On a beautiful sunny day here in Charlottesville, Virginia, on the campus of UVA, they came! I got there at 2:30 although the event was posted to start at 4:50, but I wanted a good seat. Turns out I got one of the very few seats, atop a stairwell leading to the Plaza near the bookstore.
The crowd was peppy and excited. I saw kids with T-Shirts that said "I'm too young to vote but not too young to hope;" plenty of Obamaville pins and T-Shirts too. About 20 minutes before the projected start time, some speakers came out and revved up the crowd.
Tom Periello, the Democratic challenger to the ensconced repub Congressman Virgil Goode, reminded us that if Obama wins every state that Kerry won, and also Iowa where he is ahead, he will need 11 more electoral votes to win. Virginia has 13 electoral votes! That got us all going!
Right on time, Lily, Jill, and Michelle came out looking absolutely great! Jill started, and she talked about the fact that the polls do not include those who have never voted before; she talked about college loans, health care, and changing our image abroad. She ended up with a lesson about the Supreme Court, and how the next President will have enormous power in the choices of the next several justices. This segued into Lily Ledbetter.
Lily is the woman who had a very responsible job with Goodyear Tire company in Alabama, and only when she was just about ready to retire did she find out that she had been paid profoundly less than her male cohorts who had the same job descriptions and responsibilities. She sued and won. Goodyear countered, and eventually it went to the Supreme Court, which decided 5/4 for Goodyear because she needed to sue within (I think she said) 6 months of when the salary discrepancy happened -- never mind that Goodyear kept this information from her intentionally. So she lost, and there is no recourse. I kind of had the impression that she used to be a republican because she said she would never have expected to back Obama, but she endorsed him just earlier today. In fact, Obama and Biden co-sponsored a bill to prevent this from happening again -- repubs in the Senate kept it from coming to a vote, but they will try again after the election. She was a good speaker, very down to earth, and I was glad she came.
Michelle, in her elegance, came next. She had us all hooting and responding to her, "Fired UP?" chants. She then went on to talk about college loans, health care, equal pay for equal work, and pulling the troops safely out of Iraq, and using those funds on our own infrastructure. She compared the Obama team's goals for our country to those of "the other team." She never once used McCain's name, and never made disparaging comments; it was a completely positive message, and was just the right length of time too.
The message for today was: Do your part to get people registered to vote (Deadline for Virginia is October 6th). It was a joyous occasion, and as we were leaving, there was one coed standing with a McCain sign. She looked either frightened or like she was going to cry. I went right next to her and said, "You really have a hard job, don't you?" Just beyond her was a group of 3 with signs that said "If you don't get born you can't vote." Pretty lame.
I put those points in just because they were there, but the overwhelming feeling of the day was hope and empowerment, and enthusiasm for this great chance we have to make a difference. Michelle's last words were, "Let's go and change the world!"
That is what we felt like doing as we went back to our homes.