ChrisWeigant.com

From The Archives -- Photos From Philly

[ Posted Monday, July 17th, 2023 – 15:38 UTC ]

Well, OK, I know I promised, but I was forced to renege. There will be no new column today, but there will indeed be a new one tomorrow, never fear. What with seeing houseguests off today there was just no time to focus on sitting down and writing a column, sorry. So almost at random, I went looking for another article to run again and came across this one. It's just fun, just "summertime vacation photos" really, which is precisely the sort of mood I am currently in. So here are my photos of the 2016 Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. My favorite has got to be the one of Clarence Page showing me a Grateful Dead medallion on the back of his phone... which Jerry Garcia had given him, after an interview. In any case, enjoy, sorry for yet another re-run column, and see you all back here tomorrow.

 

Originally published August 2, 2016

Due to technical reasons (and not having a full-time staff to do this stuff the way big media organizations do), I wasn't able to post photos with all the stories from the Democratic National Convention. Instead, I'm just going to present them all together in this "album." A lot of these were mentioned in my previous coverage, but some of them are just random convention shots.

Without further ado, here's my look at the Democratic National Convention, starting (of course) with a stop to get a cheesesteak.

Geno's

Sorry Pat's, but Geno's had a parking space right in front of it, which made up our minds for us (the two most famous cheesesteak joints in Philly are right across the street from each other).

Donkey

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From The Archives -- Biden Speculation

[ Posted Friday, July 14th, 2023 – 16:00 UTC ]

In case you're just tuning in, there will be no Friday Talking Points column today, as I am still on vacation. What I've been doing all week is taking a trip in the Wayback Machine to the summer of 2015, eight years ago, which was the precise point when political pundits who could read the tea leaves correctly realized that Donald Trump's candidacy was no joke -- he was quite likely to become the Republican presidential nominee. This wasn't a big crowd, because most pundits did continue to treat Trump like a punchline -- some right up to the point where he actually began winning primary races. In any case, I'd like to end the week with a "what might have been" column. What would have happened if Joe Biden had run in 2016? We'll never know, but all I know is that when I attended the 2016 Democratic National Convention, I heard over and over again (from many people from all over the country) some serious regret that Biden hadn't run. Would Biden have been able to triangulate successfully and pull off the win by balancing somewhere between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders? Or would he have been a spoiler and thrown the race to Bernie? Again: we will never know. If Biden had run and won the nomination, perhaps he even would have beaten Trump the first time around, which would put us all in a very different world today. Like I said, it's all just a subject for idle speculation, but that's about all I can manage on a summer vacation Friday, so it'll have to do. (And rest assured, everyone: regular new columns will begin again on Monday.)

 

Originally published August 24, 2015

Vice President Joe Biden certainly has got the media talking. All it really took was one leak to Maureen Dowd and a meeting with Senator Elizabeth Warren, and the recurring story in the media is now: "Biden's son Beau made a deathbed plea to his father to run for president again, and he's now seriously considering it." That's a compelling political narrative, to be sure. The Wall Street Journal is even reporting that Biden's now leaning towards running. Now, I have no inside sources of my own, so I have no idea what's really going on in Biden's head, but no matter how likely it turns out to be, a Biden candidacy bears political examination beyond the simple question of: "Will he or won't he run?"

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From The Archives -- How Do You Solve A Problem Like The Donald?

[ Posted Thursday, July 13th, 2023 – 18:02 UTC ]

In reaching back for repeat columns this week, I started exactly eight years ago, in July of 2015. I've decided to widen the window a bit and move into August as well. This article was written one day before the first-ever Republican presidential debate of the 2016 cycle, when nobody had yet seen either how Donald Trump was going to perform in a debate setting or how any of the other candidates were going to try to deal with his presence. Most of it still rings true today, even after we've all seen Trump debate his way through two separate presidential campaigns. The conundrum facing Republican opponents of Trump hasn't really changed at all, even now that Trump's debating style has become so well-known. So while we won't be getting the first Republican presidential debate of the 2024 cycle until next month, I thought it was a good reminder for how we were all talking about Trump debating right before the first time it ever happened.

