Sunday, December 14, 2008

Affirming Voters' Voices for CHANGE

Affirming voters' voices
Miami Herald - 12/14/08

I never truly knew the faces and voices behind Florida's Electoral College until this year. Like many, I viewed this vestige of the U.S. Constitution with some suspicion. This changed, however, when I received a call to serve as one of those voices on behalf of Barack Obama's campaign, one of 27 electors for Florida.

The Electoral College process is part of the U.S. Constitution's original design. Each state's popular vote determines the number of electors based on its congressional districts. The first presidential candidate to win 270 electoral votes out of a possible 538 wins the Oval Office.
The 27 electoral votes for Florida reflect the changing hue of this state from red to blue. It also speaks to its ever-changing demographics and, in turn, its political pulse. Some pundits say that the growing Hispanic vote had a direct impact on this year's presidential election. Others have concluded the state's growing and diverse black community tipped the scales.

The primary reason Florida is awash in blue is the surging activism and burgeoning voter rolls in key pockets. From the suburbs of Tampa to the urban immigrant neighborhoods of Miami-Dade and Broward counties, Democrats, Republicans and independents alike woke up and embraced the powerful message of change. Floridians gave their dollars despite a bad economy, volunteered their time and organized friends and colleagues to knock on doors and staff phone banks. Many met neighbors for the first time; constituents realized their power.

On Nov. 4, voters chose the men and women who will serve in the Electoral College. As an elector, I will go to Tallahassee on Dec. 15 to record your vote on an official ''Certificate of Vote.'' As a group, we will sign, seal and certify Florida's electoral votes and immediately send them to the president of the U.S. Senate, the archivist of the United States and other federal and state officials for official counting on Jan. 8, 2009.

In the Senate chambers that day, I will echo not only my voice, but that of thousands of Floridians who voted early and turned up the volume of their voices in this election. It will be a resounding confirmation that Barack Obama is the 44th president of the United States.
Voting is serious business and should not be taken for granted. We must treasure this precious constitutional right and honor the intent of our Founding Fathers. We can all be proud and find solace, whether your vote was tinged with red or blue. On Jan. 20, we will move forward, together, as a nation.

Friday, November 7, 2008

The Prologue of a Journey: "How Did We Paint Florida Blue"

Family, friends, and colleagues, what a week! I had to take a few days to marinate on the reality of the extraordinary moment witnessed this week. As promised, my 50th Blog would genuflect on the seminal journey of this remarkable political experience and transformation for all of us.

First, let me take you back to my precinct where I volunteered as a poll watching attorney. I volunteered to protect the rights of voters back at my former high school, Miami Southridge Senior High, in South-Miami-Dade County (851/827). I wanted to return to the first place that gave me a safe place to learn when I first migrated to the United States. And I am glad I did. I recognized former students, teachers, and neighbors. I even helped my own little sister vote in her first presidential election. It was like looking into a mirror.

I arrived at 6:30am and there were about 300 persons in line. Remarkable. I walked in and introduced myself to Miss Carolyn (above) one of the poll clerks. She said to me, "You look handsome in your blue tie, but how can I help you?" I said humbly, "I am going to find myself a quiet corner and I am just here to help support you." She retorted, "Goodie."
I said to myself, "We are in good hands."

Later that morning dusk, as the voters poured in, I offered some of the other clerks some fruit juice from my secret "charm the poll workers" stash. They were most appreciative, except for Miss Carolyn. She commented, "What happened to me, I don't look like I am working here as well and in need of hydration." I replied, "But of course, democracy needs to be quenched. She smirked and guzzled my cranberry juice.

The day progressed with a steady flow of voters, young, old, disabled, Black, White, Hispanic, East-Indian. All working folk. The neighborhood had not changed much. Truck drivers, bus drivers, teachers, students. Hard working Americans. You could tell the first time voters - with the nervous hesitation in which they entered the room. But they were determined and most simply came in to vote for the top of the ticket - which was unfortunate.

Later in the day, my Republican counterpart arrived 4 hours late. He proceeded to insert himself aggressively at the problem table. Then, he met Miss Carolyn who told him that his physical presence was hindering the process and that he should take a comfortable seat in the corner. He proceeded to recite the Florida statute to her as to his right to be watchful over the process. He should not have gone there. This is after I had warmed up the room in our favor. He quickly realized that she was not someone to mess with, unless he had some cranberry juice, snacks, and extra pens for voters.

The day ended with a spurt of workers closing their shifts. The last voter left at 7:40pm. And in the end, Obama prevailed to an estimated 760-214 votes. My precinct was painted BLUE.

We painted Florida Blue on the backs of a ground game that was built around dinner tables, lunch meetings, community rallies, art shows, barbeques, birthday parties, and house parties. We painted Florida Blue with $10 bills. We painted Florida Blue with the engagement of new Florida voices of young people and immigrant communities. We painted Florida Blue with the backing of loyal Clinton supporters. We painted Florida Blue in persuading fringe constituencies such as the Cuban-American community. We painted Florida BLUE by storming Tampa and Orlando and increasing voter turnout in North Florida/Panhandle and South Florida. We painted Florida Blue by building a hurricane of voices over the warm sea of a resonating CHANGE message. We painted Florida Blue because we believed in ourselves - WOMEN FOR OBAMA, CARIBBEAN-AMERICANS FOR OBAMA, ORLANDO4OBAMA, JEWS FOR OBAMA, THE TAMPA BAY O-TRAIN, HAITIANS FOR OBAMA-CHANJMAN, GLBT FOR OBAMA, AFRICAN-AMERICANS FOR OBAMA, and on and on. We hoped. We believed. We voted.

