Harmon, Welch would get national Democratic Party spots under proposal from state party chair

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SPRINGFIELD — Illinois Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, and House Speaker Chris Welch, D-Hillside, would become members of the Democratic National Committee by virtue of their positions under a proposal from state party chair Lisa Hernandez. 

Hernandez, a state representative from Cicero who serves on Welch’s House leadership team, told the 34-member Illinois Democratic State Central Committee on Monday she will seek to amend the state party’s bylaws to include language that would make the president of the Illinois Senate and the speaker of the Illinois House "base" DNC members if they are Democrats. 

The DNC is the the party’s national governing structure. It is charged with organizing the Democratic National Convention every four years and writing the party’s platform. It also raises money, commissions polls and provides campaign strategy for Democratic candidates up and down the ballot. 

The organization is comprised of state party chairs and vice-chairs along with 200 "base" members apportioned among states based on population. The latter group of members are elected by each state party to represent them at the national party.

Under Hernandez’s proposal, Harmon and Welch, or whoever holds their titles, would automatically receive two of Illinois’ seven "base" slots in future election cycles.



Senate President Don Harmon, left, and House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch stand together during a joint session of the General Assembly on April 19 at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield.




BRIAN CASSELLA, CHICAGO TRIBUNE



The pair are expected to be slated for the term that begins following the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago and runs through the party’s 2028 presidential nominating convention. That vote, initially expected on Monday, will take place on May 13. 

In an interview with Lee Enterprises following the Democratic state central committee’s meeting at the Illinois AFL-CIO headquarters in Springfield, Hernandez said the legislative leaders’ presence as members of the national party made sense because "they’re both already the main individuals who are trying to … select the candidates or keep their membership in office."

"It’s fitting," Hernandez said. "They’re already doing the work. So for me, it’s a very appropriate designation. It should have been done already a long time ago."

Illinois’ Democratic legislative leaders, at least in recent history, have had significant influence on state politics. By utilizing a loophole in state campaign finance law, Harmon and Welch can collect unlimited high-dollar donations from key constituencies like labor unions and trial lawyers and move the money seamlessly to support their members’ campaigns.

As of the end of March, Harmon had more than $12.7 million in his campaign account, according to the Illinois State Board of Elections. Welch had more than $7.2 million on hand. Both are far outpacing their Republican counterparts.

"Well, I mean, I think as speaker and Senate president, we spend a great deal of our time building the party," Welch told Lee Enterprises. "A lot of our time is fundraising, a lot of our time is candidate recruitment. We certainly, I think, know where the party is at or have a really good sense of where the party’s at. And so we can certainly take that to our friends on a national level and help take that to other states that need it."

The proposed change comes nearly two years after Hernandez, backed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Welch, defeated U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, D-Matteson, who had been elected state party chair following the resignation of former House Speaker Michael Madigan from the role in 2021. 

State Rep. Lisa Hernandez, D-Cicero, reacts to her election as chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois.


Under Madigan, the state party largely served a nominal role as a vehicle for sending out campaign materials at a postage discount for state House Democrats. Candidates and activists often had to fend for themselves or turn to other organizations for party-building activities. 

But in the years since, the organization has started to resemble a functioning state party, with programs for candidate recruitment and getting out the vote, among other initiatives.

There has also been greater integration between the different party organizations, from the legislative caucuses to Pritzker’s political operation.

In 2022, for instance, they all signed off on a "coordinated campaign" largely funded by Pritzker but housed under the umbrella of the state party.

And last year, an amendment was slipped into an elections omnibus bill that made Pritzker, Harmon and Welch "honorary" members of the Democratic State Central Committee, the state party’s governing structure. 

Members of the committee gathered in Springfield on Monday were initially expected to vote on all seven of Illinois’ "base" DNC members. But Hernandez said it would be postponed until May 13 since the state Board of Elections has yet to certify precinct-level results. These are needed as the votes are weighted based on Democratic turnout in each congressional district. 

Even if the Hernandez’s proposed amendment is not ready to go by the next meeting, Harmon and Welch are expected to be selected as DNC members.

There are 13 candidates vying for the five remaining spots: state Sen. Omar Aquino, D-Chicago; state central committeewoman Christine Benson; former state Sen. Melinda Bush, D-Grayslake; state Sen. Cristina Castro, D-Elgin; former Illinois Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago; U.S. Rep. Danny Davis, D-Chicago; U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, D-Matteson; state central committeeman Bill Houlihan; former state Comptroller Dan Hynes; U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez, D-Chicago; state central committeeman Terry Redman; state central committeewoman Carol Ronen; and state central committeewoman Kristina Zahorik.


Historic moments from past political conventions

Historic moments from past political conventions

Political conventions can seem like old-timey, corny affairs with silly hats, endless enthusiasm, and no shortage of red, white, and blue balloons and bunting. In fact, they have provided the scenes for substantial dealmaking, strategic maneuvering, fundraising, and a fair share of backstabbing. More than a few careers have begun—and ended—at political conventions.

Conventions have heralded a host of firsts, from the first Black woman to address the floor to the first woman to be nominated for the highest office. Barack Obama made his first significant appearance at a political convention as a young state senator, telling the crowd in Boston that his was an unlikely American story and that his African name meant “blessed.”

These forums have given us last looks, as well. A grieving nation paid a tearful tribute to a slain president at a convention in 1964, and venerable figures like Ted Kennedy and Ronald Reagan made poignant farewells on convention stages.

Conventions have been the gatherings for setting thought-provoking goals and advocating for political change. Jesse Jackson reminded delegates that the nation was a rainbow of citizens, and Mario Cuomo reminded them that the country was like two cities, one shining and rich, the other desperate and poor. The nation’s division in 1968 was televised in American homes courtesy of the violence-torn Democratic convention in Chicago. Missteps and gaffes have had their roles to play, from Jimmy Carter’s fumbled words to a speech by Melania Trump that raised accusations of plagiarism.

Whether they are meetings of power brokers and big-time donors or expensive infomercials bloated with delegate breakfasts and cocktail parties, conventions are milestones that usher in a frenzied season of politicking ahead of the November general election. Candidates introduce themselves, and campaigns strive for enthusiasm and momentum.

This year, amid the coronavirus pandemic, conventions will be dramatically different affairs, held virtually and thus without the crowds, the cheers, and the pageantry. The Democratic National Convention is set for Aug. 17–20, followed by the Republican National Convention from Aug. 24–27. Some say this could mark a lasting change in conventions, which might not return to former incarnations.

Stacker took a look back at 20 historic moments from the nation’s political conventions over the years, consulting academic accounts, news reports, and the memories of those who were there.

You may also like: Highest-paid employees in the White House




Jessica Kourkounis // Getty Images



1948: Civil rights divide Democrats

At the Democratic Convention in 1948, where Harry Truman’s name was at the top of the ballot, dozens of delegates from Mississippi and Alabama walked out in opposition to the party’s civil rights platform, which included abolition of state poll taxes, an anti-lynching law, and desegregation of the military. The Southern delegates broke away and founded their own States’ Rights Democratic Party.

[Pictured: Members of the American Communications Association (CIO) set up picket lines in front of the Convention Hall before the 1948 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia.]




Irving Haberman/IH Images // Getty Images



1964: A tearful tribute to JFK

Delegates to the 1964 Democratic National Convention were brought to tears by a moving video tribute to the late President John F. Kennedy, who had been assassinated less than a year earlier. The tribute was introduced by an emotional Robert Kennedy, then-attorney general, who himself would be slain four years later as he ran for president.

[Pictured: U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy gives a speech on Sept. 2, 1964, at the Democratic National Convention in New York.]




Staff/AFP // Getty Images



1964: NBC reporter arrested on air

NBC television reporter John Chancellor was arrested at the Republican National Convention in 1964 in San Francisco. He had refused to leave when efforts were made to clear reporters from the convention floor following the nomination of Barry Goldwater. As he was escorted out by uniformed officers, he famously said on the air: "This is John Chancellor, somewhere in custody!"

[Pictured: Crowds outside the Republican National Convention in Cow Palace, following the nomination of right-wing presidential candidate Barry Goldwater,  July 16, 1964, in Daly City, California.]




Michael Ochs Archives // Getty Images



The 1968 Democratic National Convention was roiled by the hundreds of protestors who were arrested and injured outside on the streets of Chicago. Inside, Connecticut Sen. Abe Ribicoff accused Chicago Mayor Richard Daley of “Gestapo tactics.” The Chicago mayor can be seen, but not heard, angrily shouting and gesturing in response.

