#national party convention
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whenweallvote · 11 months ago
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Did you watch Shirley on Netflix and wonder how political parties select their nominee for President? 🤔 
Voters participate in primaries or caucuses at state-level party conventions in order to select the delegates who represent their community at their party's presidential nominating convention. At the convention, delegates ultimately select a candidate to represent their party on the November ballot. 
Swipe to learn more about delegates, national party conventions, and how YOUR vote in a primary election impacts who you’ll see on the ballot in November. Then, visit weall.vote/register to make sure you’re registered to vote! 🗳️
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izzylimon · 4 months ago
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PLEASE SHARE
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thenameisgul · 6 months ago
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covid-safer-hotties · 6 months ago
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last-tarrasque · 1 month ago
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Was it worth it you little monsters? Was it?
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nando161mando · 6 months ago
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▶️ Pro-Palestine protesters rally on the Democratic National Convention final day in Chicago
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auriidae · 6 months ago
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eepythubs :)
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my-voice-my-resistance · 6 months ago
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deadpresidents · 7 months ago
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On the cliffs of Normandy, in a small holding area, the President of the United States was looking out at the English Channel. It was only six weeks ago, on the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings, and President Biden had just finished his remarks at the American cemetery atop Omaha Beach. Guests had been congratulating him on the speech, but he didn't want to talk about himself. The moment was not about him; it was about the men who had fought and died there. "Today feels so large," he told me. "This may sound strange -- and I don't mean it to -- but when I was out there, I felt the honor of it, the sanctity of it. To speak for the American people, to speak over those graves, it's a profound thing." He turned from the view over the beaches and gestured back toward the war dead. "You want to do right by them, by the country."
Mr. Biden has spent a lifetime trying to do right by the nation, and he did so in the most epic of ways when he chose to end his campaign for re-election. His decision is one of the most remarkable acts of leadership in our history, an act of self-sacrifice that places him in the company of George Washington who also stepped away from the presidency. To put something ahead of one's immediate desires -- to give, rather than to try to take -- is perhaps the most difficult thing for any human being to do. And Mr. Biden has done just that.
To be clear: Mr. Biden is my friend, and it has been a privilege to help him when I can. Not because I am a Democrat -- I belong to neither party and have voted for both Democrats and Republicans -- but because I believe him to be a defender of the Constitution and a public servant of honor and of grace at a time when extreme forces threaten the nation. I do not agree with everything he has done or wanted to do in terms of policy. But I know him to be a good man, a patriot and a president who has met challenges all too similar to those Abraham Lincoln faced. Here is the story I believe history will tell of Joe Biden. With American democracy in an hour of maximum danger in Donald Trump's presidency, Mr. Biden stepped in the breach. He staved off an authoritarian threat at home, rallied the world against autocrats abroad, laid the foundations for decades of prosperity, managed the end of a once-in-a-century pandemic, successfully legislated on vital issues of climate and infrastructure and has conducted a presidency worthy of the greatest of his predecessors. History and fate brought him to the pinnacle in a late season in his life, and in the end, he respected fate -- and he respected the American people.
It is, of course, an incredibly difficult moment. Highs and lows, victories and defeats, joy and pain: It has been ever thus for Mr. Biden. In the distant autumn of 1972, he experienced the most exhilarating of hours -- election to the United States Senate at the age of 29. He was no scion; he earned it. The darkness fell: His wife and daughter were killed in an automobile accident that seriously injured his two sons, Beau and Hunter. But he endured, found purpose in the pain, became deeper, wiser, more empathetic. Through the decades, two presidential campaigns imploded, and in 2015 his son Beau, a lawyer and wonderfully promising young political figure, died of brain cancer after serving in Iraq.
Such tragedy would have broken many lesser men. Mr. Biden, however, never gave up, never gave in, never surrendered the hope that a fallen, frail and fallible world could be made better, stronger and more whole if people could summon just enough goodness and enough courage to build rather than tear down. Character, as the Greeks first taught us, is destiny, and Mr. Biden's character is both a mirror and a maker of his nation's. Like Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan, he is optimistic, resilient and kind, a steward of American greatness, a love of the great game of politics and, at heart, a hopeless romantic about the country that has given him so much.
Nothing bears out this point as well as his decision to let history happen in the 2024 election. Not matter how much people say that this was inevitable after the debate in Atlanta last month, there was nothing foreordained about an American President ending his political career for the sake of his country and his party. By surrendering the possibility of enduring in the seat of ultimate power, Mr. Biden has taught us a landmark lesson in patriotism, humility and wisdom.
Now the question comes to the rest of us. What will we the people do? We face the most significant of choices. Mr. Roosevelt framed the war whose dead Mr. Biden commemorated at Normandy in June as a battle between democracy and dictatorship. It is not too much to say that we, too, have what Mr. Roosevelt called a "rendezvous with destiny" at home and abroad. Mr. Biden has put country above self, the Constitution above personal ambition, the future of democracy above temporal gain. It is up to us to follow his lead.
-- "Joe Biden, My Friend and an American Hero" by Jon Meacham, New York Times, July 22, 2024.
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I love this, it's fairly lighthearted and she has great energy throughout the pseudo-interview, vote blue and vote Harris this election.
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mellodyevangeline · 5 months ago
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izzylimon · 3 months ago
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Harrison Ford coming in at the last minute to endorse Kamala Harris even tough he´s never endorsed a political candidate before is the most Han Solo thing he´s ever done.
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itsallpoliticsstupid · 6 months ago
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Matt Walsh allegedly 'enrages' democrats
According to the Daily Fail in the UK, democrats are enraged by Matt Walsh's attendance at the DNC.
Nope, definitely not enraged, merely laughing incredibly hard at the man.
Why is he skulking around like he's infiltrated some secret cult? It's the DNC, a well publicised, well attended, televised event.
Really, he's just making an ass of himself by thinking he's doing something sneaky. And it's hilarious to watch.
Maybe we should have played a drinking game during the event? Every time you see Matt Walsh, take a shot.
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foxy-kitsune-fox · 4 months ago
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Black people tell me vote Kamala Harris but it will never happen, I see her as an Indian not Black, so stop lying. Donald Trump is a better option to be trusted and he’s the opposite of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris when it comes to economy, immigration, inflation and uncensored.
~ Baron Tremayne Caple A.K.A. Foxy Fox/Foxy Kitsune Fox/Fox Man/Fox King/King Fox/Gemini Man/Autism Man/Rainbow Man Is A Metrosexual/God Of Autism/King Of Autism/God Of Asperger/King Of Asperger 🦊
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joansiesbeloved · 3 months ago
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Ethel and Joan at a dinner party at the National Democratic Convention. Circa, 1960.
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unitedfrontvarietyhour · 5 months ago
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See through their disguise.
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