CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Democrats kicked off their national convention here on Labor Day with a downtown street fair delivering a soft-rock version of the delirious pop culture spirit that infused President Obama's historic run for the presidency four years ago.
But reviving the spirit of Denver might be a tall order. Still hoping to party like it's 2008, with singer-songwriter James Taylor headlining the main stage, Obama partisans came to Charlotte yearning to recapture the magic of a relatively untested senator from Illinois with a "funny name" who inspired voters with a message of hope. "I still have the fire in my heart," said retired Forest Service firefighter Denny FitzPatrick, a delegate from Grand Marais, Minn. "There's still so much change that has to happen." But the focus, he added, "has to be on Obama, not the drama."
Meg Litts, a delegate from Onamia and chair of the Mille Lacs County DFL, said the feeling is different the second time around. "I think it's a different kind of excitement," she said. "It is not about something new and different, but it is an excitement about moving forward."
Jessica Rohlaff, a delegate from Willmar who became involved in politics because of Obama, said she was worried that the 2008 excitement was a singular moment in history and the inspiration would fade over time. But she was encouraged anew when she saw all the young Minnesotans vying to attend the national convention. "It's still alive. It's still out there," she said.
Still, amid the jubilation of the daylong CarolinaFest 2012, there was reason to believe that times have changed. A frustratingly slow recovery is turning the race into a referendum on the economy and Obama's leadership.
Republicans believe that the momentum has swung back to their side, as some independent voters disenchanted with the pace of change and the combative tone in Washington have decided that Obama didn't live up to the promise of will.i.am's campaign anthem, "Yes We Can."
'Not his fault'
As the convention begins, polls show that slightly more people disapprove than approve of the job Obama is doing. For that, Minnesota delegates tend to blame Republican intransigence in Congress.