[Pictured: Illinois delegates holding a banner promoting Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley on the convention floor of the final day of the 1968 DNC, held at the International Amphitheater in Chicago.]




Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Hulton Archive // Getty Images



1968: Television reporter Dan Rather punched on convention floor

At that same heated 1968 Democratic Convention, CBS television reporter Dan Rather scuffled with security guards on the floor and could be heard saying: “Take your hands off me, unless you’re planning to arrest me.” Still on air, he was knocked over and punched in the stomach. From the anchor booth, Walter Cronkite called the guards “thugs.”

[Pictured: Reporting from the floor, CBS’ Dan Rather (left with headset) is shoved by security agents at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.]

 




Bettmann // Getty Images



1968: Julian Bond debuts as underage vice presidential pick

The 1968 Democratic Convention was infamously torn apart over issues of civil rights and the Vietnam War, and Julian Bond, a Georgia state legislator, was nominated to be vice president as a protest candidate. At 28 years old, Bond was seven years too young to be eligible. In 1986, Bond was defeated in his bid for a U.S. Congressional seat from Atlanta by John Lewis, a fellow civil rights champion who died in July 2020.

[Pictured: The Democratic Convention approved with unexpected speed a compromise splitting Georgia’s votes between an Old Guard slate, and a Redel, biracial group. Here is rebel leader Julian Bond (L), along with other delegates, in Chicago.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1976: First Black woman makes keynote address to Democrats

In 1976, Rep. Barbara Jordan of Texas became the first Black woman to deliver the keynote address to a Democratic National Convention. In moving words that echo today, she said: “We are a people in a quandary about the present. We are a people in search of our future. We are a people in search of a national community." Two years earlier, she had delivered a compelling statement about impeachment proceedings against President Richard Nixon before the House Judiciary Committee.

[Pictured: Barbara Jordan waves to the crowd before her keynote speech at the DNC.]




Owen Franken/Corbis // Getty Images



s challenge to Jimmy Carter

At the Democratic National Convention in 1980, Sen. Ted Kennedy ended his challenge to unseat President Jimmy Carter, delivering a speech that did not throw wholehearted support to Carter. A fumbling, failed effort at posing the two rivals together with arms raised in unity followed. Kennedy’s performance was seen as taking steam out of Carter’s reelection bid, and Republican Ronald Reagan won the White House that November.

[Pictured: President Carter and Sen. Edward Kennedy finally shake hands as Democratic Convention chairman Thomas "Tip" O’Neill and Carter campaign manager Robert Strauss bring them together on the podium at the conclusion of the Democratic Convention in New York.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1980: ‘Hubert Horatio Hornblower Humphrey’

Jimmy Carter made an unfortunate gaffe at the Democrats’ 1980 convention with the words “Hubert Horatio Hornblower!… Humphrey!” in a tribute to the former vice president and presidential candidate who died in 1978. Carter mixed up the Minnesota politician’s name with the fictional character Horatio Hornblower, a British naval officer in books by C.S. Forester. Making matters worse, his speech was followed by a spectacular failure of the balloons to fall from the convention hall ceiling. Carter was defeated by Republican Ronald Reagan.

[Pictured: President Jimmy Carter at the 1980 DNC at Madison Square Garden in New York City.]




Dan Brinzac/New York Post Archives /(c) NYP Holdings, Inc. // Getty Images



1984: ‘Tale of Two Cities’

In 1984, New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivered his “Tale of Two Cities“ keynote address, taking aim at President Ronald Reagan’s description of the nation as “a shining city upon a hill.” Cuomo said, “There is despair, Mr. President, in the faces that you don’t see, in the places that you don’t visit in your shining city.” It was considered one of the best speeches by Cuomo, a skilled orator, and fueled hopes and expectations that he would seek the presidency. Today, his son Andrew Cuomo has built a national, if not global following as governor of New York thanks to his widely viewed news briefings on the state’s efforts to battle the coronavirus pandemic.

[Pictured: New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivers the keynote address to the DNC, July 16, in San Francisco.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1984: Jesse Jackson and the Rainbow Coalition

Rev. Jesse Jackson, who had sought the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination with his Rainbow Coalition campaign in 1984, mesmerized the convention with a stirring speech in which he described his constituency as “the desperate, the damned, the disinherited, the disrespected, and the despised. They are restless and seek relief.” But in a call for unity, he said, “Even in our fractured state, all of us count, and all of us fit somewhere.”

[Pictured: Jesse Jackson at the 1984 DNC held at Moscone Center in San Francisco.]




Frederic Larson/San Francisco Chronicle // Getty Images




1988: ‘Read my lips’

In 1988, George H.W. Bush promised supporters at the Republican National Convention, "Read my lips: no new taxes,” as he tried to paint his opponent Michael Dukakis as a tax-and-spend liberal Democrat. It was a campaign promise Bush failed to keep in office, when he agreed to tax increases including a hike in the personal tax rate ceiling to 31% from 28%.

[Pictured: George H.W. Bush gives a speech at the 1988 Republican Convention.]




Philip Gould/Corbis // Getty Images



1988: George H.W. Bush and the ‘silver foot in his mouth’

Ann Richards, Texas state treasurer and later governor with a famously sharp wit, delighted the audience at the Democratic National Convention in 1988 with her barbs at Republican George H.W. Bush. “Poor George. He can’t help it,” she said. “He was born with a silver foot in his mouth.”

[Pictured: Ann Richards at the 1988 DNC.]




Wally McNamee/Corbis // Getty Images



1988: Ronald Reagan says goodbye

In 1988, before an emotional crowd, outgoing President Ronald Reagan bid farewell at the Republican National Convention in New Orleans, where George H.W. Bush accepted the party’s nomination. “I’ll leave my phone number and address behind just in case you need a foot soldier," Reagan said as he headed into retirement. Six years later, he released a letter telling the American public he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

[Pictured: President Ronald Reagan and First Lady Nancy Reagan waving to crowd as confetti falls on them.]




Shepard Sherbell/CORBIS SABA/Corbis // Getty Images



2004: A young Barack Obama is noticed

Many Americans were introduced to Barack Obama in 2004 when the state senator from Illinois delivered a riveting keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention in Boston. Calling himself “a skinny kid with a funny name who believes that America has a place for him, too,” he delivered the now-famous line: “There’s not a liberal America and a conservative America—there’s the United States of America.”

[Pictured: DNC keynote speaker Barack Obama, U.S. Senate candidate for Illinois, is greeted by delegates July 27, 2004, in Boston.]




Robyn Beck/AFP // Getty Images



s last roar

In 2008, when Barack Obama was nominated as the Democratic Party’s presidential candidate, Sen. Ted Kennedy made his farewell appearance. He had been diagnosed with brain cancer three months earlier. Known as the “Lion of the Senate,” he was surrounded on stage by family, including his children, his nephews, and his nieces, among them Caroline Kennedy, who introduced him.

[Pictured: U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy speaks at the Democratic National Convention at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado.]




Yoon S. Byun/The Boston Globe // Getty Images



2008: Alaska hockey mom joins Republican ticket

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin accepted her nomination to be the Republican Party’s vice presidential candidate at the 2008 convention. Chosen to run alongside Sen. John McCain, the largely unknown politician described herself as a small-town “hockey mom.” “You know [what] they say the difference [is] between a hockey mom and a pit bull?” she asked. “Lipstick."

[Pictured: Gov. Sarah Palin and Sen. John McCain at the end of McCain’s speech at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota.]




Bruce Bisping/Star Tribune // Getty Images



2012: Clint and the empty chair

th President Barack Obama. It made a sensation, but not in the way organizers would have hoped. It seemed nonsensical, and the aging Hollywood star looked dottering talking to an invisible character, but it gave late-night comedians plenty of material.

[Pictured: Actor Clint Eastwood talks to an empty chair during the 2012 Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on Aug. 30, 2012, in Tampa, Florida.]




Lucian Perkins for The Washington Post // Getty Images



s familiar-sounding speech

At the Republican convention in 2016 nominating Donald Trump, his wife Melania Trump made a speech—and caused an uproar—with sections taken from a 2008 address by Michelle Obama. “Because we want our children in this nation to know that the only limit to your achievements is the strength of your dreams and your willingness to work for them,” Trump said. In 2008, Michelle Obama had said: “Because we want our children—and all children in this nation—to know that the only limit to the height of your achievements is the reach of your dreams and your willingness to work for them." A Trump speechwriter later said Melania Trump had cited passages of the earlier speech as inspirational that were inadvertently included in her own.

