Pelosi addresses California delegation at convention
Nancy Pelosi addressing the California delegation on Monday, August 25, 2008.
CHRISTOPHER CHUNG / PDPublished: Tuesday, August 26, 2008 at 3:40 a.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, August 26, 2008 at 11:17 a.m.
Democrats opened their national convention in Denver on Monday, seeking unity and urging Hillary Clinton supporters to rally behind the Barack Obama-Joe Biden ticket.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco sounded the call for a unified party at a breakfast for the 441-member California delegation, including superdelegate Rachel Binah of Little River in Mendocino County.
"There are some people who don't seem to understand that we really need to move on," said Binah, a Democratic National Committee member attending her sixth consecutive convention.
"Their feelings are hurt, and they just don't seem to see the bigger picture," said Binah, who endorsed Clinton but switched to Obama in early June.
Pelosi's message Monday was "we have to be unified. The sooner the better," Binah said.
At a news conference, Pelosi, also chairwoman of the convention, said, "The nomination is decided, we have a vice president, we're going to work together and go forward."
Pelosi also said Democrats "had not yet achieved the complete reconciliation that we need."
Rep. Lynn Woolsey of Petaluma said she's been at conventions that involved some division within Democratic ranks.
"This is a democracy," she said. "People have different views."
But Democrats will emerge united, Woolsey said in a phone interview. "I totally believe it will work itself out," she said.
Clinton, a New York senator, attended the New York delegation breakfast Monday and sought to assure skeptics that the party's divisions would heal.
"We are, after all, Democrats, so it may take . . . awhile," she said, drawing out her words for comic effect. "We are not the fall-in-line party. But make no mistake: We are united."
Later this week, Clinton is due to release the delegates she won in the primaries and caucuses and encourage them to support her former rival.
A CNN/Opinion Research poll of registered Democrats conducted over the weekend found 59 percent want Obama as the party's nominee and 37 percent favor Clinton.
Binah, who rose in Democratic Party circles as a vocal opponent of offshore oil drilling, said she received personal assurances from Pelosi on that issue at a Sunday night reception.
"She said she would do everything in her power to protect the (California) coast from offshore oil development," Binah said.
Pelosi, a longtime foe of offshore drilling, said Sunday that drilling in some federal waters could be packaged in an energy bill that also would require royalty payments on oil profits to fund the development of renewable energy resources.
Binah said she was impressed by the Sunday reception, hosted by Phil Angelides, former California treasurer, who is chairman of the Apollo Alliance. The San Francisco-based coalition of labor, business and environmental leaders promotes alternative energy to create jobs and benefit the Earth.
"They want us to do it (develop alternative energy) really quickly," Binah said.
The Denver convention is a model of environmentalism, Binah said, with recycling stations dotting the hotels and meeting venues.
In the media center Monday morning, Binah spotted a volunteer standing by the recycling area to show people how to use it.
"They're not all from California," Binah quipped.
This story includes information from the Associated Press. You can reach Staff Writer Guy Kovner at 521-5457 or guy.kovner@pressdemocrat.com.
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