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Will there be a bounce? Takeaways from the Democratic convention

Democrats left energized after a speech where Harris comparedher own working-class upbringing as the daughter of immigrants with an opponent, Donald Trump, she characterized as an egomaniac friend to billionaires.

The 3 p's from Kamala Harris speech: patriotism, personality, priorities

Harris, smiling with hands clasped on stage
Vice-President Kamala Harris seen wrapping up the four-day Democratic convention in Chicago with her presidential nomination acceptance speech Thursday. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

Kamala Harris accepted the Democratic presidential nomination in a speech Thursday infused with patriotism, presenting herself, nother opponent, as embodying their nation's besttraditions.

The speech broke little policy ground, hewing to the Democratic Party's traditional centre-left lane: supporting NATO allies, expanding social programs, abortion access, and a middle-ground approach to border policy, migration and the Middle East.

It went heavy, however, on personality.

Its key objective: strikea contrast in values with Donald Trump.She comparedher own working-class upbringing as the daughter of immigrants with an opponent she characterized as an egomaniac friend to billionaires.

It was wrapped in red, white and blue, in a convention that made a conscious effort to claim patrioticbona fides for Democrats, who repeatedly cheered, "U-S-A!"It appeared clearly targeted at swing voters uneasy with Trump, her opponent, closing a convention that featured numerous Republican speakers.

"On behalf of everyone whose story could only be written in the greatest nation on Earth," Harris said, "I accept your nomination for president of the United States of America."

She compared herownlife path, as a prosecutor,to Trump's: "My entire career, I have only had one client, the people," she said. Trump is running, she added,to servethe only client hehas ever had: "Himself."

Here are takeaways from the four-day affair that kicks off the general-election campaign, which will see Americans elect a president Nov. 5.

Woman holding a U.S. flag and a Kamala Harris sign
Holding a U.S. flag and a Kamala Harris sign, Deirdre Harper of Chicago said she was leaving the convention Thursday feeling optimistic. (Jenna Benchetrit/CBC News)

Enthusiasm surge

It was already clear entering the convention that the switch atop the ticket had had a galvanizing effect. And it's not just because of a bump in the polls. There's a staggering fundraising surge: Harris raked in more donations in her first 10 days as a candidate than Joe Biden did in 15 months.

One convention-goer, Letitia Flowers, said she wasn't even going to vote for Biden, frustrated over his Gaza policy. Now? "I'm amped up," she told CBC News.

She plans to knock on doors for Harris and is willing to give her time to define her own Mideast policy. Leaving the convention Thursday,Deirdre Harper of Chicago said:"I am optimistically excited. She brings joy."

After speeches by Barack and Michelle Obama on Tuesday night, one young man exiting the venue was shouting excitedly into his phone that other young people must get involved. That's what a party wants out of a convention.

A person gestures while speaking into a microphone at a lectern.
Trump came up at the convention often. Quite frequently, as the butt of a joke. (Julia Nikhinson/The Associated Press)

Trump one part mockery, one partoutrage

Yes, Democrats still describe Trump as a threat to democracy, as Biden habitually did. There were searing videos about the assault on the U.S. Capitol on Jan.6, 2021.

The campaign, however, is now targeting him more often by prosaic means: mockery. To tease him, make him seem small, petty, self-obsessed. It was a recurring theme.

From Barack Obama ridiculing his obsession with crowd sizes, while making mischievous hand gesturesalluding to Trump's manhood; to Bill Clinton describing empathy as a key presidential quality, and calling the election a choice between"We, the people," and "Me, myself and I." Don't count the lies in a Trump speech, Clinton said: "Count the I's."

The audience at the convention's final nightalso heard from, and about, people victimized by Trump.

There were young Black men he falsely accused of a brutal 1989 rape, urged their execution, then never apologized. There was a fraud settlement involving Trump University. "Donald Trump ripped off his biggest fans," said Tristian Snell, a New York prosecutor on the Trump University case. "Kamala Harris fought scammers like him."

Harris tried pulling these themes together in her acceptance speech. "In many ways, Donald Trump is an unserious man," she said. "But the consequences of putting Donald Trump back in the White House are extremely serious."

WATCH |Harris slams Trump on abortion, says Republicans are 'out of their minds':

Harris slams Trump on abortion, says Republicans are 'out of their minds'

10 days ago
Duration 3:15
Kamala Harris, speaking as she accepted the Democratic presidential nomination said, 'we trust women' and pledged to sign a bill if passed by Congress that would 'restore reproductive freedom' in the U.S.

A personal intro to Harris

As a late entrant into this race, Harris isn't as well-known as some past presidential candidates. Her campaign worked to fill in the blanks of her bio the parts they hope will stick with voters.

The convention heard about her mom, an Indian-American cancer researcher; her close relationship with her stepchildren; and from friends and relatives who described her as kind, smart, and tough.

While attending high school in Montreal, she learned a friend was being abused by her stepfather and invited her to live with her family. Harris cites this as an impetus for becoming a prosecutor.

Of note: She airbrushed her life outside the U.S. fromthe speech. Harris referred to having lived in a working-class area of California, Wisconsin, Illinois, and, "wherever our parents' jobs took us," in a glancing reference to those six years in Montreal.