We painted Florida Blue because we took this time around seriously. Just like, Miss Carolyn (in her BLUE rim glasses). We were not playing with this moment. Now the real work begins, let's commit to the CHANGE WE BELIEVE IN. Follow the journey at http://change.gov/.

On December 15, I will submit my vote as one of the 27 electors in Tallahassee. I will remember your voice and break out my BLUE paint brush.

God Bless.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Life is Too Short

Family, friends, colleagues, it is only a matter of hours. Our transformation is near completion. If you already early voted, thank you. If you are still undecided, time to put your game face on. If you voted the other guy, thank you for exercising your franchise and I wish you God's blessings. No more debates. No fundraising receptions. No more patio discussion fights. No more TV ads. It's showtime!

For many of you, I am sure this is an anxious moment. Your stomach is unsettled. You cannot focus on the task at hand. You are scratching your head nervously. You are praying for the best. All of these emotions are natural. But, here is the comfort: Senator Obama has run a noble campaign. He has steadfastly communicated his vision for our country (and the world). He has shared his core values for the tone of this campaign and for the politics of CHANGE. He has remained dignified in addressing bumps in the road of the campaign. He shown all other candidates in the primary and general election all the respect warranted of your rivals. He has brought us all into this election from the ground up - veteran voices, new voices, re-engaged voices. He has simply run a stellar campaign. No matter what, we can all be proud of being able to live through this moment.

So, my friends, this is not a time for stress or anxiety. I know you are probably on pins and needles. In the middle of any storm or hurricane or pending instability (including economic hardship), it is important to remain calm and focused. There is much to be done --- to keep you busy away from the television, radio and internet. We have to close this deal and it will be critical for you to assess what else you could do over the next hours:

Take the day off with family to vote and volunteer to help others;
Adopt a precinct to volunteer after voting (other voters will need moral support);
Call all family members and friends who are registered to ensure that they have a picture ID and that they have completed their sample ballot;
Volunteer to help transport others to the polls;
Call 1-877-2-FL-OBAM - for any trouble shooting questions at the polls
Be sure to have a healthy breakfast and to hydrate and snack healthily throughout the day;
and finally, offer a prayer in memory of all those persons who are not with us on this day to witness and share in this moment.

Promise me that you will conduct your daily movements tomorrow with the same dignity that Sen. Obama has conducted this campaign. Please be polite to the poll workers. Please and thank you are still part of the language of common courtesy. In addition, please be helpful to other voters and be on the look out for any poll workers and civil rights attorneys who are present to ensure that every person has the right to vote.

Life is too short. We have to live every moment to the fullest. I am heartbroken Grandma Dunham did not have the opportunity to live through tomorrow. Let's live it for her.

My final Blog of the journey will be No. 50 - after tomorrow night.

Monday, October 27, 2008

One Week. One Voice. One Moment. This is the One.

Family, friends, colleagues, this is it. One Week remaining. In one week, you will be part of a defining moment in American history (irrespective of the results). As you reflect on the role that you have played, please pause for a moment, close your eyes, take a breath, and give thanks for being a part of something special. Since Sen. Obama's announcement in February 2007, we could fairly say that he was not the only one on a journey. We all participated in a transformation. The long nights on cable news. The dining table debates. The volunteer parties. The sound of a slamming dial tone. Worn shoe soles from canvassing. The begging and pleading for contributions. The new friends and discovered neighbors. The hustle for campaign rally passes. The difference between delegates and super-delegates. Debate after debate after debate. The campaign drama of wayward clergy, fumbling surrogates, costly hairdos and wardrobes, villified media, and armchair/backseat campaign quarterbacking. The transformation is in full motion. We are forever CHANGED. Politics will never seen through the same lens.

Over the last, I have tried to share this transformation and journey on a personal level and hoped that it would reflect some of the thoughts and emotions that were simultaneously experiencing. This is the moment you have been waiting for. You can smell the smoke from the kitchen. You can see the break of the sun on the oceanic horizon. You can hear the faint call of the rooster in the morning dusk. You can hear the click of the starter gun. But WAIT!. . . not so fast! Nothing in life is guaranteed. Your transformation will not be fully complete until the final certification of 270 electoral votes for the respective candidate. Not even close.

What do you hope to wake up to on the morning of November 5th, 2008? What do you hope to say about your political transformation? For me, the pressure is undaunting. Earlier this summer, I was asked to be one of the loyal 27 electors for Obama in Florida. One of 27. This means that your full transformation will certify the painting of Florida BLUE. Your Voice. Your Vote. Your Moment. You should not underestimate the full thrus of your personal power --- every decision you make to contribute to this campaign will validate the importance of ONE VOICE. You listened and acted, like you never did before - either as a staff person, a volunteer, and/or a voter. The connective tissue of each of our voices will single-handedly CHANGE America and the world.

This is the moment. For the next week, I am asking that you dig deeper to make our own closing argument that CHANGE truly occurs best from the bottom UP -- especially from the bottomless pit of stomachs where our emotions find refuge. You can make one more phone call. You can knock on one more door. You can assist one more voter. You make one more small contribution. You can ensure that this moment is yours. Vote absentee (avoid the long lines). Vote early (feel the energy). Or vote on November and close this deal.

We have ONE WEEK. You have ONE VOICE. And we have ONE MOMENT. This is the ONE.

