MY jealousy of the party at the Troyeville Hotel would have known no end if it wasn't for New York exploding with relief and joy on Tuesday night. Around the corner from our house is a spectacular bar, called Union Hall, and everybody who had watched the election returns there spilled onto the street after Obama's acceptance speech. The neighbourhood caught on in a flash, and a crowd of about a thousand people, dogs, children, the inevitable man with an aviary on his shoulder, firemen, the waste-removal workers and the police gathered to hang from lamp posts, stand on one another's shoulders and form prayer circles to shout: "Yes, we can!" and "USA! USA!" Graeme Simpson and I met each other for a cigarette at the corner to watch, and the rather wonderful Park Slope police simply parked their cars across the street to block off traffic. There was no way they were going to try to break up the party. Here is a selection of Mikhael Subotzky's pics from the Troyeville. Looking at them I have to believe all those stories that are doing the rounds here about women at the Democratic National Convention trying to rip Obama's shirt from his pants.
THE Daily Beast relays a Fox News report that says McCain's Hail Mary thought Africa was a country, not a continent consisting of quite a number of states. Here's a clip about that gem of knowledge; it also holds out the promise of many more stories to come that will demonstrate the depth of her ignorance.
I'VE followed Donna Brazil's contributions to CNN throughout this year, and she's become about my most favourite person on TV (she's a Democratic Party strategist, and ran Al Gore's campaign in 2000). CNN just showed a clip of her talking about what it meant to her to vote this morning; what it meant to realise that what her grandparents told her about being anything in America was actually true. For me that's one of the best things about having been able to watch this election campaign: how it energised people who have felt themselves politically marginalised for so many decades. That really is what real democracy is about, I think.
THE GOP Trust is running wall-to-wall ads about Obama's association with Jeremiah Wright on CNN -- that with only about an hour and a half to go before the polls on the east coast start closing. But there's the after-work voters he can still catch, I suppose. And the battleground states start closing from 7pm ET: at 7.30, North Carolina closes; at 8, Pennsylvania; at 9, Colarado; at 10, Iowa (can Obama do it again?).
CNN says the first exit polls will be out in an hour. The New York Times said this morning:
"In 2004, early exit poll data suggested that Mr. Kerry was ahead began circulating within newsrooms — and leaking out on Web sites, including Slate’s — early in the afternoon on Election Day. This year, the consortium of six news organizations gathering the exit poll data — NBC, ABC, CBS, Fox, CNN and The Associated Press — have agreed to keep the information under quarantine until 5 p.m.
"Representatives of those news organizations will begin analyzing that information at a secret location beginning in late morning, but will have to surrender all electronic devices at the door; even restroom visits will be supervised. There were already signs on Monday that the additional security was paying off.
"'We won’t call off exit polls,' Mr. Plotz said, 'in part because we don’t expect to get them leaked to us much before the first results.'"
DEBRA is working at home (and keeping an eye on the TV). BEA has gone to bed, and is getting up at 5. JACKIE and ANTONY are blogging from The Times, but may have gone to get sushi. MIRIAM is besides herself with anxiety at Rietpan. CHIPPY is at Hogsback without CNN (in a way that is a state of bliss). JEREMY wants to know what to wear to the party at the Troyeville Hotel tomorrow night. PROSPERO says he won't make the party because he'll be too busy comforting Sarah Palin (which is a comforting thought). JANINE should be home from Cape Town by now, and may be watching at JANN's. Debra's mother and mine have strict prayer instructions.
HERE'S a YouTube video of the Madonna concert Jonny, Dianne Hubbard and her daughter, Kelsey, and I went to at Madison Square Garden at the beginning of October. Some choice extracts: "You guys have come to my party! "Thank you for coming to my party! "You know who's not invited to my party? "Sarah Fucking Palin! "She's not invited to this show! "Sarah Palin has to go! "Now get the bitch out of here, alright. Nothing personal. She's freaking me out."
(Give it a couple of seconds; the image gets better and the sound's fine.)
VOTER turnout has the TV anchors very excited, and there's a chance that this could be the best year since 1908, when the turnout was something like more than 66%. They're putting it down to person-to-person contact (the way it would have been a hundred years ago) -- that is, Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, and, I suppose, all those hundreds of thousands of volunteers who have been hitting the pavements all over America. There's a record turnout in Los Angeles; in one county in Ohio the turnout is 80%; 4,4 million people voted early in Florida, and inside the polling stations there it's humming right now.