As California's attorney general, she played hardball with big banks and scored a much higher-than-planned payout for victims of a foreclosure scam.

Her husband, Doug Emhoff, described a first nervous phone call to her when a mutual acquaintance set them up. He left an awkward voicemail and Harris saved it. "She makes me listen to it on every anniversary," Emhoff said.

By coincidence, Thursday, the night she accepted the nomination, was their 10th anniversary.

Breaking down where Kamala Harris stands on key issues

11 days ago
Duration 1:35
What do we know where Kamala Harris stands on key issues? CBCs Alex Panetta breaks it down from the Democratic National Convention.

Policy? It's a work in progress

The goal here was a feel-good election rally, not a policy forum to discussideal marginal tax rates. Harris has released only bits of her platform. She promises more in the coming weeks.

Her program so far focuses on lowering living costs in housing, groceries, and medicine. She also wants to raise taxes for companies and the wealthy.

The details remain skimpy. She'll be pressed for details on Sept. 10, when she debates Trump.

She'll have a chance to press him for clarity,because he's been vague as well like, for example how he would implement his plan for a 10 per cent global minimum tariff. His platform also calls for military strikes against drug cartels and a mass-deportation of undocumented migrants, with few specifics.

Little girls on stage
Harris's great-nieces, Amara and Leela, standing with actress Kerry Washington, led a crowd chant of the candidate's name, as they explained how to pronounce it: "Comma-la". (Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters)

Chant for Israeli hostages; no stage time for Palestinians

One of the more moving moments involved the parents Hersh Goldberg-Polin, an American-Israeli hostage kidnapped along with around 250 others when Hamas militants attacked Israel last Oct. 7.

His mother began weeping as the crowd began chanting, "Bring them home," referring to the 105 hostages still in Gaza. She later revealed that she was surprised, and overwhelmed, by the reaction.

The party is deeply divided over Palestinian-Israeli issues. Just a day before, protesters disrupted a meeting of Orthodox Jews at the convention.

A refusal to allow any pro-Palestinian speeches prompted protests: some delegates, including members of Congress, staged a sit-in. A Muslim women's group for Harris announced it was disbanding.

A group of protest delegates was given space for a first-ever convention gathering on Palestinian issues, where they discussed the humancatastrophe in Gaza. But they failed in repeated efforts to getspeaking time for Ruwa Romman, a Palestinian American member of the Georgia legislature who wrote a speech urging a ceasefire.

"I've had some pretty crushing days, but to be honest today took the cake," she tweetedWednesday, saying she couldn't understand why the convention made time for several Republican speakers but not her.

These delegates want a ceasefire, an arms embargo on Israel, and they're demanding actions from Harris. When it comes to the Middle East, this party's bitter divisions haven't disappeared.

In her speech, Harris made clear she would not abandonIsrael, promising to always help it defend itself. In the next breath, she added that Palestinians deserve dignity, security and self-determination.

She and President Joe Biden, she said, are working for a ceasefire dealthat achieves all those things.

WATCH |Harris urges hostage deal, ceasefire between Israel and Hamas:

'Now is the time' for hostage deal, ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, Harris says

10 days ago
Duration 1:46
Kamala Harris, speaking at the Democratic National Convention, said she is working alongside President Joe Biden to 'end this war such that Israel is secure, the hostages are released, the suffering in Gaza ends and the Palestinian people can realize their right to dignity, security, freedom and self-determination.'

Still, this wasn't 1968

The potential for history repeating itself was obvious.The last time a sitting president Lyndon Johnson cancelled a re-election campaign, he was also replaced by his vice-president, Hubert Humphrey. The convention was also in Chicago, and the party was also divided over a foreign war.

In the streets, protesters were beaten by police; in the hall there was chaos. The convention was a disaster, and the party was electorally doomed.

"[This was] nothing like the protests in '68," said Peter Hancon, 81, a delegate who was in Chicago for both conventions. He'd joined the National Guard to avoid being drafted to Vietnam, and his unit was in Chicago back then.

This time, he said, there's a progressive mayor who supports the protesters; the party is more united; and the war in question involves fewer Americans directly.

Looking for a bounce

This election remains a tossup. Usually, conventions give parties a bump in the polls of several percentage points. Democrats will desperately be looking for one. Because the absence of a bounce would be a troubling sign.

"This is going to be so close," Harris campaign manager Jen O'Malley Dillon said during a forum at the convention, hosted by Politico and CNN. "It is a margin of error race."

She noted that Trump continues to have better poll numbers than in his past two elections when he won in 2016, and almost won in 2020. An early good sign for Democrats is their convention's TV viewershipratings were clearly higherthan Republicans' last month.

The bad news? They were still lower than past conventions, and only a small fraction of Americans watched on TV. Convention clips will continue to run in social media.

Meanwhile, attention will turn to Robert F. Kennedy on Friday, amid speculation the third-party candidate will exit the race.

WATCH | Kamala Harris's speech to the Democratic National Convention:

Kamala Harris's full speech to the Democratic National Convention

11 days ago
Duration 37:39
In a passionate keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention, Kamala Harris accepted her partys presidential nomination, promising to represent all Americans while highlighting her past experiences and detailing some political priorities.

With files from Idil Mussa and Jenna Benchetrit