Let's close this argument with an exclamation point!

Friday, September 26, 2008

America/The World Is Hungry for Leadership, Dinner Begins Tonight in Oxford, MS

So, on your mark, get set, . . . . . . the runners have finally decided to get on with the final leg of the relay. Sen. McCain decided not to drop his baton. Let's get serious about hearing the competing visions on the issues. And more importantly, let's hear directly from the persons of which we are looking to for leadership in America. Our throats are parched, the skin is clammy, and our stomachs are grumbling. We have less than 39 days and counting to make up our minds on what we wish to have on the menu of leadership:

An eclectic mix of
Strong Leadership
Compassion
Vision
Judgement
Experience
Intelligence
Smart ideas
Consensus-builder
Integrity
Sprinkled with a dash of core values and any other condiments you wish

I am certainly hungry and I believe the debates will offer up a clear opportunity for the American public to vote up or down the Obama-Biden and McCain-Palin tickets. We have spent countless sleepless hours watching cable television as morsels of appetizers to the main meal: the opportunity to vote. In the interim, we will defer to our current president, congressional leadership, and governmental arms to deal with and resolve any further crises that we are confronted with over the next 39 days. In either event, the next president will have a mountain of mail in his INBOX.

Since my last note, we have had lots of drama and excitement since the end of both Conventions . All in my view - qualify as all distractions and diversions (I paused to reflect). It is imperative that you and your family remain focused on the kitchen sink issues that directly impact your daily lives. Likewise, I implore you to ignore any chain emails purporting to tell you what your voting rights are. Please press delete and refrain from forwarding any YOU WILL NOT BE PERMITTED TO VOTE ALERTS. Let me assure you that there will be countless of lawyers and legal professionals on hand across America to ensure that EVERY VOTE COUNTS. Not this time. No way. No how. You can take this to the bank (ooops, well, wait a second, until bailout bill is signed by the President). It is important that you update your picture identificiation, your voter registration card, and identify when and where you are able to vote in advance. Turnout is going to be extremely high.

If you are hungry for leadership, pick up your knife and fork, grab your napkins, and lick your lips. We are about to enter the phase of the last meal. First stop, Oxford, Mississippi. Do not leave anything on your plate. Mummy is likely to put you in a corner.

Enjoy and eat up!

Saturday, September 6, 2008

America's Next Chapter: CHANGE

America's Next Chapter: CHANGE

Make a contribution - go to http://donate.barackobama.com/page/contribute/SOCAFORCHANGE
Register to vote - go https://www.voteforchange.com/index_obama.php (Deadline - October 6th)
Vote from Abroad: http://www.votefromabroad.org
To Volunteer - go to http://action.barackobama.com/page/s/volunteer

Over the last two weeks, we had the opportunity to listen to the overarching vision, themes, and spirit of the Democratic and Republican Convention. This was probably the first time that most people were interested and engaged in the proceedings of either party. We have heard about race. We have heard about gender. We have heard about faith. We have heard about experience. We have heard about patriotism. Who has it and who doesn't.

As I sat in the Convention hall and in the stadium in Denver, I soaked it all in to put it into perspective. I thought about all those people who are in my family, the circle of friends, and those in receipt of my Blog. I was living the moment for them and with them. It was a priceless opportunity. Having listened to both Conventions gavel to gavel, I concluded, however, that both political parties are a distraction to getting to the bottom of the soul of the candidates at the top of the tickets. In both parties, there are so many polar stakeholders to balance and to appease. In addition, it was also clear to me that both parties are of distinct American cultures and attitudes. You heard it in the music of the floor. You saw it in the attire of the delegates. You saw it in the comparative hues and accents of the delegations. You heard it in the suttle references of east v. west and rural v. urban.

It is very unfortunate that we struggle to find common ground in our politics because our failing to bypass the divisive inferences of our politics. I suspect that both Barack Obama and John McCain both want the best for our country. At the end of the day and this year, America is yearning for a CHANGE. For the next 50 plus days, you have the duty to do the work to make your best judgment on who has the best vision to deliver the CHANGE that you want and need.

So, on your mark, get set, . . . . . .

First presidential debate
Friday, September 26
The University of Mississippi, Oxford, Miss.
Moderator: Jim Lehrer, Executive Editor and Anchor, The NewsHour, PBS

Vice presidential debate
Thursday, October 2
Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.
Moderator: Gwen Ifill - Senior Correspondent, The NewsHour
and Moderator and Managing Editor, Washington Week, PBS

Second presidential debate (town meeting)
Tuesday, October 7
Belmont University, Nashville, Tenn.
Moderator: Tom Brokaw, Special Correspondent, NBC News

Third presidential debate
Wednesday, October 15
Hofstra University, Hempstead, N.Y.
Moderator: Bob Schieffer, CBS News Chief Washington Correspondent, and
Host, Face the Nation

Each debate will begin at 9:00 p.m. EST.

Let's go for the Gold! Join us at www.barackobama.com --- Obama/Biden '08

Find your motivation - click http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/9/4/121951/9182

Thursday, August 28, 2008

An American President

On August 29, 2008, on the 45th anniversary of Dr. King's I Have A Dream Speech, we witnessed together the final makings of American president. Yes, I am being presumptious and speaking it into existence.

After waiting a couple hours in line in the cool Denver sun with about 50,000 other CHANGE agents, I was spiritually calm and patient. This was one of those moments that you would not rush. People smiled and engaged in spontaneous conversations with each other. The air reflected the crisp spirit and tone of Barack Obama. Though you had the occasional whiners (McCain-like), they were overwhelmed with positive vibes.