[Pictured: Melania Trump waves to the crowd after delivering a speech on the first day of the Republican National Convention on July 18, 2016 ,at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.]

You may also like: U.S. cities with the dirtiest air




Chip Somodevilla // Getty Images



Historic moments from past political conventions

Political conventions can seem like old-timey, corny affairs with silly hats, endless enthusiasm, and no shortage of red, white, and blue balloons and bunting. In fact, they have provided the scenes for substantial dealmaking, strategic maneuvering, fundraising, and a fair share of backstabbing. More than a few careers have begun—and ended—at political conventions.

Conventions have heralded a host of firsts, from the first Black woman to address the floor to the first woman to be nominated for the highest office. Barack Obama made his first significant appearance at a political convention as a young state senator, telling the crowd in Boston that his was an unlikely American story and that his African name meant “blessed.”

These forums have given us last looks, as well. A grieving nation paid a tearful tribute to a slain president at a convention in 1964, and venerable figures like Ted Kennedy and Ronald Reagan made poignant farewells on convention stages.

Conventions have been the gatherings for setting thought-provoking goals and advocating for political change. Jesse Jackson reminded delegates that the nation was a rainbow of citizens, and Mario Cuomo reminded them that the country was like two cities, one shining and rich, the other desperate and poor. The nation’s division in 1968 was televised in American homes courtesy of the violence-torn Democratic convention in Chicago. Missteps and gaffes have had their roles to play, from Jimmy Carter’s fumbled words to a speech by Melania Trump that raised accusations of plagiarism.

Whether they are meetings of power brokers and big-time donors or expensive infomercials bloated with delegate breakfasts and cocktail parties, conventions are milestones that usher in a frenzied season of politicking ahead of the November general election. Candidates introduce themselves, and campaigns strive for enthusiasm and momentum.

This year, amid the coronavirus pandemic, conventions will be dramatically different affairs, held virtually and thus without the crowds, the cheers, and the pageantry. The Democratic National Convention is set for Aug. 17–20, followed by the Republican National Convention from Aug. 24–27. Some say this could mark a lasting change in conventions, which might not return to former incarnations.

Stacker took a look back at 20 historic moments from the nation’s political conventions over the years, consulting academic accounts, news reports, and the memories of those who were there.

You may also like: Highest-paid employees in the White House




Jessica Kourkounis // Getty Images



1948: Civil rights divide Democrats

At the Democratic Convention in 1948, where Harry Truman’s name was at the top of the ballot, dozens of delegates from Mississippi and Alabama walked out in opposition to the party’s civil rights platform, which included abolition of state poll taxes, an anti-lynching law, and desegregation of the military. The Southern delegates broke away and founded their own States’ Rights Democratic Party.

[Pictured: Members of the American Communications Association (CIO) set up picket lines in front of the Convention Hall before the 1948 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia.]




Irving Haberman/IH Images // Getty Images



1964: A tearful tribute to JFK

Delegates to the 1964 Democratic National Convention were brought to tears by a moving video tribute to the late President John F. Kennedy, who had been assassinated less than a year earlier. The tribute was introduced by an emotional Robert Kennedy, then-attorney general, who himself would be slain four years later as he ran for president.

[Pictured: U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy gives a speech on Sept. 2, 1964, at the Democratic National Convention in New York.]




Staff/AFP // Getty Images



1964: NBC reporter arrested on air

NBC television reporter John Chancellor was arrested at the Republican National Convention in 1964 in San Francisco. He had refused to leave when efforts were made to clear reporters from the convention floor following the nomination of Barry Goldwater. As he was escorted out by uniformed officers, he famously said on the air: "This is John Chancellor, somewhere in custody!"

[Pictured: Crowds outside the Republican National Convention in Cow Palace, following the nomination of right-wing presidential candidate Barry Goldwater,  July 16, 1964, in Daly City, California.]




Michael Ochs Archives // Getty Images



The 1968 Democratic National Convention was roiled by the hundreds of protestors who were arrested and injured outside on the streets of Chicago. Inside, Connecticut Sen. Abe Ribicoff accused Chicago Mayor Richard Daley of “Gestapo tactics.” The Chicago mayor can be seen, but not heard, angrily shouting and gesturing in response.

[Pictured: Illinois delegates holding a banner promoting Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley on the convention floor of the final day of the 1968 DNC, held at the International Amphitheater in Chicago.]




Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Hulton Archive // Getty Images



1968: Television reporter Dan Rather punched on convention floor

At that same heated 1968 Democratic Convention, CBS television reporter Dan Rather scuffled with security guards on the floor and could be heard saying: “Take your hands off me, unless you’re planning to arrest me.” Still on air, he was knocked over and punched in the stomach. From the anchor booth, Walter Cronkite called the guards “thugs.”

[Pictured: Reporting from the floor, CBS’ Dan Rather (left with headset) is shoved by security agents at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.]

 




Bettmann // Getty Images



1968: Julian Bond debuts as underage vice presidential pick

The 1968 Democratic Convention was infamously torn apart over issues of civil rights and the Vietnam War, and Julian Bond, a Georgia state legislator, was nominated to be vice president as a protest candidate. At 28 years old, Bond was seven years too young to be eligible. In 1986, Bond was defeated in his bid for a U.S. Congressional seat from Atlanta by John Lewis, a fellow civil rights champion who died in July 2020.

[Pictured: The Democratic Convention approved with unexpected speed a compromise splitting Georgia’s votes between an Old Guard slate, and a Redel, biracial group. Here is rebel leader Julian Bond (L), along with other delegates, in Chicago.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1976: First Black woman makes keynote address to Democrats

In 1976, Rep. Barbara Jordan of Texas became the first Black woman to deliver the keynote address to a Democratic National Convention. In moving words that echo today, she said: “We are a people in a quandary about the present. We are a people in search of our future. We are a people in search of a national community." Two years earlier, she had delivered a compelling statement about impeachment proceedings against President Richard Nixon before the House Judiciary Committee.

[Pictured: Barbara Jordan waves to the crowd before her keynote speech at the DNC.]




Owen Franken/Corbis // Getty Images



s challenge to Jimmy Carter

At the Democratic National Convention in 1980, Sen. Ted Kennedy ended his challenge to unseat President Jimmy Carter, delivering a speech that did not throw wholehearted support to Carter. A fumbling, failed effort at posing the two rivals together with arms raised in unity followed. Kennedy’s performance was seen as taking steam out of Carter’s reelection bid, and Republican Ronald Reagan won the White House that November.

[Pictured: President Carter and Sen. Edward Kennedy finally shake hands as Democratic Convention chairman Thomas "Tip" O’Neill and Carter campaign manager Robert Strauss bring them together on the podium at the conclusion of the Democratic Convention in New York.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1980: ‘Hubert Horatio Hornblower Humphrey’

Jimmy Carter made an unfortunate gaffe at the Democrats’ 1980 convention with the words “Hubert Horatio Hornblower!… Humphrey!” in a tribute to the former vice president and presidential candidate who died in 1978. Carter mixed up the Minnesota politician’s name with the fictional character Horatio Hornblower, a British naval officer in books by C.S. Forester. Making matters worse, his speech was followed by a spectacular failure of the balloons to fall from the convention hall ceiling. Carter was defeated by Republican Ronald Reagan.

[Pictured: President Jimmy Carter at the 1980 DNC at Madison Square Garden in New York City.]




Dan Brinzac/New York Post Archives /(c) NYP Holdings, Inc. // Getty Images



1984: ‘Tale of Two Cities’

In 1984, New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivered his “Tale of Two Cities“ keynote address, taking aim at President Ronald Reagan’s description of the nation as “a shining city upon a hill.” Cuomo said, “There is despair, Mr. President, in the faces that you don’t see, in the places that you don’t visit in your shining city.” It was considered one of the best speeches by Cuomo, a skilled orator, and fueled hopes and expectations that he would seek the presidency. Today, his son Andrew Cuomo has built a national, if not global following as governor of New York thanks to his widely viewed news briefings on the state’s efforts to battle the coronavirus pandemic.

