Convention Cheat Sheet: Unite the Clans!
The Fix's guide to the best of last night | VIDEO: The Highlights
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton waves to the crowd after her daughter, Chelsea Clinton, introduced her at the Democratic National Convention in Denver on Tuesday.
(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Clinton Pleads Unity, Vows Support for Obama
Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) took the stage at the end of the second night of the Democratic National Convention, calling for her supporters to back Barack Obama and casting John McCain as just another George W. Bush. Full Transcript
Party Time '08: Night Two
The Sleuth covers the second night of parties in Denver for the Democratic National Convention.
All Aboard for Sen. Biden
Democratic vice-presidential nominee Joe Biden has taken the the Acela Amtrak train from Delaware to Washington, D.C., for over 30 years.
Democrats Convene in Denver
PHOTOS | The Democratic Party presents itself to the nation this week at the party's national convention, held at the Pepsi Center in Denver.
Hillary the Happy Warrior
Was it Hillary's Pitch-Perfect Toast? Politicians and political operatives weigh in.
Gov. Ed Rendell
The Pennsylvana governor discusses the feeling inside the Pepsi Center and compares Barack Obama to Adlai Stevenson.
- Obama's Response Ad Reflects Lessons of 2004
- Media Notes: Half-Hearted Hillary?
- Obama, Biden's Son Linked by Earmarks
- Authorities: No Credible Threat Posed To Obama
- Jon Stewart Takes Aim At Cable News 'Beast'
- Biden Thanks the Delaware Delegation
- Clinton Bundler Joins Obama Camp
- Rendell Compares Obama to Adlai Stevenson
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.)
"Whether you voted for me, or voted for Barack, the time is now to unite as a single party with a single purpose. We are on the same team, and none of us can sit on the sidelines."
- Video | Transcript | Tag Cloud
Former Gov. Mark Warner (D-Va.)
"The most important contest of our generation has begun. Not the campaign for the presidency. Not the campaign for Congress. But the race for the future."
- Video | Transcript | Tag Cloud
Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.)
"The revolutionaries who invented America's most quoted national slogan did not create a new nation to get the vote, only to turn around and deny the vote to the citizens of their own capital."
ALL AUG 26 SPEAKERS +
The Democrats