It was an enormous undertaking to move over 60,000 through two entrances in one line. Upon entering the stadium, the maganamity of the moment was evident. The expectations were high. Other speakers went through the motions, but it was clear that it was Barack's night.

Barack Obama stepped into his stage with his comfortable professorial ease. His tone and delivery elevated to a contrasting substance and climaxed into an ultimatum on any future character assassinations. He reminded the nation and the world of our own personal power.

He closed his re-introduction acceptance speech with a promise to renew America's promise. He claimed his place and purpose. It was a seminal and transforming moment in the orchestra of American history.

We were witnesses and will be forever CHANGED by the making of this American president.

Today is the Day

Good morning God, you told me that the sun would rise on this day. I am glad it is rising in the Rockies where the sky is big enough to hold the radiating feelings of this historic moment.

We have waited patiently and diligently and now it is here. On Monday, we heard from Michelle as she reminded us of love, family and values. On Tuesday, we heard from Sen. Hillary Clinton as she reminded us of our greater purpose. Then yesterday, we were uplifted by former president Bill Clinton as he restored the power of our example.

Today is the day.

We are the ones we have been waiting for.

This is the moment. Thank you for the opportunity to be here in person to witness it with you.

I am grateful and blessed beyond compare.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Obama-Biden - Change is Here

It's official - Obama and Biden have received the nomination and second from the delegates. The only thing remaining is an acceptance from Barack.

Sen. McCain will try to rain on the stadium in leaking his decision on a VP candidate. No way ... No how ... No McCain

The Democratic party is increasingly energized and it is this motivation that will move us closer to CHANGE. Biden is making the case for CHANGE needed against his good friend McCain. In fact, he is laying out the specific policies for the ticket's platform for CHANGE.

The Hall is an orchestra of political drama. The vessel is preparing its people for POWER to flow through.

The river is expected to overflow tomorrow at Invesco field.

The world will stop.

Join the movement - go to http://donate.barackobama.com/page/contribute/SOCAFORCHANGE and be on the right side of history.

The Power of Example and the Example of Power

In the Hall, previous speakers spoke over personal chatter. Pres. Bill Clinton has retaken the stage not to be undone by his wife. Classic Bill.

After a very symbolic introduction from Congressman Kendrick Meek, his speech is littered with the right political tone. The Hall is electric!

We are about to return to a place called Hope.

Braaaaaaaaaaaaam!

Let's Talk About Power

Today's lesson boys and girls is about a word that many people do not like to talk about: POWER!

Who has it? What do they do with it? or Where does it manifest itself?

It is 8pm EST and I am sitting in one of America's platforms of power. Under the US Constitution, we have three independent branches of POWER - the legislative, the judiciary, and the one presently on the stage - the EXECUTIVE.

I ran into a fraternity brother and Obama supporter from South Carolina and he noted three important rules of POWER:

1. POWER exists.
2. POWER flows through people and
3. People have the POWER to be powerful.

In the Democratic party, we are witnessing a reallocation of power. Bill and Hillary Clinton have built the power base of the party for years. Their political allies and staff and business associates have benefitted from their access to this POWER.

During my visit this rookie witness to this vestibule of POWER, there is a clear struggle for access to POWER with the political aquarirum of Clinton and Obama supporters. Who has access to certain posh hotel accommodations? Who is special credentials to the Hall floor or to the hot parties? It was also glaring that the POWER also flows through the checkbook.

In the company merger of the Democratic party of the Clinton-Obama factor, the pursuit or retention of POWER distracts the real purpose for CHANGE we can believe in.

Last night, Senator Clinton used her personal power to endorse her support for Sen.Obama and also inspired her supporters and others to do the same. Even if privately she may have harbored the pains of a loss, she made the party more powerful in overlooking her own ambitions.

We are awaiting the speeches of Pres. Bill Clinton and Sen. Joe Biden to share their own thoughts on how they wish to utilize their own power.

Stay tuned for feedback.

We have POWER - let's use it wisely for the common good.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

The Hall is Hers Tonight

Straight out from the top - Hillary lays out her support for Barack Obama. Firmly and distinctively. Hillary and Obama banners are distributed and scattered throughout the hall along with UNITY banners.

In a dashing orange suit, she is a packaged tour du force. Undoubtedly. And it is clear that Barack Obama must make the sale to her supporters. Those men that are shouting I LOVE YOU from the rafters and the women littered with Hillary buttons. Hillary is making the case for that sale and she is selling in her own style. You cannot help but respect her.

There is not an empty seat in the Hall. Not one.

You can hear a pin drop and you can hear the thunderous response at every emotional punch.

Woven into her speech are the buzz words of some of her constituencies - Puerto Rico, Gay and women rights.

She is making the case and it is unflinching in stating that the election was not about her but about changing America and renewing its promise.

It is quite a political moment and she is preserving her standing without any doubt.

Wow.

More of the Same

Briaan Schweitzer of Montana just laid out the carpet for Hillary Clinton's keynote speech - as he laid out some of the contrasting status quo policies of McCain.

The energy of the Hall is rock star like. The screams are going to be deafening - especially from her army of women.