[Pictured: New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivers the keynote address to the DNC, July 16, in San Francisco.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1984: Jesse Jackson and the Rainbow Coalition

Rev. Jesse Jackson, who had sought the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination with his Rainbow Coalition campaign in 1984, mesmerized the convention with a stirring speech in which he described his constituency as “the desperate, the damned, the disinherited, the disrespected, and the despised. They are restless and seek relief.” But in a call for unity, he said, “Even in our fractured state, all of us count, and all of us fit somewhere.”

[Pictured: Jesse Jackson at the 1984 DNC held at Moscone Center in San Francisco.]




Frederic Larson/San Francisco Chronicle // Getty Images




1988: ‘Read my lips’

In 1988, George H.W. Bush promised supporters at the Republican National Convention, "Read my lips: no new taxes,” as he tried to paint his opponent Michael Dukakis as a tax-and-spend liberal Democrat. It was a campaign promise Bush failed to keep in office, when he agreed to tax increases including a hike in the personal tax rate ceiling to 31% from 28%.

[Pictured: George H.W. Bush gives a speech at the 1988 Republican Convention.]




Philip Gould/Corbis // Getty Images



1988: George H.W. Bush and the ‘silver foot in his mouth’

Ann Richards, Texas state treasurer and later governor with a famously sharp wit, delighted the audience at the Democratic National Convention in 1988 with her barbs at Republican George H.W. Bush. “Poor George. He can’t help it,” she said. “He was born with a silver foot in his mouth.”

[Pictured: Ann Richards at the 1988 DNC.]




Wally McNamee/Corbis // Getty Images



1988: Ronald Reagan says goodbye

In 1988, before an emotional crowd, outgoing President Ronald Reagan bid farewell at the Republican National Convention in New Orleans, where George H.W. Bush accepted the party’s nomination. “I’ll leave my phone number and address behind just in case you need a foot soldier," Reagan said as he headed into retirement. Six years later, he released a letter telling the American public he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

[Pictured: President Ronald Reagan and First Lady Nancy Reagan waving to crowd as confetti falls on them.]




Shepard Sherbell/CORBIS SABA/Corbis // Getty Images



2004: A young Barack Obama is noticed

Many Americans were introduced to Barack Obama in 2004 when the state senator from Illinois delivered a riveting keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention in Boston. Calling himself “a skinny kid with a funny name who believes that America has a place for him, too,” he delivered the now-famous line: “There’s not a liberal America and a conservative America—there’s the United States of America.”

[Pictured: DNC keynote speaker Barack Obama, U.S. Senate candidate for Illinois, is greeted by delegates July 27, 2004, in Boston.]




Robyn Beck/AFP // Getty Images



s last roar

In 2008, when Barack Obama was nominated as the Democratic Party’s presidential candidate, Sen. Ted Kennedy made his farewell appearance. He had been diagnosed with brain cancer three months earlier. Known as the “Lion of the Senate,” he was surrounded on stage by family, including his children, his nephews, and his nieces, among them Caroline Kennedy, who introduced him.

[Pictured: U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy speaks at the Democratic National Convention at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado.]




Yoon S. Byun/The Boston Globe // Getty Images



2008: Alaska hockey mom joins Republican ticket

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin accepted her nomination to be the Republican Party’s vice presidential candidate at the 2008 convention. Chosen to run alongside Sen. John McCain, the largely unknown politician described herself as a small-town “hockey mom.” “You know [what] they say the difference [is] between a hockey mom and a pit bull?” she asked. “Lipstick."

[Pictured: Gov. Sarah Palin and Sen. John McCain at the end of McCain’s speech at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota.]




Bruce Bisping/Star Tribune // Getty Images



2012: Clint and the empty chair

th President Barack Obama. It made a sensation, but not in the way organizers would have hoped. It seemed nonsensical, and the aging Hollywood star looked dottering talking to an invisible character, but it gave late-night comedians plenty of material.

[Pictured: Actor Clint Eastwood talks to an empty chair during the 2012 Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on Aug. 30, 2012, in Tampa, Florida.]




Lucian Perkins for The Washington Post // Getty Images



s familiar-sounding speech

At the Republican convention in 2016 nominating Donald Trump, his wife Melania Trump made a speech—and caused an uproar—with sections taken from a 2008 address by Michelle Obama. “Because we want our children in this nation to know that the only limit to your achievements is the strength of your dreams and your willingness to work for them,” Trump said. In 2008, Michelle Obama had said: “Because we want our children—and all children in this nation—to know that the only limit to the height of your achievements is the reach of your dreams and your willingness to work for them." A Trump speechwriter later said Melania Trump had cited passages of the earlier speech as inspirational that were inadvertently included in her own.

[Pictured: Melania Trump waves to the crowd after delivering a speech on the first day of the Republican National Convention on July 18, 2016 ,at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.]

You may also like: U.S. cities with the dirtiest air




Chip Somodevilla // Getty Images



Historic moments from past political conventions

Political conventions can seem like old-timey, corny affairs with silly hats, endless enthusiasm, and no shortage of red, white, and blue balloons and bunting. In fact, they have provided the scenes for substantial dealmaking, strategic maneuvering, fundraising, and a fair share of backstabbing. More than a few careers have begun—and ended—at political conventions.

Conventions have heralded a host of firsts, from the first Black woman to address the floor to the first woman to be nominated for the highest office. Barack Obama made his first significant appearance at a political convention as a young state senator, telling the crowd in Boston that his was an unlikely American story and that his African name meant “blessed.”

These forums have given us last looks, as well. A grieving nation paid a tearful tribute to a slain president at a convention in 1964, and venerable figures like Ted Kennedy and Ronald Reagan made poignant farewells on convention stages.

Conventions have been the gatherings for setting thought-provoking goals and advocating for political change. Jesse Jackson reminded delegates that the nation was a rainbow of citizens, and Mario Cuomo reminded them that the country was like two cities, one shining and rich, the other desperate and poor. The nation’s division in 1968 was televised in American homes courtesy of the violence-torn Democratic convention in Chicago. Missteps and gaffes have had their roles to play, from Jimmy Carter’s fumbled words to a speech by Melania Trump that raised accusations of plagiarism.

Whether they are meetings of power brokers and big-time donors or expensive infomercials bloated with delegate breakfasts and cocktail parties, conventions are milestones that usher in a frenzied season of politicking ahead of the November general election. Candidates introduce themselves, and campaigns strive for enthusiasm and momentum.

This year, amid the coronavirus pandemic, conventions will be dramatically different affairs, held virtually and thus without the crowds, the cheers, and the pageantry. The Democratic National Convention is set for Aug. 17–20, followed by the Republican National Convention from Aug. 24–27. Some say this could mark a lasting change in conventions, which might not return to former incarnations.

Stacker took a look back at 20 historic moments from the nation’s political conventions over the years, consulting academic accounts, news reports, and the memories of those who were there.

You may also like: Highest-paid employees in the White House




Jessica Kourkounis // Getty Images



1948: Civil rights divide Democrats

At the Democratic Convention in 1948, where Harry Truman’s name was at the top of the ballot, dozens of delegates from Mississippi and Alabama walked out in opposition to the party’s civil rights platform, which included abolition of state poll taxes, an anti-lynching law, and desegregation of the military. The Southern delegates broke away and founded their own States’ Rights Democratic Party.

[Pictured: Members of the American Communications Association (CIO) set up picket lines in front of the Convention Hall before the 1948 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia.]




Irving Haberman/IH Images // Getty Images



1964: A tearful tribute to JFK

Delegates to the 1964 Democratic National Convention were brought to tears by a moving video tribute to the late President John F. Kennedy, who had been assassinated less than a year earlier. The tribute was introduced by an emotional Robert Kennedy, then-attorney general, who himself would be slain four years later as he ran for president.

[Pictured: U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy gives a speech on Sept. 2, 1964, at the Democratic National Convention in New York.]




Staff/AFP // Getty Images



1964: NBC reporter arrested on air

NBC television reporter John Chancellor was arrested at the Republican National Convention in 1964 in San Francisco. He had refused to leave when efforts were made to clear reporters from the convention floor following the nomination of Barry Goldwater. As he was escorted out by uniformed officers, he famously said on the air: "This is John Chancellor, somewhere in custody!"

[Pictured: Crowds outside the Republican National Convention in Cow Palace, following the nomination of right-wing presidential candidate Barry Goldwater,  July 16, 1964, in Daly City, California.]




