Taylor Bates couldn't demand his eyes off Michelle Obama. Standing just feet from the massive Democratic National Convention stage in the Pepsi Center during Obama's closing address Monday night, with a clear up view of the first lady hopeful from his Vermont delegation's good seating in a first section to the left of the stage, the 18-year-old delegate was soaking in his first taste of the political big prison term ... and loving it.
"You see, Barack doesn't care where you're from, or what your background is, or what party, if any, you belong to," Obama said good the end of her speech. "He knows that thread that connects us � our belief in America's promise, our dedication to our children's future � is strong sufficiency to carry us unitedly as one and only nation, even when we disagree."
Bates, wHO will be a freshman at Tufts in the fall, has already logged more time in the political trenches than nigh of his fellow Green Mountain state compatriots. In addition to being in charge of managing the carbon offsets for the Vermont contingent, Bates is the Facebook president for all the young delegates at the convention and was an intern for Senator John Kerry's failed Democratic presidential campaign in 2004, as well as a U.S. Senate page in 2007.
Like many at the convention, Bates was inspired by Senator Obama's stirring 2004 DNC speech. In fact, while Michelle was telling the write up of her late father's struggles with multiple induration, Bates recalled how he turned to his father during Barack's speech in 2004 and predicted, "He's going to be chairman some day."
Signing a petition to nominate Obama, Bates listened as the candidate's spouse spun her story of growth up in a wage-earning family on Chicago's South Side. "Each one of us too comes here tonight by way of our possess improbable journey," Michelle aforesaid, echoing the oft-told story line of her husband's rise to the Democratic candidacy for president. "I come here tonight as a baby blessed with a brother who is my mentor, my shielder and my lifelong champion," she aforementioned of her 46-year-old sibling, Craig, world Health Organization introduced her.
"I think she's really connecting to a lot of people wHO don't needfully know her as good," Bates whispered, keeping one eye on the teleprompter so as not to miss whatever of the address. "The more people get to know them, the wagerer they like them, so I think this is really effective."
The young Democratic booster was in good company among Obama boosters in the building Monday night, wHO felt that something unprecedented was in the line. Wandering the concourse just moments before Michelle took the stage, filmmaker Spike Lee aforesaid there was only one reason he had set-aside a ticket to Denver this week. "To witness history ... history. ... That's what I'm here to see that we haven't seen before, history."
At a convention where the sometimes raw feelings of disappointed supporters of Senator Hillary Clinton can promptly and loudly rise to the open � such as the woman walking down fifteenth Street on Monday wHO busted into a shout of "Hillary!" when a bus touting Obama drove chisel by � Bates aforesaid Michelle Obama's shout-out to the other first noblewoman in her speech was a sign of the already-gelling party unity.
Speaking of the sacrifices of Americans from all stripes, the senator's married woman praised "citizenry like Hillary Clinton, wHO put those 18 meg cracks in the meth ceiling, so that our daughters and sons tin dream a little bigger and direct a little higher."
"People ar already approach together," aforesaid Bates, glad up at the multiple images of Michelle on the great screens around the way and applause hard in all the right places. "I recall that the fact that she's talking about the 18 one thousand thousand breaking the glass ceiling � she's just acknowledging that [Clinton supporters] have really made a difference and that they're already really behind us all the way."
As the presumptive Democratic candidate closed the night chatting with his wife and daughters via satellite link on the big silver screen in the main room, Bates huddled in a hallway deep within the Pepsi Center and gave his instantaneous take on how Mrs. Obama did.
"I think it was truly great how she emphasised her possess background, how she very tried to reach out to the Americans in the audience instead of just tolerant of repeating her husband's point, or instead of attacking the McCain campaign," he aforesaid. "She just now built up her have story and let mass connect with it, because she knows they volition. And it's really telling how she chose to do that when she had some different alternatives."
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