The Dynamics of a Merger

It is about 9pm EST and the buzz is all about Hillary. The Convention hall is filling up. Tonight is different. You can tell the scores of Hillary supporters due to the visible Hillary paraphrenalia being worn. This night will be significant as it will determine the direction of the soul of the party. There is an anticipatory feel in the Hall. Will there be a seemless merger of emotional affinities? I will return back to Hillary in a jiffy.

Last night, I witnessed the Carnivalizing of Denver courtesy of the talent of Wyclef Jean. Wyclef Jean co-host an after party with Bizmarkie at a Denver downtown club. Wyclef demonstrated the musical dexterity of a magician. He warmed the crowd up with a medley of Bob Marley standard and built a energizing mood with the spectrum of Caribbean melodies. He had the audience nibbling out of the palm of his hands. He stopped mid-lyric and reminded the audience that he was from Haiti. He questioned the audience whether they were ready for a new president. In his usual Brooklyn Haitian cadence he incited a near electoral riot. Shirts were swirling, campaign signs were waving, and bacchanal smiles filled the room. The fire marshalls stood by nervously as Wyclef stood on one of the speaker and created bedlam as he instructed "tear the club down" tear McCain down". They smiled and shook their heads. He closed the club down with a congaline into the streets. He basically shut it down.

Now back to Hillary after that short station break. The primary question tonight will be whether Hillary could take the emotional equity of her supporters and transport them towards the best interests of the party and the nation. It will not be easy. They are vested in her.

Stay tune for the feedback.

The Dynamics of a Merger

Hillary takes the stage tonight. The Democratic world will pause to dissect every word and body language. Will she able to move the party towards unity. Stay tuned for the live feedback.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Michelle O!

Michelle OBAMA!

Wow.

Now - this is what it is all about.

Love. Family. Values.

Michelle has told her story in a manner that brings you right into her living room.

The Convention has gotten on the right tone that reflects Barack's personality. Looking forward to the crescendo.

The Heart of the Party

Teddy Kennedy just took the stage and the Convention has erupted. Lots of glassy eyes in the house.

He is the official heart of the party. He has taken on the challenge of brain cancer and has returned to the Convention to give the faithful an emotional lift.

The energy is building.

I hope you can feel it through the screen.

This party is motivated. And this energy will take them to victory in November.

Pure excitement!

I am blogging LIVE from the Pepsi Center - 8pm EST - and the energy here is building. People are smiling and the anticipation is in explicable. America is rich with colorful faces, personalities, and unbounded energy as reflected through this Convention.

I am not on the floor tonight with the Florida which located to the front left of the stage in their Florida theme colors. They are a rowdy beach bunch. They went crazy when the Credentials Committee had restored their full delegation vote. Pure drama. Florida takes the cake.

Tonight's theme is all about the American Story - our story - Barack Obama's story. It is important night for us to reflect on our own story and how we evoke our own experience and need for CHANGE.

The Pepsi Center is buzzing with over 1400 media outlets from all ove the world. The Olympics are over and people are salivating for some substitute excitement.

I am looking forward to Michelle setting the record straight tonight and talking about her love story with Barack. It is American Story - our story.

This is our moment as One Nation.

Pure excitement.

You can view a spontaneous You Tube interview at YouTube.com/2008conventions - search Marlon Hill

Until the next,

Obamanos!

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Change is Ah Coming

The smoke is visible from Illinois capital and a Vice President has been chosen. This is an Olympic relay and we are in the final leg. We must finish the race to win Gold. I should have some insight ---- I was born in the world's fastest nation.

I arrived in the Mile High City today and went to work immediately as a member of the Rules Committee. There, the primary issue on the agenda was to decide on how to address the issue of timing of primaries and caucus and the influence of "super-delegates" on the nomination process. The Committee adopted a resolution to establish a Democratic Change Commission to address all issues systematically. You may view all documents, deliberations, and speeches at www.demconvention.com. Tune in.

Being here is surreal for me, the son and grandson of a hard working immigrant family from a country ( Jamaica ) that is accustomed to making the world out of very little. I travel to Denver with the voice and dreams of many others who are in pursuit of their slice of American life in my luggage. It dawned on me that this party nomination process is serious business. It is confirmed that the same folks who fight for CHANGE internally within the Democratic Party - also fight against CHANGE of the status quo from new forces. It is also resonated to me that we are dead set in the eye of a storm that has squarely to do with the distribution of POWER among stakeholders within the party and ultimately for the Oval Office.

We play a vital role in the equitable (if this is even possible) distribution of power in the best interests of the common good. You certainly cannot stand by and watch this happen from your verandah. For the next 73 days, you will watch TV ads, read newspaper Op-eds, view presidential debates, and the like -- all with the effort to help you make a personal decision for your own well-being and that of your family. You have the power in your vote.

Over the next few days, I will be reporting on my personal experience directly from the floor of the Convention floor at http://marlonhill.blogspot.com Join me in the experience.

Monday - Keynote - Michelle Obama
Tuesday - Sen. Hillary Clinton
Wednesday - Sen. Joe Biden
Thursday - Sen. Barack Obama acceptance speech.

Together, we will be part of the CHANGE we want and NOT part of the CHANGE that passes you by in the dead of the night. Thank you for being there from Day one or even yesterday.

Let's go for the Gold! Join us at www.barackobama.com --- Obama/Biden '08

Monday, June 2, 2008

This One is for Rosa

Last year, I shared that I was living in a divided family (and still am to some extent). The women in my family did not really buy my interest or enthusiasm for Senator Obama. However imperfect I am at times - they one by one expressed some faith in my judgment and at least gave me the benefit of the doubt at times on my rantings about the campaign. My aunt in New York is still supportive of Senator Clinton and I encourage her to remain steadfast. We do, however, agree on ONE thing --- CHANGE must arrive in Washington and it will not be in the form of a Bush-McCain third term.