Michael Ochs Archives // Getty Images



The 1968 Democratic National Convention was roiled by the hundreds of protestors who were arrested and injured outside on the streets of Chicago. Inside, Connecticut Sen. Abe Ribicoff accused Chicago Mayor Richard Daley of “Gestapo tactics.” The Chicago mayor can be seen, but not heard, angrily shouting and gesturing in response.

[Pictured: Illinois delegates holding a banner promoting Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley on the convention floor of the final day of the 1968 DNC, held at the International Amphitheater in Chicago.]




Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Hulton Archive // Getty Images



1968: Television reporter Dan Rather punched on convention floor

At that same heated 1968 Democratic Convention, CBS television reporter Dan Rather scuffled with security guards on the floor and could be heard saying: “Take your hands off me, unless you’re planning to arrest me.” Still on air, he was knocked over and punched in the stomach. From the anchor booth, Walter Cronkite called the guards “thugs.”

[Pictured: Reporting from the floor, CBS’ Dan Rather (left with headset) is shoved by security agents at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.]

 




Bettmann // Getty Images



1968: Julian Bond debuts as underage vice presidential pick

The 1968 Democratic Convention was infamously torn apart over issues of civil rights and the Vietnam War, and Julian Bond, a Georgia state legislator, was nominated to be vice president as a protest candidate. At 28 years old, Bond was seven years too young to be eligible. In 1986, Bond was defeated in his bid for a U.S. Congressional seat from Atlanta by John Lewis, a fellow civil rights champion who died in July 2020.

[Pictured: The Democratic Convention approved with unexpected speed a compromise splitting Georgia’s votes between an Old Guard slate, and a Redel, biracial group. Here is rebel leader Julian Bond (L), along with other delegates, in Chicago.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1976: First Black woman makes keynote address to Democrats

In 1976, Rep. Barbara Jordan of Texas became the first Black woman to deliver the keynote address to a Democratic National Convention. In moving words that echo today, she said: “We are a people in a quandary about the present. We are a people in search of our future. We are a people in search of a national community." Two years earlier, she had delivered a compelling statement about impeachment proceedings against President Richard Nixon before the House Judiciary Committee.

[Pictured: Barbara Jordan waves to the crowd before her keynote speech at the DNC.]




Owen Franken/Corbis // Getty Images



s challenge to Jimmy Carter

At the Democratic National Convention in 1980, Sen. Ted Kennedy ended his challenge to unseat President Jimmy Carter, delivering a speech that did not throw wholehearted support to Carter. A fumbling, failed effort at posing the two rivals together with arms raised in unity followed. Kennedy’s performance was seen as taking steam out of Carter’s reelection bid, and Republican Ronald Reagan won the White House that November.

[Pictured: President Carter and Sen. Edward Kennedy finally shake hands as Democratic Convention chairman Thomas "Tip" O’Neill and Carter campaign manager Robert Strauss bring them together on the podium at the conclusion of the Democratic Convention in New York.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1980: ‘Hubert Horatio Hornblower Humphrey’

Jimmy Carter made an unfortunate gaffe at the Democrats’ 1980 convention with the words “Hubert Horatio Hornblower!… Humphrey!” in a tribute to the former vice president and presidential candidate who died in 1978. Carter mixed up the Minnesota politician’s name with the fictional character Horatio Hornblower, a British naval officer in books by C.S. Forester. Making matters worse, his speech was followed by a spectacular failure of the balloons to fall from the convention hall ceiling. Carter was defeated by Republican Ronald Reagan.

[Pictured: President Jimmy Carter at the 1980 DNC at Madison Square Garden in New York City.]




Dan Brinzac/New York Post Archives /(c) NYP Holdings, Inc. // Getty Images



1984: ‘Tale of Two Cities’

In 1984, New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivered his “Tale of Two Cities“ keynote address, taking aim at President Ronald Reagan’s description of the nation as “a shining city upon a hill.” Cuomo said, “There is despair, Mr. President, in the faces that you don’t see, in the places that you don’t visit in your shining city.” It was considered one of the best speeches by Cuomo, a skilled orator, and fueled hopes and expectations that he would seek the presidency. Today, his son Andrew Cuomo has built a national, if not global following as governor of New York thanks to his widely viewed news briefings on the state’s efforts to battle the coronavirus pandemic.

[Pictured: New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivers the keynote address to the DNC, July 16, in San Francisco.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1984: Jesse Jackson and the Rainbow Coalition

Rev. Jesse Jackson, who had sought the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination with his Rainbow Coalition campaign in 1984, mesmerized the convention with a stirring speech in which he described his constituency as “the desperate, the damned, the disinherited, the disrespected, and the despised. They are restless and seek relief.” But in a call for unity, he said, “Even in our fractured state, all of us count, and all of us fit somewhere.”

[Pictured: Jesse Jackson at the 1984 DNC held at Moscone Center in San Francisco.]




Frederic Larson/San Francisco Chronicle // Getty Images




1988: ‘Read my lips’

In 1988, George H.W. Bush promised supporters at the Republican National Convention, "Read my lips: no new taxes,” as he tried to paint his opponent Michael Dukakis as a tax-and-spend liberal Democrat. It was a campaign promise Bush failed to keep in office, when he agreed to tax increases including a hike in the personal tax rate ceiling to 31% from 28%.

[Pictured: George H.W. Bush gives a speech at the 1988 Republican Convention.]




Philip Gould/Corbis // Getty Images



1988: George H.W. Bush and the ‘silver foot in his mouth’

Ann Richards, Texas state treasurer and later governor with a famously sharp wit, delighted the audience at the Democratic National Convention in 1988 with her barbs at Republican George H.W. Bush. “Poor George. He can’t help it,” she said. “He was born with a silver foot in his mouth.”

[Pictured: Ann Richards at the 1988 DNC.]




Wally McNamee/Corbis // Getty Images



1988: Ronald Reagan says goodbye

In 1988, before an emotional crowd, outgoing President Ronald Reagan bid farewell at the Republican National Convention in New Orleans, where George H.W. Bush accepted the party’s nomination. “I’ll leave my phone number and address behind just in case you need a foot soldier," Reagan said as he headed into retirement. Six years later, he released a letter telling the American public he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

[Pictured: President Ronald Reagan and First Lady Nancy Reagan waving to crowd as confetti falls on them.]




Shepard Sherbell/CORBIS SABA/Corbis // Getty Images



2004: A young Barack Obama is noticed

Many Americans were introduced to Barack Obama in 2004 when the state senator from Illinois delivered a riveting keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention in Boston. Calling himself “a skinny kid with a funny name who believes that America has a place for him, too,” he delivered the now-famous line: “There’s not a liberal America and a conservative America—there’s the United States of America.”

[Pictured: DNC keynote speaker Barack Obama, U.S. Senate candidate for Illinois, is greeted by delegates July 27, 2004, in Boston.]




Robyn Beck/AFP // Getty Images



s last roar

In 2008, when Barack Obama was nominated as the Democratic Party’s presidential candidate, Sen. Ted Kennedy made his farewell appearance. He had been diagnosed with brain cancer three months earlier. Known as the “Lion of the Senate,” he was surrounded on stage by family, including his children, his nephews, and his nieces, among them Caroline Kennedy, who introduced him.

[Pictured: U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy speaks at the Democratic National Convention at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado.]




Yoon S. Byun/The Boston Globe // Getty Images



2008: Alaska hockey mom joins Republican ticket

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin accepted her nomination to be the Republican Party’s vice presidential candidate at the 2008 convention. Chosen to run alongside Sen. John McCain, the largely unknown politician described herself as a small-town “hockey mom.” “You know [what] they say the difference [is] between a hockey mom and a pit bull?” she asked. “Lipstick."

[Pictured: Gov. Sarah Palin and Sen. John McCain at the end of McCain’s speech at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota.]




Bruce Bisping/Star Tribune // Getty Images



2012: Clint and the empty chair

th President Barack Obama. It made a sensation, but not in the way organizers would have hoped. It seemed nonsensical, and the aging Hollywood star looked dottering talking to an invisible character, but it gave late-night comedians plenty of material.

[Pictured: Actor Clint Eastwood talks to an empty chair during the 2012 Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on Aug. 30, 2012, in Tampa, Florida.]




Lucian Perkins for The Washington Post // Getty Images



s familiar-sounding speech

At the Republican convention in 2016 nominating Donald Trump, his wife Melania Trump made a speech—and caused an uproar—with sections taken from a 2008 address by Michelle Obama. “Because we want our children in this nation to know that the only limit to your achievements is the strength of your dreams and your willingness to work for them,” Trump said. In 2008, Michelle Obama had said: “Because we want our children—and all children in this nation—to know that the only limit to the height of your achievements is the reach of your dreams and your willingness to work for them." A Trump speechwriter later said Melania Trump had cited passages of the earlier speech as inspirational that were inadvertently included in her own.

