Monday, November 12, 2007

Ranking the Speeches at the Jefferson Jackson Dinner

I posted this on Daily Kos yesterday and meant to post it here, but didn't get around to it.

Here are my final rankings of the speeches at the Jefferson Jackson Dinner...

1. Barack Obama - This was the 5th time seeing Obama in person and he gave the most passionate, strongest speech I have heard. Most in attendance would say he was one of the best and the press, including David Yepsen, declared him the winner too.

2. John Edwards - Led off the night with a riproaring speech that fired up the crowd. However, he was probably hurt by going first on a long night of speeches. He didn't get the media bump, but the 9,000 likely caucus goers left impressed with Edwards. I put it right up there with his speech at his campaign announcement in Des Moines back in December.

3. Hillary Clinton - It seemed like a great general election speech. Some have said her new theme "turn up the heat" and exchange with the crowd seemed to rehearsed and robotic. I didn't get that feeling the first time I heard it. She mentioned the support she is getting from red state politicians like Sen. Evan Bayh and Ohio Governor Ted Strickland, but no mention of the Vilsacks.

4. Joe Biden - Biden's best part of his speech was when he said he can't wait to debate Republicans on values. Something probably everyone in the audience wants to see happen. Biden showed his experience by talking about Pakistan and the need for bipartisan support. In the end, Biden came back to Iraq showing everyone that he is one of the most qualifed to lead on foreign policy. However, I get the feeling Democrats badly want this election to be about more than just Iraq and I am afraid Biden can't give that to them.

5. Bill Richardson - Was in a tough situation of following Edwards. Richardson's best moment came when he said he would have all the troops out of Iraq by 2013 and the top candidates aren't sure if they can get that done by 2013. Richardson's support unfurled a banner that read "2013?" to strengthen his point. Drew applause from the audience and from Clinton, when he said Democrats need to keep the campaign positive and discuss the issues.

6. Chris Dodd - Dodd speech just seemed flat. I am not sure if was his spot in the order. He came right in the middle and pretty much everything he said was already mentioned by Edwards, Richardson, or Biden. Or it could have been him following Boswell's auction. Dodd talked about restoring the Constitution, which is mightily important, but seemed to focus on it too long. To top it off, all of Dodd's supporters were in yellow t-shirts, but they seemed to just blend with all of the Clinton supporters wearing yellow shirts also.

2 comments:

T.M. Lindsey said...

I was front and center at the JJ dinner, and I agree with your rankings for the most part, although I would flip-flop (no pun intended) Hillary and Biden. Hillary's new theme "Turn Up the Heat" -- a response to the call and response of the Obama campaign ended up being a mixed metaphor that only served to highlight some contradictory statements she made.

She used divisive rhetoric, only to turn around and paint herself as someone who needs the Independents and Republicans. That, and the whole heat in the kitchen bit undermined the past 30 years of the women's movement, for I'm going out on the limb here that Hillary hasn't spent much time in the literal kitchen.

gregg said...

I generally agree, with one modification; we thought Joe Biden's speech was as well thoughtout and presented as Obama's, but the audience responses were biased and can't be used as sole indicator of speech success.