I also share a kindred respect for a number of other women (friends and professional peers) who are both quiet and vocal supporters of Hillary Clinton. This is the bedrock of her support. It troubles me somewhat that some of these friends will not vote for Barack (or even choose McCain) out of any possible disappointment over Sen. Clinton's candidacy. I could not see myself doing the same if the tables were turned. I will work hard to build some trust.

I am especially moved this week -- due to the voice of a lady named Rosa. Every evening, this petite and jovial lady from Nicaragua comes to our office buiding to conduct her janitorial duties in our suite. She always greets me with a smile and a greeting in Spanish. Recently, I had a Obama campaign sign out --- and she commented in Spanish --- "Va a ganar." (He is going to win). She expressed her thoughts about him and simply repeated, "Va a ganar." She only said that she just liked him and that he appeared to have a trusting "alma" - soul. The following week, Rosa approached me and contributed $5.00 for his campaign. She gave me her address and phone number and expressed that she wanted to help him. I was moved. I know nothing more about this friendly and hardworking Nicaraguan woman - but I am sure she is likely the bedrock of some family here in Miami (as a mother, grandmother, or sister).

Whatever I am presently doing in this campaign - fundraising or volunteering - I will do it for all the hardworking people who sacrifice their single dollar --- for the ounce of inspiration or hope that they see in themselves through this campaign - including Rosa. And for my Aunt and other girlfriends who may feel somewhat discontented or dejected on the prospects --- I hope we can heal the political side of our relationship. We have more in common through our familyand friendship to uphold together.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

The Power of One: Time to Organize Your Field

  • On March 9, 2007, a very small group of friends crammed into my office to discuss how we could support Senator Obama's candidacy. We had nothing in the room, but trust and hope in and for each other. We were and still are dreamers of both the possible and impossible.

    Besides, how can ONE person change the world, a country, a state, a county , a city, a neighborhood, a block, a home, a family, or themselves? It is easy. It is a simple choice to CHANGE your own apathy or cynicism. It is the decision to stand for something as opposed to against something. For the last fifteen months, the Obama campaign has evoked a spirit that has brought light where there were shadows, smiles where there were frowns, and a bounce where there was a slouch. I have heard voices from some where there was nothing but a whisper. This is why we will not only change the content of our politics, but also the attitude towards our politics. I have learned fully that it is a choice.

    Florida is about to be run over with this spirit. If you have not already asked yourself what you could do to contribute - here are some tips on how may begin to contribute to this tsunami of CHANGE (and some of these suggestions have been inspired by our friends working on the ground --- like the indomitable Orlando4Obama grassroots group):

    Begin organizing your family and sharing information with them;
  • Build your field of support in your immediate surroundings (your work associates, social groups, sports clubs, place of worship, etc.) - and develop a database for yourself and the campaign;
  • Build a team with specific roles and responsibilities (phone banking, fundraising, canvassing, database management, communications, voter registration logistics, etc.);
  • Provide your team with the tools and resources to educate and support each other;
  • Be persistent in asking people to do things; and then ask for help again;Praise those who volunteer --- they are after all, volunteers;
  • Give your volunteer team a sense of ownership;
  • Provide fun opportunities while volunteering (music, food, games, etc);
  • Keep asking again.

For additional resources - go to the Grassroots Organizing Action Center: http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/actioncenter

It is time to step out of your shell and to realize the power of ONE. This campaign was built from scratch - ONE brick at a time and every brick is a solid contribution - irrespective of size or material. Join US.

The campaign is presently dispatching Field Staff to assist us in organizing YOUR field. Be prepared to engage them (Miami – Alison Griffin, Broward/Palm Beach – Brian Brothman, Tampa – Adam Hoyer, and Orlando – Nick Buis). The cavalry is on the way.

Upcoming events or opportunities to volunteer or organize your field:

Voter Registration at Citizenship Oath Ceremony this Wednesday & Thursday, May 28 & 29, 9am & Noon. Meet at 1680 Michigan St., Miami Beach;

Phone Banks at campaign office or at your home (Call 305-442-7464);

Host a Primary Watch party for June 3 - to organize your field

We are almost there. HOPE. BELIEVE. CHANGE. Obamanos! Organizing cannot happen effectively without financial resources. Make your first contribution -- anything greater than $1 --- http://donate.barackobama.com/page/contribute/florida. To volunteer at any level - CALL Lynn Eisenberg at 305-442-7464. CHANGE begins with ONE.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Dear Clinton Supporters . . . the Real Superdelegates

Dear Clinton Supporters:


I am glad I have good blood pressure. I am sure we were all glued to the tele into the wee hours. As I watched the pundits psychoanalyze the exit polls and results, I wondered to myself whether they really understand us --- THE VOTER. What we feel . . . How we react . . . What really makes us angry . . .? But they speak for "black" voters or "white" voters as if we are inhuman without any ability to decipher the difference between the actual colors of black and white.