[Pictured: Melania Trump waves to the crowd after delivering a speech on the first day of the Republican National Convention on July 18, 2016 ,at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.]

You may also like: U.S. cities with the dirtiest air




Chip Somodevilla // Getty Images



Historic moments from past political conventions

Political conventions can seem like old-timey, corny affairs with silly hats, endless enthusiasm, and no shortage of red, white, and blue balloons and bunting. In fact, they have provided the scenes for substantial dealmaking, strategic maneuvering, fundraising, and a fair share of backstabbing. More than a few careers have begun—and ended—at political conventions.

Conventions have heralded a host of firsts, from the first Black woman to address the floor to the first woman to be nominated for the highest office. Barack Obama made his first significant appearance at a political convention as a young state senator, telling the crowd in Boston that his was an unlikely American story and that his African name meant “blessed.”

These forums have given us last looks, as well. A grieving nation paid a tearful tribute to a slain president at a convention in 1964, and venerable figures like Ted Kennedy and Ronald Reagan made poignant farewells on convention stages.

Conventions have been the gatherings for setting thought-provoking goals and advocating for political change. Jesse Jackson reminded delegates that the nation was a rainbow of citizens, and Mario Cuomo reminded them that the country was like two cities, one shining and rich, the other desperate and poor. The nation’s division in 1968 was televised in American homes courtesy of the violence-torn Democratic convention in Chicago. Missteps and gaffes have had their roles to play, from Jimmy Carter’s fumbled words to a speech by Melania Trump that raised accusations of plagiarism.

Whether they are meetings of power brokers and big-time donors or expensive infomercials bloated with delegate breakfasts and cocktail parties, conventions are milestones that usher in a frenzied season of politicking ahead of the November general election. Candidates introduce themselves, and campaigns strive for enthusiasm and momentum.

This year, amid the coronavirus pandemic, conventions will be dramatically different affairs, held virtually and thus without the crowds, the cheers, and the pageantry. The Democratic National Convention is set for Aug. 17–20, followed by the Republican National Convention from Aug. 24–27. Some say this could mark a lasting change in conventions, which might not return to former incarnations.

Stacker took a look back at 20 historic moments from the nation’s political conventions over the years, consulting academic accounts, news reports, and the memories of those who were there.

You may also like: Highest-paid employees in the White House




Jessica Kourkounis // Getty Images



1948: Civil rights divide Democrats

At the Democratic Convention in 1948, where Harry Truman’s name was at the top of the ballot, dozens of delegates from Mississippi and Alabama walked out in opposition to the party’s civil rights platform, which included abolition of state poll taxes, an anti-lynching law, and desegregation of the military. The Southern delegates broke away and founded their own States’ Rights Democratic Party.

[Pictured: Members of the American Communications Association (CIO) set up picket lines in front of the Convention Hall before the 1948 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia.]




Irving Haberman/IH Images // Getty Images



1964: A tearful tribute to JFK

Delegates to the 1964 Democratic National Convention were brought to tears by a moving video tribute to the late President John F. Kennedy, who had been assassinated less than a year earlier. The tribute was introduced by an emotional Robert Kennedy, then-attorney general, who himself would be slain four years later as he ran for president.

[Pictured: U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy gives a speech on Sept. 2, 1964, at the Democratic National Convention in New York.]




Staff/AFP // Getty Images



1964: NBC reporter arrested on air

NBC television reporter John Chancellor was arrested at the Republican National Convention in 1964 in San Francisco. He had refused to leave when efforts were made to clear reporters from the convention floor following the nomination of Barry Goldwater. As he was escorted out by uniformed officers, he famously said on the air: "This is John Chancellor, somewhere in custody!"

[Pictured: Crowds outside the Republican National Convention in Cow Palace, following the nomination of right-wing presidential candidate Barry Goldwater,  July 16, 1964, in Daly City, California.]




Michael Ochs Archives // Getty Images



The 1968 Democratic National Convention was roiled by the hundreds of protestors who were arrested and injured outside on the streets of Chicago. Inside, Connecticut Sen. Abe Ribicoff accused Chicago Mayor Richard Daley of “Gestapo tactics.” The Chicago mayor can be seen, but not heard, angrily shouting and gesturing in response.

[Pictured: Illinois delegates holding a banner promoting Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley on the convention floor of the final day of the 1968 DNC, held at the International Amphitheater in Chicago.]




Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Hulton Archive // Getty Images



1968: Television reporter Dan Rather punched on convention floor

At that same heated 1968 Democratic Convention, CBS television reporter Dan Rather scuffled with security guards on the floor and could be heard saying: “Take your hands off me, unless you’re planning to arrest me.” Still on air, he was knocked over and punched in the stomach. From the anchor booth, Walter Cronkite called the guards “thugs.”

[Pictured: Reporting from the floor, CBS’ Dan Rather (left with headset) is shoved by security agents at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.]

 




Bettmann // Getty Images



1968: Julian Bond debuts as underage vice presidential pick

The 1968 Democratic Convention was infamously torn apart over issues of civil rights and the Vietnam War, and Julian Bond, a Georgia state legislator, was nominated to be vice president as a protest candidate. At 28 years old, Bond was seven years too young to be eligible. In 1986, Bond was defeated in his bid for a U.S. Congressional seat from Atlanta by John Lewis, a fellow civil rights champion who died in July 2020.

[Pictured: The Democratic Convention approved with unexpected speed a compromise splitting Georgia’s votes between an Old Guard slate, and a Redel, biracial group. Here is rebel leader Julian Bond (L), along with other delegates, in Chicago.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1976: First Black woman makes keynote address to Democrats

In 1976, Rep. Barbara Jordan of Texas became the first Black woman to deliver the keynote address to a Democratic National Convention. In moving words that echo today, she said: “We are a people in a quandary about the present. We are a people in search of our future. We are a people in search of a national community." Two years earlier, she had delivered a compelling statement about impeachment proceedings against President Richard Nixon before the House Judiciary Committee.

[Pictured: Barbara Jordan waves to the crowd before her keynote speech at the DNC.]




Owen Franken/Corbis // Getty Images



s challenge to Jimmy Carter

At the Democratic National Convention in 1980, Sen. Ted Kennedy ended his challenge to unseat President Jimmy Carter, delivering a speech that did not throw wholehearted support to Carter. A fumbling, failed effort at posing the two rivals together with arms raised in unity followed. Kennedy’s performance was seen as taking steam out of Carter’s reelection bid, and Republican Ronald Reagan won the White House that November.

[Pictured: President Carter and Sen. Edward Kennedy finally shake hands as Democratic Convention chairman Thomas "Tip" O’Neill and Carter campaign manager Robert Strauss bring them together on the podium at the conclusion of the Democratic Convention in New York.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1980: ‘Hubert Horatio Hornblower Humphrey’

Jimmy Carter made an unfortunate gaffe at the Democrats’ 1980 convention with the words “Hubert Horatio Hornblower!… Humphrey!” in a tribute to the former vice president and presidential candidate who died in 1978. Carter mixed up the Minnesota politician’s name with the fictional character Horatio Hornblower, a British naval officer in books by C.S. Forester. Making matters worse, his speech was followed by a spectacular failure of the balloons to fall from the convention hall ceiling. Carter was defeated by Republican Ronald Reagan.

[Pictured: President Jimmy Carter at the 1980 DNC at Madison Square Garden in New York City.]




Dan Brinzac/New York Post Archives /(c) NYP Holdings, Inc. // Getty Images



1984: ‘Tale of Two Cities’

In 1984, New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivered his “Tale of Two Cities“ keynote address, taking aim at President Ronald Reagan’s description of the nation as “a shining city upon a hill.” Cuomo said, “There is despair, Mr. President, in the faces that you don’t see, in the places that you don’t visit in your shining city.” It was considered one of the best speeches by Cuomo, a skilled orator, and fueled hopes and expectations that he would seek the presidency. Today, his son Andrew Cuomo has built a national, if not global following as governor of New York thanks to his widely viewed news briefings on the state’s efforts to battle the coronavirus pandemic.

