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Inside Politics

Daily Blog Roundup: Wednesday, September 1, 2004

By David L. Sifry
Special to CNN.com

Editor's Note: David L. Sifry is the CEO and founder of Technorati, a Web-based company that tracks weblogs, or personal journals, on the Internet.

SPECIAL REPORT
YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS
America Votes 2004

NEW YORK (CNN) -- The heat turned up in Manhattan last night, as speeches by Zell Miller and Dick Cheney provided red meat to party faithful, and protests outside the convention hall increased in intensity and number.

After-hour parties aboundedexternal link, but behind the scenes, the effect of money in politics only got rarely reportedexternal link. Here's more from the floor.

Reactions to Miller: The angriest speechexternal link of the convention, seeminglyexternal link came from Zell Miller, as Glenn Reynoldsexternal link notesexternal link, "It's funny that the purest voice of Jacksonian America at this Republican convention -- in fact, at either convention -- comes from a Democrat.". Begging to Differ wrote, "Zell Miller was more effective tonight than any Republican could have been. John Kerry will have to answer, if he can."

Reactions to Cheney: The Technorati Politics Attention Index?external link saw heavy blogging from both the left and right regarding Vice President Dick Cheney's speech tonight. Conservatives like Sister Toldjahexternal link remarked, "A SOLID performance!". Ann Althouseexternal link wrote, ""He lays it out. And you can take it or leave it. He's not doing the twist. He's Dick Cheney." Liberals felt differently. Josh Marshallexternal link described a common liberal perspectiveexternal link: "My first thought was, bold words for a man whose office is the subject of an on-going criminal inquiry. But apparently that's not the subject of polite conversation."

Arnold gets fact-checked: The liberal blogosphere has been buzzingexternal link about Arnold Schwartenegger's speech Tuesday night. Numerous bloggers pointed out that while Arnoldexternal link hasexternal link spokenexternal link of Nixon debating Humphrey in 1968, the debate never happened.

Protest Vignettes: Outside of the convention, New York is filled with protests, from big, to small, to personal. Inside the convention hall, AIDS demonstrators disruptedexternal link a Republican youth gathering on the floor, unveilingexternal link an anti-Bush sign and disrupting a speech by Andrew Card. Andrew Sullivanexternal link reports on a particularly rudeexternal link protester, while Peter Northrup wroteexternal link "of a self-proclaimed liberal [that] was spending her day, not protesting with angry slogans, but sitting in front of an empty chair and a sign that invited conservatives to sit down and talk with her about the future of the country." Ratherbiased has pictures of a protester being removedexternal link during Cheney's speech.

Blogging a talk-show appearance: Michelle Malkinexternal link blogs her side of the storyexternal link after appearing on MSNBC's Hardball. First-hand accounts like this are shifting the fulcrum away from show hosts and producers who often attempt to unfairly create controversy. Malkin's account, while completely subjective, allows her to get her side of the story out to the world, just as the FCC's Michael Powellexternal link or Mark Cubanexternal link, the owner of the Dallas Mavericks, use their blogs to speak to the world in a timely, unedited fashion.


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