The NPR Network will be reporting live from Chicago throughout the week bringing you the latest on the Democratic National Convention.
Atlanta’s own award-winning rapper Lil Jon helped spice up the DNC roll call by introducing Georgia’s delegation.
Performing “Turn Down for What” and “Get Low,” the Peach State native had one of the flashier entries in the ceremonial roll call.
Lil Jon headlined the Georgia Democrats’ Monday night kickoff, themed “Window to the Walz” at a Chicago nightclub.
Last night in true “Atlanta influences everything” fashion, the Democratic Party of Georgia’s very popular afterparty — themed “Window to the Walz” — featured a @LilJon DJ set until the wee morning hours. #gapol pic.twitter.com/fdlNvLIEAl
— stephen fowler (@stphnfwlr) August 20, 2024
“Mr. Secretary, the South got something to say,” Rep. Nikema Williams, Democratic Party of Georgia chairwoman said. “Y’all, when we send Kamala Harris to the White House, she’ll fight for our freedom to vote, our reproductive freedom and our freedom to thrive in the spirit of ‘good trouble,’ Georgia cast 123 votes for the next president.”
Delegates to the Democratic National Convention held a ceremonial — and celebratory — roll call vote to mark what they’d already made official earlier this month with a virtual vote: Vice President Kamala Harris’ selection as the party’s presidential nominee.
The unconventional roll call was facilitated by a DJ, with a unique songs playing as the call moved from state to state: “Sweet Home Alabama” by Lynyrd Skynyrd for Alabama, for example. Florida’s song was “Won’t Back Down” by Tom Petty (possibly a snarky reference to the Never Back Down, Inc., super PAC, set up to encourage Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’ unsuccessful presidential candidacy?).
Loud cheers went up from the convention crowd as the voting moved from state to state. Participants announced their support for Harris and Walz, and touted their individual states’ accomplishments, including the Hawaii delegation, which noted its status as the birthplace of former President Obama, and Illinois, where Obama won the first victory of his presidential campaign in the 2008 caucuses.