[Pictured: New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivers the keynote address to the DNC, July 16, in San Francisco.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1984: Jesse Jackson and the Rainbow Coalition

Rev. Jesse Jackson, who had sought the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination with his Rainbow Coalition campaign in 1984, mesmerized the convention with a stirring speech in which he described his constituency as “the desperate, the damned, the disinherited, the disrespected, and the despised. They are restless and seek relief.” But in a call for unity, he said, “Even in our fractured state, all of us count, and all of us fit somewhere.”

[Pictured: Jesse Jackson at the 1984 DNC held at Moscone Center in San Francisco.]




Frederic Larson/San Francisco Chronicle // Getty Images




1988: ‘Read my lips’

In 1988, George H.W. Bush promised supporters at the Republican National Convention, "Read my lips: no new taxes,” as he tried to paint his opponent Michael Dukakis as a tax-and-spend liberal Democrat. It was a campaign promise Bush failed to keep in office, when he agreed to tax increases including a hike in the personal tax rate ceiling to 31% from 28%.

[Pictured: George H.W. Bush gives a speech at the 1988 Republican Convention.]




Philip Gould/Corbis // Getty Images



1988: George H.W. Bush and the ‘silver foot in his mouth’

Ann Richards, Texas state treasurer and later governor with a famously sharp wit, delighted the audience at the Democratic National Convention in 1988 with her barbs at Republican George H.W. Bush. “Poor George. He can’t help it,” she said. “He was born with a silver foot in his mouth.”

[Pictured: Ann Richards at the 1988 DNC.]




Wally McNamee/Corbis // Getty Images



1988: Ronald Reagan says goodbye

In 1988, before an emotional crowd, outgoing President Ronald Reagan bid farewell at the Republican National Convention in New Orleans, where George H.W. Bush accepted the party’s nomination. “I’ll leave my phone number and address behind just in case you need a foot soldier," Reagan said as he headed into retirement. Six years later, he released a letter telling the American public he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

[Pictured: President Ronald Reagan and First Lady Nancy Reagan waving to crowd as confetti falls on them.]




Shepard Sherbell/CORBIS SABA/Corbis // Getty Images



2004: A young Barack Obama is noticed

Many Americans were introduced to Barack Obama in 2004 when the state senator from Illinois delivered a riveting keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention in Boston. Calling himself “a skinny kid with a funny name who believes that America has a place for him, too,” he delivered the now-famous line: “There’s not a liberal America and a conservative America—there’s the United States of America.”

[Pictured: DNC keynote speaker Barack Obama, U.S. Senate candidate for Illinois, is greeted by delegates July 27, 2004, in Boston.]




Robyn Beck/AFP // Getty Images



s last roar

In 2008, when Barack Obama was nominated as the Democratic Party’s presidential candidate, Sen. Ted Kennedy made his farewell appearance. He had been diagnosed with brain cancer three months earlier. Known as the “Lion of the Senate,” he was surrounded on stage by family, including his children, his nephews, and his nieces, among them Caroline Kennedy, who introduced him.

[Pictured: U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy speaks at the Democratic National Convention at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado.]




Yoon S. Byun/The Boston Globe // Getty Images



2008: Alaska hockey mom joins Republican ticket

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin accepted her nomination to be the Republican Party’s vice presidential candidate at the 2008 convention. Chosen to run alongside Sen. John McCain, the largely unknown politician described herself as a small-town “hockey mom.” “You know [what] they say the difference [is] between a hockey mom and a pit bull?” she asked. “Lipstick."

[Pictured: Gov. Sarah Palin and Sen. John McCain at the end of McCain’s speech at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota.]




Bruce Bisping/Star Tribune // Getty Images



2012: Clint and the empty chair

th President Barack Obama. It made a sensation, but not in the way organizers would have hoped. It seemed nonsensical, and the aging Hollywood star looked dottering talking to an invisible character, but it gave late-night comedians plenty of material.

[Pictured: Actor Clint Eastwood talks to an empty chair during the 2012 Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on Aug. 30, 2012, in Tampa, Florida.]




Lucian Perkins for The Washington Post // Getty Images



s familiar-sounding speech

At the Republican convention in 2016 nominating Donald Trump, his wife Melania Trump made a speech—and caused an uproar—with sections taken from a 2008 address by Michelle Obama. “Because we want our children in this nation to know that the only limit to your achievements is the strength of your dreams and your willingness to work for them,” Trump said. In 2008, Michelle Obama had said: “Because we want our children—and all children in this nation—to know that the only limit to the height of your achievements is the reach of your dreams and your willingness to work for them." A Trump speechwriter later said Melania Trump had cited passages of the earlier speech as inspirational that were inadvertently included in her own.

[Pictured: Melania Trump waves to the crowd after delivering a speech on the first day of the Republican National Convention on July 18, 2016 ,at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.]

You may also like: U.S. cities with the dirtiest air




Chip Somodevilla // Getty Images



Historic moments from past political conventions

More than a few careers have begun—and ended—at political conventions.

Conventions have heralded a host of firsts, from the first Black woman to address the floor to the first woman to be nominated for the highest office. Barack Obama made his first significant appearance at a political convention as a young state senator, telling the crowd in Boston that his was an unlikely American story and that his African name meant “blessed.”

These forums have given us last looks, as well. A grieving nation paid a tearful tribute to a slain president at a convention in 1964, and venerable figures like Ted Kennedy and Ronald Reagan made poignant farewells on convention stages.

Conventions have been the gatherings for setting thought-provoking goals and advocating for political change. Jesse Jackson reminded delegates that the nation was a rainbow of citizens, and Mario Cuomo reminded them that the country was like two cities, one shining and rich, the other desperate and poor. The nation’s division in 1968 was televised in American homes courtesy of the violence-torn Democratic convention in Chicago. Missteps and gaffes have had their roles to play, from Jimmy Carter’s fumbled words to a speech by Melania Trump that raised accusations of plagiarism.

Whether they are meetings of power brokers and big-time donors or expensive infomercials bloated with delegate breakfasts and cocktail parties, conventions are milestones that usher in a frenzied season of politicking ahead of the November general election. Candidates introduce themselves, and campaigns strive for enthusiasm and momentum.

This year, amid the coronavirus pandemic, conventions will be dramatically different affairs, held virtually and thus without the crowds, the cheers, and the pageantry. The Democratic National Convention is set for Aug. 17–20, followed by the Republican National Convention from Aug. 24–27. Some say this could mark a lasting change in conventions, which might not return to former incarnations.

Stacker took a look back at 20 historic moments from the nation’s political conventions over the years, consulting academic accounts, news reports, and the memories of those who were there.

You may also like: Highest-paid employees in the White House




Jessica Kourkounis // Getty Images



1948: Civil rights divide Democrats

At the Democratic Convention in 1948, where Harry Truman’s name was at the top of the ballot, dozens of delegates from Mississippi and Alabama walked out in opposition to the party’s civil rights platform, which included abolition of state poll taxes, an anti-lynching law, and desegregation of the military. The Southern delegates broke away and founded their own States’ Rights Democratic Party.

[Pictured: Members of the American Communications Association (CIO) set up picket lines in front of the Convention Hall before the 1948 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia.]




Irving Haberman/IH Images // Getty Images



1964: A tearful tribute to JFK

Delegates to the 1964 Democratic National Convention were brought to tears by a moving video tribute to the late President John F. Kennedy, who had been assassinated less than a year earlier. The tribute was introduced by an emotional Robert Kennedy, then-attorney general, who himself would be slain four years later as he ran for president.

[Pictured: U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy gives a speech on Sept. 2, 1964, at the Democratic National Convention in New York.]




Staff/AFP // Getty Images



1964: NBC reporter arrested on air

NBC television reporter John Chancellor was arrested at the Republican National Convention in 1964 in San Francisco. He had refused to leave when efforts were made to clear reporters from the convention floor following the nomination of Barry Goldwater. As he was escorted out by uniformed officers, he famously said on the air: "This is John Chancellor, somewhere in custody!"

[Pictured: Crowds outside the Republican National Convention in Cow Palace, following the nomination of right-wing presidential candidate Barry Goldwater,  July 16, 1964, in Daly City, California.]




Michael Ochs Archives // Getty Images



The 1968 Democratic National Convention was roiled by the hundreds of protestors who were arrested and injured outside on the streets of Chicago. Inside, Connecticut Sen. Abe Ribicoff accused Chicago Mayor Richard Daley of “Gestapo tactics.” The Chicago mayor can be seen, but not heard, angrily shouting and gesturing in response.