 

Originally published August 5, 2015

I have to begin by immediately offering my apologies to Rodgers and Hammerstein for that title, but the lyrics from The Sound Of Music's "Maria" have indeed been running through my head -- as I contemplate what all the other Republican candidates are going to do in the debate tomorrow night to differentiate themselves from their party's frontrunner, Donald Trump. Especially the ever-so descriptive line: "A flibbertigibbet... A will o' the wisp... A clown."

How do you solve a problem like The Donald, when he's standing center stage and everyone's eyes are on him? How do you deal with whatever Trump says from the podium? How do you stand out from the pack and make an impression on all the voters watching?

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From The Archives -- Feeling The Bern

[ Posted Wednesday, July 12th, 2023 – 16:26 UTC ]

Continuing yesterday's theme of looking back precisely eight years to July of 2015, I came across this article (with a bunch of photos I took!) from one of the first Bernie Sanders rallies of his 2016 campaign. While we all know the outcome -- Bernie eventually lost to Hillary Clinton -- the excitement that was present at the beginning was not just palpable but almost overwhelming. At this point in time, very few people even knew who Bernie Sanders was. His ideas had not yet moved the entire Democratic Party's Overton window into a far more progressive place. Bernie was an upstart, seen by the media as no more than a curiosity. But when political historians assess the time period in the future, I am confident that Bernie Sanders will be given a lot of credit for effecting real change in the direction of American politics. And I was there to witness it, almost at its very start. So enjoy this look back, as I believe this was the first time I ever used the phrase "feel the Bern" in my writing.

 

Originally published July 22, 2015

Yes, it's true. This past weekend, I joined 11,000 other people in Phoenix to "feel the Bern," as the supporters of Bernie Sanders would put it. Sanders held a rally in the city immediately after the Netroots Nation conference concluded, which made it pretty easy for me to attend (and take a few photos). Netroots routinely draws a crowd of around 3,000, so even if everyone from the conference went to the Bernie rally (actually, not everyone did), the conference crowd could only roughly have been about a quarter of the people there to see Bernie. The rest were locals from a very red state. All there to feel the Bern, as it were.

All photographs © Chris Weigant 2015

This applied to both young and old. Since I got there a bit early, I was able to circulate among the people streaming in to see Sanders. I saw a child working on his own "Feel The Bern!" sign, and talked to a woman who told me Sanders was only the second "real" politician she had ever been excited about (the first being Eugene McCarthy).

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From The Archives -- Thinking The Unthinkable: Donald Trump, GOP Nominee

[ Posted Tuesday, July 11th, 2023 – 14:47 UTC ]

I am on vacation all week, and to start off this series of re-runs I just went back to July of 2015 to see where the presidential race was going, at this point eight years ago. This was pretty much the point where everyone had to stop treating Donald Trump as a joke. Which is what the following admits, although I have to admit that thinking the even-more unthinkable ("President Trump") was beyond me, at the time.

 

Originally published July 29, 2015

It's time to think about what has previously been in the realm of the unthinkable: Donald Trump might just become the Republican nominee for president. Two months ago, that statement would have elicited nothing but a big old belly laugh from just about anyone who pays any attention to politics. Nowadays, though, nobody's laughing. The very concept has moved from the surreal to the possible. So it's time to actually think about what it would mean for the country and for the Republican Party.

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Program Note

[ Posted Monday, July 10th, 2023 – 16:58 UTC ]

Due to houseguests arriving unexpectedly early, I regret to announce that there will be no new columns here all week long. I am going to try to spend some time tomorrow setting up re-run columns for the rest of the week (so the site won't be entirely dark), but my original plan of posting today and tomorrow is now no longer operational. Have a great summer week, everyone, and rest assured I will be doing so as well! New columns will resume next Monday.

