‘A constructive convention’
Other Tri-State Democrats told WHYY News that they saw the convention as a successful introduction of their nominees, Harris and vice presidential nominee Tim Walz.
“This has been a wonderful and constructive convention,” said Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware.
Coons, who worked for then-Sen. Biden as an intern and served as co-chair of the Biden presidential campaign until he dropped out last month, had advocated for the president to stay in the race, and his speech to the DNC Wednesday focused on the legacy of his friend and mentor.
Coons, who had attended convention breakfasts with the Pennsylvania and Delaware delegations, now says that everyone is fully committed to Harris.
“If there’s any place in the country where there might be some folks still harboring some hard feelings about this transition, it would be there,” he said. “But what I heard was unanimous enthusiasm for the Harris-Walz ticket.”
U.S. Rep Madeleine Dean — who represents Pennsylvania’s 4th Congressional District, which includes Montgomery and Berks counties — shared Coons’ view that DNC attendees were enthusiastic.
“The feeling on the floor, anywhere you go in the arena, it is joyful, jubilant, excited, exhilarating,” she told WHYY News. “I don’t know all the superlatives to tell you. And it’s so bright. That’s what I keep looking at. People are beaming, smiling in ways that we haven’t had the opportunity to smile for a few years in this way.”
Dean added that she has also seen a shift in her district since Harris moved up to the top of the ticket. She said that the new campaign is running on a winning message of “joy.”
“I think joy is a powerful cocktail, and we’re going to ride it and work hard to make sure that the future looks joyful, not dark,” she said.
U.S. Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon — who represents Pennsylvania’s 5th Congressional District, which includes Delaware County and parts of Chester County and Montgomery County — echoed her colleague and added that this year is different from 2016, when Hillary Clinton became the first woman to be nominated by a major party.
“Because the stakes have become so much clearer, we have the contrast of having had four years of a Trump presidency, the conspiracy theories, the lies, the election denialism,” she said. “We understand the assignment, and I think is the word going around here that everybody needs to turn out. We need to turn out in overwhelming numbers because this idea of election denialism is particularly strong in Pennsylvania among Trump supporters.”