[Pictured: Illinois delegates holding a banner promoting Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley on the convention floor of the final day of the 1968 DNC, held at the International Amphitheater in Chicago.]




Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Hulton Archive // Getty Images



1968: Television reporter Dan Rather punched on convention floor

At that same heated 1968 Democratic Convention, CBS television reporter Dan Rather scuffled with security guards on the floor and could be heard saying: “Take your hands off me, unless you’re planning to arrest me.” Still on air, he was knocked over and punched in the stomach. From the anchor booth, Walter Cronkite called the guards “thugs.”

[Pictured: Reporting from the floor, CBS’ Dan Rather (left with headset) is shoved by security agents at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.]

 




Bettmann // Getty Images



1968: Julian Bond debuts as underage vice presidential pick

The 1968 Democratic Convention was infamously torn apart over issues of civil rights and the Vietnam War, and Julian Bond, a Georgia state legislator, was nominated to be vice president as a protest candidate. At 28 years old, Bond was seven years too young to be eligible. In 1986, Bond was defeated in his bid for a U.S. Congressional seat from Atlanta by John Lewis, a fellow civil rights champion who died in July 2020.

[Pictured: The Democratic Convention approved with unexpected speed a compromise splitting Georgia’s votes between an Old Guard slate, and a Redel, biracial group. Here is rebel leader Julian Bond (L), along with other delegates, in Chicago.]




Bettmann // Getty Images



1976: First Black woman makes keynote address to Democrats

In 1976, Rep. Barbara Jordan of Texas became the first Black woman to deliver the keynote address to a Democratic National Convention. In moving words that echo today, she said: “We are a people in a quandary about the present. We are a people in search of our future. We are a people in search of a national community." Two years earlier, she had delivered a compelling statement about impeachment proceedings against President Richard Nixon before the House Judiciary Committee.

[Pictured: Barbara Jordan waves to the crowd before her keynote speech at the DNC.]




Owen Franken/Corbis // Getty Images



s challenge to Jimmy Carter

At the Democratic National Convention in 1980, Sen. Ted Kennedy ended his challenge to unseat President Jimmy Carter, delivering a speech that did not throw wholehearted support to Carter. A fumbling, failed effort at posing the two rivals together with arms raised in unity followed. Kennedy’s performance was seen as taking steam out of Carter’s reelection bid, and Republican Ronald Reagan won the White House that November.

[Pictured: President Carter and Sen. Edward Kennedy finally shake hands as Democratic Convention chairman Thomas "Tip" O’Neill and Carter campaign manager Robert Strauss bring them together on the podium at the conclusion of the Democratic Convention in New York.]




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1980: ‘Hubert Horatio Hornblower Humphrey’

Jimmy Carter made an unfortunate gaffe at the Democrats’ 1980 convention with the words “Hubert Horatio Hornblower!… Humphrey!” in a tribute to the former vice president and presidential candidate who died in 1978. Carter mixed up the Minnesota politician’s name with the fictional character Horatio Hornblower, a British naval officer in books by C.S. Forester. Making matters worse, his speech was followed by a spectacular failure of the balloons to fall from the convention hall ceiling. Carter was defeated by Republican Ronald Reagan.

[Pictured: President Jimmy Carter at the 1980 DNC at Madison Square Garden in New York City.]




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1984: ‘Tale of Two Cities’

In 1984, New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivered his “Tale of Two Cities“ keynote address, taking aim at President Ronald Reagan’s description of the nation as “a shining city upon a hill.” Cuomo said, “There is despair, Mr. President, in the faces that you don’t see, in the places that you don’t visit in your shining city.” It was considered one of the best speeches by Cuomo, a skilled orator, and fueled hopes and expectations that he would seek the presidency. Today, his son Andrew Cuomo has built a national, if not global following as governor of New York thanks to his widely viewed news briefings on the state’s efforts to battle the coronavirus pandemic.

[Pictured: New York Gov. Mario Cuomo delivers the keynote address to the DNC, July 16, in San Francisco.]




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1984: Jesse Jackson and the Rainbow Coalition

Rev. Jesse Jackson, who had sought the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination with his Rainbow Coalition campaign in 1984, mesmerized the convention with a stirring speech in which he described his constituency as “the desperate, the damned, the disinherited, the disrespected, and the despised. They are restless and seek relief.” But in a call for unity, he said, “Even in our fractured state, all of us count, and all of us fit somewhere.”

[Pictured: Jesse Jackson at the 1984 DNC held at Moscone Center in San Francisco.]




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1988: ‘Read my lips’

In 1988, George H.W. Bush promised supporters at the Republican National Convention, "Read my lips: no new taxes,” as he tried to paint his opponent Michael Dukakis as a tax-and-spend liberal Democrat. It was a campaign promise Bush failed to keep in office, when he agreed to tax increases including a hike in the personal tax rate ceiling to 31% from 28%.

[Pictured: George H.W. Bush gives a speech at the 1988 Republican Convention.]




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1988: George H.W. Bush and the ‘silver foot in his mouth’

Ann Richards, Texas state treasurer and later governor with a famously sharp wit, delighted the audience at the Democratic National Convention in 1988 with her barbs at Republican George H.W. Bush. “Poor George. He can’t help it,” she said. “He was born with a silver foot in his mouth.”

[Pictured: Ann Richards at the 1988 DNC.]




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1988: Ronald Reagan says goodbye

In 1988, before an emotional crowd, outgoing President Ronald Reagan bid farewell at the Republican National Convention in New Orleans, where George H.W. Bush accepted the party’s nomination. “I’ll leave my phone number and address behind just in case you need a foot soldier," Reagan said as he headed into retirement. Six years later, he released a letter telling the American public he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

[Pictured: President Ronald Reagan and First Lady Nancy Reagan waving to crowd as confetti falls on them.]




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2004: A young Barack Obama is noticed

Many Americans were introduced to Barack Obama in 2004 when the state senator from Illinois delivered a riveting keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention in Boston. Calling himself “a skinny kid with a funny name who believes that America has a place for him, too,” he delivered the now-famous line: “There’s not a liberal America and a conservative America—there’s the United States of America.”

[Pictured: DNC keynote speaker Barack Obama, U.S. Senate candidate for Illinois, is greeted by delegates July 27, 2004, in Boston.]




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s last roar

In 2008, when Barack Obama was nominated as the Democratic Party’s presidential candidate, Sen. Ted Kennedy made his farewell appearance. He had been diagnosed with brain cancer three months earlier. Known as the “Lion of the Senate,” he was surrounded on stage by family, including his children, his nephews, and his nieces, among them Caroline Kennedy, who introduced him.

[Pictured: U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy speaks at the Democratic National Convention at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado.]




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2008: Alaska hockey mom joins Republican ticket

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin accepted her nomination to be the Republican Party’s vice presidential candidate at the 2008 convention. Chosen to run alongside Sen. John McCain, the largely unknown politician described herself as a small-town “hockey mom.” “You know [what] they say the difference [is] between a hockey mom and a pit bull?” she asked. “Lipstick."

[Pictured: Gov. Sarah Palin and Sen. John McCain at the end of McCain’s speech at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota.]




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2012: Clint and the empty chair

One of the oddest moments occurred in 2012 at the Republican National Convention when actor and director Clint Eastwood stood on stage next to an empty chair and held what was meant to be an imaginary conversation with President Barack Obama. It made a sensation, but not in the way organizers would have hoped. It seemed nonsensical, and the aging Hollywood star looked dottering talking to an invisible character, but it gave late-night comedians plenty of material.

[Pictured: Actor Clint Eastwood talks to an empty chair during the 2012 Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on Aug. 30, 2012, in Tampa, Florida.]




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s familiar-sounding speech

At the Republican convention in 2016 nominating Donald Trump, his wife Melania Trump made a speech—and caused an uproar—with sections taken from a 2008 address by Michelle Obama. “Because we want our children in this nation to know that the only limit to your achievements is the strength of your dreams and your willingness to work for them,” Trump said. In 2008, Michelle Obama had said: “Because we want our children—and all children in this nation—to know that the only limit to the height of your achievements is the reach of your dreams and your willingness to work for them." A Trump speechwriter later said Melania Trump had cited passages of the earlier speech as inspirational that were inadvertently included in her own.

[Pictured: Melania Trump waves to the crowd after delivering a speech on the first day of the Republican National Convention on July 18, 2016 ,at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.]

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April 30, 2024 at 08:35PM

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