-- Chris Weigant

 

Follow Chris on Twitter: @ChrisWeigant

 

Friday Talking Points -- Some Cautious Optimism

[ Posted Friday, July 7th, 2023 – 16:43 UTC ]

The nation celebrated its 247th birthday this year, leaving only three more to go until the second-biggest celebration of our lifetime (as we still personally remember the ushering in the bicentennial in Washington D.C.). But since it was a short week, what with Independence Day falling on a Tuesday, we are hoping this will be a short column (for once). Well, short-ish at any rate. We are cautiously optimistic.

Cautious optimism is a good place to start, actually. We stumbled across an interesting paper from two Democratic strategists (Celinda Lake and Mike Lux) which confidently states: "All the elements are in place for a big Democratic victory in 2024," and predicts that the "trifecta" of winning the House back, holding the Senate and keeping Joe Biden in the White House is well within grasp.

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Guest Author -- Dosing Tricky Dick

[ Posted Thursday, July 6th, 2023 – 16:03 UTC ]

Because it is a slow political news week (and for the salacious nature of it all), the mainstream media is currently digging into every aspect of the "Cocaine Found At White House" story. News articles are being written summarizing all possible past rumors or actual instances of drug use at the White House. My favorite came at the end of a Washington Post article on this theme, under the heading: "Rocker Grace Slick." But I found their rundown of what happened awfully sparse, so as a public service today I am going to run an extended excerpt from Grace Slick's autobiography Somebody To Love, of which (of course) I have my own copy (signed and personalized, even...).

Anyway, this all comes from Chapter 29, and uses the same title as the chapter. Enjoy....

[Context note: "Grace Wing" is Grace Slick's birth name]

-- Chris Weigant

 

Dosing Tricky Dick

Another grandiose "Get Nixon" idea we came up with was the "Let's Dose Dickie" trick. That one wasn't carried through to conclusion either, which was probably fortunate since the repercussions might have been more than we bargained for. But the planning stages were pretty exciting.

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No Bad Press

[ Posted Wednesday, July 5th, 2023 – 16:04 UTC ]

It has long been a Hollywood maxim: "There is no such thing as bad press." To movie stars, it doesn't really matter why you get your name in the papers, because it puts your name in front of the public, whether for good or bad. The worst tragedy for a Hollywood star is being forgotten by the public, to put this another way. So it doesn't matter what gets you in the news -- a scandal, a real stinkeroo of a movie, whatever -- it reminds everyone who you are and creates the magical "buzz," which means you stand a higher chance of getting better roles in the future.

We seem now to have reached the point where this maxim is true in politics as well, at least for some people. News that would previously have been not just bad but downright disqualifying in the past now boosts your name recognition and actually builds support among your party's base. This is becoming more and more frequent in the age of Trump, as more and more politicians learn how to capitalize on the phenomenon.

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From The Archives -- Happy Independence Day!

[ Posted Monday, July 3rd, 2023 – 16:11 UTC ]

Program Note: For the next two weeks, I will be on semi-vacation. Or "two vacations," really. The first of these starts today and will continue tomorrow during our national holiday. So I will be re-running columns to start this week, but then I'll be back for the end of the week as usual. Next week, I may (or may not) get a column out on Monday and/or Tuesday (we'll see how things go), but then after that point it'll be re-run columns for the rest of the week. By Monday the 17th, everything will return to normal and new columns will appear with regularity once again. I apologize in advance for the gaps in service.

Today's column was (obviously) written to be run yesterday, July 2nd. However, since the 2nd fell on a Sunday this year, I thought it'd be a good bridge column between the weekend and the actual Fourth of July. In any case, enjoy, and have fun celebrating our independence no matter which actual day you decide to celebrate it on.

 

Originally published July 2, 2012

Happy Second of July, everyone! Happy Independence Day!

Now, you may be thinking: "Has Chris gone bonkers? Why is he jumping the gun, two days early?" The answers to these important queries are: No, Chris has not gone any more bonkers than usual; and, in fact, the rest of you are celebrating a fictitious event on a fictitious anniversary date. So there.

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