has to do is become president of the United States.
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No big.
She just has to beat neo-Mussolini, a protofascist riding a populist âdestroy first, build laterâ wave, who resembles an orange construction-hazard cone.
She can do that, right? Right?
Clinton is a fascinating study. Her rĂ©sumĂ© is impeccable, but her untrustworthy ratings are impossibly high for a leading presidential candidate. Sheâs a hard worker whoâas her longtime friend actress Mary Steenburgen said Thursday nightâwill get knocked down seven times and stand up eight. She also comes across as a political animal, someone who clearly wants power, both because she has a distinct vision for America (and the world) and because she has a more than healthy ego. You kind of have to in order to believe that you should be âleader of the free world.â
So she took her experience, credentials and work ethic and pulled together a workwomanâs speech that took to task her rival while expanding on the hope and optimismâthe âstronger togetherâ ethos âthat was the theme of this convention. That America is better united than divided, heavy on the implication that it is newbie GOP leader Donald Trump doing the dividing.
âHe wants to divide usâfrom the rest of the world and from each other. He’s betting that the perils of today’s world will blind us to its unlimited promise,â Clinton said. âHe’s taken the Republican Party a long way âŠÂ  from âmorning in Americaâ to  âmidnight in America.â He wants us to fear the future and fear each other. Well, a great Democratic president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, came up with the perfect rebuke to Trump more than 80 years ago, during a much more perilous time: âThe only thing we have to fear is fear itself.ââ
Well, there is fear itself and fear of a Trump presidency, something that the Democrats were adamant about preventing. Delegates were verbally beaten about the head with the notion that the party must unite in order to defeat him in the fall or else Canada is going to face an influx of millions of new immigrants, if the internet is to be believed. (But packing up and skipping out on America is a bit harder than youâd think. And considering that most Americans donât even have passports, itâs more fantasy than anything.) Protest chants of âNo more warsâ were drowned out by cries of âUSA.â Delegates who were distinctly âBernie or bustâ announced that they were not âwith herâ this fall. But âfear of a Trump planetâ continued.
Whatcha gonna do when the Trump comes for you? The Dems asked. With him wanting to deport millions of immigrants, block Muslims from entry and make âBlue lives matterâ trump (no pun intended) âBlack lives matter,â and the odd fact that heâs the presidential hopeful of choice for the Russians, the chaos candidate loomed over the convention.
Making history is fun. And when the balloons dropped, the Clintons seemed as mesmerized as anyone else, but skinning and grinning and ballooning aside, thereâs a bigger hill left to climb. Itâs not over, by a long shot. In fact, itâs just beginning.
Clinton may have cracked the highest glass ceiling, but sheâs still got a few more flights of stairs to go if she wants to truly make history.
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