In my book, the real SUPERDELEGATES are the actual voters --- those of you who support Obama and those who support Clinton (I am not going to address McCain just yet). I don't think Senator Obama necessarily needs to win the support of the "elitist" elected delegates to secure and SUSTAIN the nomination. In reality, he needs to connect with and reassure supporters of Senator Clinton of a number of concerns or their own trepidations. You are the real super-delegates --- both in the short term and long term. You have been loyal and committed as I have been for all the right reasons. As far as I am concerned, Senator Clinton is qualified to be president on a number of accounts. And for this reason, you deserve to fight for her right to make her case. Without this process, Senator Obama would not have been able to make his own case. And I would not have been able to reciprocate my loyalty.

For the record, I personally would like to see all voters have their say and I would definitely like to see a fair resolution to the votes in Florida and Michigan. What a mess! Which "superdelegate" was responsible for such a mess? Many of you have voiced your frustrations to me that your vote should be counted. I agree. As superdelegate voters, we need to make sure that the Democratic Party remedies the rules to ensure that this does not occur ever again.

Now comes the most challenging period for the candidates, but more importantly, for us. Do we have the ability to debunk and demystify these invisible barriers of ethnicity, class, race, and religion to move towards a more perfect union? Each time our candidates win or lose, we share the same emotions and dreams. These emotions and dreams are not black or white, fortunate or poor. We cheer and sulk with the same demeanor. A white working class person is not more invisible than a black working class person (and vice versa). We are trying to choose a leader that should has to ability push beyond this threshold. This is what we are fighting for together.

We are the true SUPER-DELEGATES, the few, proud. The party rules simply have it twisted. Don't trick it!

Together, CHANGE will never occur without you. John McCain has no idea what is about to leave the train station.

Let's finish the voting as we have done for the last four months (including a fair resolution of MI and FL) --- then we can talk about what REAL CHANGE is all about. Until then, the race for the real SUPER-DELEGATES continues.

Upcoming Events:

Saturday, May 10th, 10am, National Voter Registration Drive - go to www.barackobama.com/voteforchange --- to find the nearest location to you to volunteer (Vote for Change Registration Event at Facebook as well). Join us at the American Legion, 6445 NE 7th Ave, Miami, FL at 10am. Call 305-442-7464 to VOLUNTEER

To continue support to the campaign - go to http://donate.barackobama.com/page/contribute/florida

Strength and Honor,

Monday, May 5, 2008

Are We One Nation Under God, Indivisible . . . ?

This weekend, I went to Mass alone at a visiting church to hear from the retiring Archbishop of Roman Catholic Church in Jamaica, the Most Rev. Lawrence Burke who was visiting to attend alumni events related to my former Jesuit high school in Jamaica. As I took my seat at this unfamiliar sanctuary, I sat next to two unknown parishioners. Let's just say that both parishioners were not of my same race. But one thing was for sure - we were there primarily to partake in the same spiritual tradition (In the Name of the Father - en el nombre del Padre, the Son - y del Hijo, and the Holy Spirit - y del Espiritu Santo) and to take communion together in the name of a mutual God.

In his homily, Bishop Burke spoke profoundly about the singular faith we shared with each other from all walks of life. As he expressed his struggles with chemo treatment for cancer, he called on the bond we shared to uplift him. Then, the congregation participated in my most favorite part of the Mass where we shared peace with each other. I turned to my congregational neighbors - we shared peace with each other - we became one under God.

Unfortunately, given the current shape of the electoral demographics, it is worrisome that we are moving away from the loyalty to our Pledge of Allegiance. The pundits in the media are now experts on what type of voters will swing in a particular way based on their race, class, or religious leaning. We have been distracted away from the primary purpose why we are called to a particular faith. I hope that we will uphold certain truths as self-evident --- and the bond that we have with each other ---- indivisible under our "respective" God with liberty and justice for all.

Let's see how our allegiance plays out tomorrow in NC and IA.

Upcoming Events:

PRIMARIES IN NORTH CAROLINA AND INDIANA - TOMORROW
Saturday, May 10th, 10am, National Voter Registration Drive - go to www.barackobama.com/voteforchange --- to find the nearest location to you to volunteer (Vote for Change Registration Event at Facebook as well). Call 305-442-7464 to VOLUNTEER
To continue support to the campaign - go to http://donate.barackobama.com/page/contribute/florida

Peace be with you,

Friday, May 2, 2008

Obama Yes

I am going to begin to turn up the volume of my Blogs to signal that we are approaching the finish line of selecting a leader. Here is a recent article from a family friend and one of the most profound voices in contemporary society. Period. Thank you for reading, listening, and acting on your voice.

Obama Yes
By Edwidge Danticat , May 2008 Issue
Edwidge Danticat is a Haitian-American writer living in Miami. Her most recent book, “Brother, I’m Dying,” won the National Book Critics Circle Award for autobiography.
http://www.progressive.org/mag_danticat0508

Because, as you may have possibly heard, the Democratic Presidential candidates did not campaign in Miami, where I live, and they, as of now, are not having a revote here, I am one of a handful of people with an Obama ’08 bumper sticker glued to the back of my car. In a city filled with exotic SUVs and flashier automobiles, my small Toyota Echo inspires conversation wherever I go. Though I have published a few books, I am not used to so much attention. In addition to the occasional supportive honking and thumbs-ups, these are the five most frequent inquiries to my bumper sticker and my now, oft-repeated responses to them.

Q: Wherever did you get it?

A: It was smuggled across state lines.

This is true. My bumper sticker came to me via a friend who’d been telling my husband and me to prepare to campaign for Obama soon after the Senator spoke at the Democratic National Convention four years ago. The day Barack Obama declared his actual candidacy and the stickers were printed, my friend got a bunch of them sent from the Obama headquarters in Chicago and distributed them to a few of us down here in Miami. Who knew my bumper sticker would be campaigning harder than I would?

