I can’t say I ever love political conventions and I often hate them. (Trump and Pat Buchanan come to mind …) This one is better than I expected, all things considered. Last night’s roll call was actually pretty great. They should do it like that forever.
And this was lovely:
Jacquelyn Brittany was an unlikely choice to provide the first formal nomination of former Vice President Joe Biden for president. But the modest security guard’s presence during the the Democratic National Convention on Tuesday evening became a showcase moment — and allowed the Democratic Party to effectively present its favorite populist narrative about itself.
Jacquelyn Brittany, 31 — who has requested to be identified by only her first and middle names — appeared in a short but compelling video in which she nominated Biden to the ticket. And her appearance as a Black woman in a shirt and tie subtly delivered a message that Biden has been trying to capitalize on since the beginning of his campaign: that he is truly a man of all the people, and thus an effective counter to Trump’s exclusionary brand of populism.
Packed into Jacquelyn’s 40-second video was a dramatic metaphor: The idea of an elevator as both an equalizer — a place where common and powerful people meet and congregate — and, well, as an elevator of the common person. “I take powerful people up on my elevator all the time,” she said. “Me? I just go back to the lobby.”
Except not this time — Biden, positioned as a shrewd uniter of classes, was taking Jacquelyn all the way to the top with him.
Jacquelyn’s trajectory ultimately played out like a classic fairy tale — beginning, as such stories do, with a chance encounter. As a security guard for the New York Times, she frequently escorts prominent guests through the elevators. In January, Joe Biden visited the building, and was lucky enough to find himself in Jacquelyn’s elevator bank. During the ride, a film crew for the TV show The Weekly, a joint production between the Times and FX, captured a wide-eyed Jacquelyn telling Biden, “I love you. … You’re like my favorite.”
The moment, followed by a selfie with the former vice president, went viral after Biden pronounced himself “honored” to have met Jacquelyn.
What’s perhaps far more telling than the moment itself, however, was the way Biden has incorporated it into his campaign. He’d been meeting that day with the Times’s editorial board, and though he didn’t get the paper’s endorsement, he seized the opportunity to promote the meeting of minds in the elevator. Ten days later, at a campaign stump in Waukee, Iowa, he specifically framed Jacquelyn’s on-camera moment as worth the trip to the Times. According to the Washington Post, he told the crowd, “I got something better” than the Times’s endorsement: “I got to meet Jacquelyn.”
The statement, with its ring of both populism and anti-intellectualism, might have backfired in a different political climate, one where he wasn’t positioning himself against an anti-intellectual sitting president. But instead, it propelled Jacquelyn into Tuesday night’s spotlight. It was all part of the natural progression of the fairy tale: the star-struck fan getting to befriend and journey with Biden all the way to the White House. “I never thought I would be in a position to do this,” she told the Post. “I never thought I was worthy enough to do this.”
Yet Jacquelyn was one of the most talked-about faces of the evening. Her endorsement received positive response across social media, with many people seeing it — and the DNC’s roll call more broadly — as a symbol of the Democratic Party’s ability to unite people across the political and socioeconomic spectrum, and as a powerful reminder of the people policies of all parties effect.
The article makes it sound like a cynical political move and it is certainly political. But I don’t think it’s cynical. What the Biden campaign is recognizing is if they want to represent the working class in this country they need to expand the definition beyond just white guys in factories. Most working-class folks in America are black, brown and female. It’s a smart political calculation but it’s also morally right.