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Kids Cover Dems '04Published: July 26, 2004
Pretty in Pink She’s got no political connections, that’s for sure. Kristin Turner of Boston won the convention committee’s “Gavel In the Future” essay contest, beating out more than 400 other kids for the honor. In a hotel hallway jammed with delegates and reporters, Kristin didn’t warm up to the media spotlight, offering short answers to just a few questions. She was wearing a homemade pink t-shirt with “Krissy” written all over the front. A copy of her 16-sentence essay was taped to her back. “I’m not old enough to vote yet, but I am old enough to form opinions about what I see,” she wrote in her essay. “I’m not too young to share my passion for a cause. . . I’m not too young to be part of the political process. I am old enough to know my heart and to follow it.” Asked why she thought she won the contest, which was judged by the public casting votes on a website, she said it wasn’t just the message that pushed her over the top. “I had a lot of people from my family and friends vote for me.” Our first report from the Children’s PressLine kids came in on Monday, July 26. Crashing the Party Anyway, upon arrival, we found out that nobody really knew that we were “too young.” A volunteer let us wait inside the theater. A few moments later very nice security guard got us into the party. He said, “Hey, how are you doing?” instead of, “Hey, what are you doing here?” Vanishing Lt. Governor Tough Life of a Delegate’s Kid The chaperones were yelling at five-year-olds, kindergartners. “Put your hands at your side! Keep yours eyes straight.” They had no patience, treating the children like non-intelligent aliens. Conveniently, they had nothing planned to occupy 100 kids for five hours. To fill up the time, we tried interviewing some white-shirted kids of delegates. One didn’t know who the president is. Another one didn’t know what the word “delegate” meant. After the first few hours, the kids got a little feisty. Shoes were thrown off the balcony. Security was called in. “Let me speak to the kid who threw the shoe,” we heard one of the armed men say. During a brief, yet panicky, separation from the cameraman and field producer, a nearby woman was no help. We said we were reporters and she asked for ages. She said, “Okay, sweetheart,” and walked away and never came back. Bobble Heads The delegate, Barbara Meyer is from Manhattan, Kansas. A skinny woman with long, blond hair, Meyer defected from the Republican Party on September 11, 2001. Where Me At? All around town, Bush-bashing became major convention sport. Some delegates wore buttons that declared: “Liberate Texas Next. They’ve Got Oil, too.” Passionate Democrats called Bush “the real terrorist.” And feminist icon Gloria Steinem got a big laugh at a pro-choice reception, when, complaining about Bush’s environmental policy and his opposition to stem cell research, she declared: “Bush causes cancer.” There was so much political talk at the convention that at least one delegate seemed to forgot where she was. Walking out of a boisterous party, she chatted on her cell phone, saying: “I’m here at this convention in Washington.” Gabe Decker-Lee, 10; Laurence James, 13; Natasha Kirtchuk, 12; Marie Ponsot, 11; Nily Rozic, 18 and Tarissa Whitely, 15 are Children’s PresssLine’s Democratic National Convention News Team.
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