Q: Did you know that his middle name is Hussein?

A: Quick, what’s your middle name?

Usually, it’s something embarrassing that the person does not want to share with a total stranger. Those who do own up to their own middle names eventually admit that their parents could not be expected to be seers and predict that it might one day become unpopular. I then add that my middle name is Rosa, and then say, “Look, I’m not exactly blooming in Spanish, am I?”

Q: We’ll have a race war if he wins.

A: Does that mean we can look forward to a gender war if Hillary Clinton turns out to be the nominee and the President of the United States?

No one’s ever really sure what to say to that one, even though one teenage girl fidgeting at her mother’s side in the supermarket parking lot did say, “A gender war might be kind of cool.”

Q: He’s all talk and no substance.

A: Look at what the “substance” that people voted for the last two times got us into: A disastrous war. A looming recession, if it isn’t already here. And we got mispronounced words on top of it.

“Oh the horror!” as Joseph Conrad might say.

Actually one woman in a mall parking lot turned her nose up at me and pointing at my bumper sticker actually shouted, “The horror!”

Q: He will be killed if elected.

A: I can’t be glib about this one because the people who say it to me are always so earnest. Often they are older men and women, many of whom have lived through the civil rights era and its many assassinations. “There are ‘Who Killed Obama?’ sweatshirts being sold in one shop in Manhattan,” one woman tells me. We have to hope, I say, that we live in a truly different age, where these other deaths paved the way for this dream to live.

All know is that whether or not Senator Obama captures the Democratic nomination, my sticker is here to stay. I am supporting him because this country desperately needs a change of leadership and that change needs to be ground-breaking. We need to be stirred out of our current apathy in a way that our neighbors’ foreclosures and a nearly $4 gallon of gas still hasn’t managed to.

I am supporting him because the prospect of my daughter’s grandchildren having to show up for that hundredth year in Iraq terrifies me. At least Obama had the sense to oppose the war even when doing so risked getting painted by the unpatriotic brush.

I am supporting him because, frankly, the win-at-all-cost mentality of the other side disgusts me. I am a feminist who is bothered by the double-entendre of the 3 a.m. phone call, which leaves hanging in the air the not so subliminal suggestion that one has a more experienced spouse who might also answer in the dead of night should terrorists attack. To use fear-mongering to win a primary suggests to me that it might erode a Presidency, and we have had enough of that.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Dear Uncle J

Dear Uncle J:

Blessings to you. I hope God will continue to uplift your spirit as you do his work. I always wondered what you were thinking and feeling in the weeks following the looping soundbites of your sermons. You must have been and probably are still upset or troubled. It is clear that most people are unable to take the time to listen to the entire sermons and decide for themselves the full body of your work and that of your church and denomination. That is our bad, especially the media.

It is also clear to me that we are one screwed up family (poor v. fortunate, black v. white, man v. woman, believers v. non-believers, red states v. blue states). We say one thing and do another. We worship the same God in different places on Saturday and Sunday. We talk past each other. We glorify everything else but our God. We identify with every other human quality, except the one that matters the most, the relationship with a common God. How did we end up this way, Uncle J?

Certainly, Uncle J, you have to do what you do as a pastor, but I wonder what do you expect from us as you stand up for yourself and the (our) "black" church? Are you going to just leave us out there like that? Uncle J, honestly I find myself uplifted by the clarity of your pastoral sense of purpose and troubled by shallowness of our society to embrace the underlying issues of your comments. Likewise, Uncle J, it is difficult for me to fully identify or connect with to some of your comments or conclusions (an AIDS conspiracy? Is that metaphorical?). But, now that we have placed these on our dinner table, who will pass the salt and pepper?

America has not acheived its full global purpose because it has failed to directly address issues of race and class. For this reason, the candidacy of Senator Barack Obama takes on a higher metaphysical meaning. Who is better prepared to call the country together to address the economic hardships, access to healthcare, improvement of our education system, the list goes on. Let's stay focused on the leadership needed to not only solve our core daily challenges, but also to amend and reconcile the soul of America. The question is, Uncle J, do we have the courage to own up to the core values of America and to ourselves?

I recognize that you will continue to be present for a number of upcoming dinners and get-togethers at home. Uncle J, you are a part of us, whether we celebrate you or cringe on the bite of your words. Now that we have heard from you, Uncle J, in all forums of the house, would you please allow us to get back to the order of finishing our dinner? I have enough on my plate (keeping my business afloat, prescriptions for my wife, a Mom without employment and a rebellious diabetic, a veteran brother, living in the poorest city in the nation . . . ). You get the picture.

We promise to own up to the root of our family pain. I personally promise. May God be with you and the family.

Until the next,

Marlon

Sunday, April 20, 2008

The World at Crossroads

On a recent trip to St. Maarten, I confirmed once again that the U.S. presidential elections are a global phenomenon. Our gracious hotel hostess checked us in, while trying to steal some minutes to read her copy of Senator Barack Obama's best-selling novel, "The Audacity of Hope". The most extraordinary thing was that she is a U.S. citizen from the South Pacific residing in St. Maarten. I gave her a Barack Obama wristband and she screamed in delight.

She said that she could not wait any longer to cast her vote. She gushed in her perception of the importance of the election and the viability of Obama's candidacy. She noted that the world is watching every moment and every word.

We hold a huge responsibility to the world. Every vote counts - local or international.