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Friday Linkage: Cheers and Challenges

Not going to Denver, but wishing there was some way you could be more involved in the Democratic convention? The DNC is holding 1,300 Party Platform meetings in all 50 states between July 18 to 27th (nitty-gritty here). A broad range of programs, including "town hall-style meetings, radio call-ins, and web chats" have already been scheduled. The Obama campaign has a 'plug-in-your-zipcode' tool identifying local meetings. As National Platform Director Michael Yaki says, "The renewal of America begins with listening to the hopes, fears, and dreams of the American people.."

As Senator Obama prepares for his trip abroad, Elizabeth Bumiller of The New York Times has a report on his large, ok huge, team of foreign policy advisors, organized into issue areas and briefing him via email on a daily basis.

Chris Bowers' latest Open Left forecast sees a 5-6 seat pick-up for Dems in the Senate. Perceptive reader comments on individual races follow his post.

Hotline's Matthew Gottlieb says the latest St. Louis Post-Dispatch/KMOV-TV poll data indicates that Missouri "has become a solid Obama state," which is good news, considering the Republicans never win the white house without it. As a result Gottlieb sees Obama's Electoral College lead upgraded to 292-234 (270 wins).

Lest we wallow in unbridled optimism, former Dukakis campaign director Susan Estrich writes in her Real Clear Politics post that her candidate was 20 points ahead of Bush I in mid-July '88, and still lost. Despite abundant Democratic advantages this cycle, Estrich argues that Dems must now put aside internecine bickering: "it's time to stop whining and start working. Otherwise, it will be hello President McCain."

E.J. Dionne, Jr. reviews Al Gore's buzz-generating speech on energy independence at Constitution Hall, which may begin the "compelling narrative" on the topic Democracy Corps says Dems need.

Michael Sean Winters has an interesting TNR article advising Obama how to win Catholic voters, who are 23 percent of the electorate and even more influential in swing states, like PA, NV, NH and WI. Winters, author of "Left at the Altar: How the Democrats Lost the Catholics and How the Catholics Can Save the Democrats," says "Catholics are ripe for Obama to pick if he can master the distinctive ways they view economic issues. Unlike the gloom-and-doom preaching of Calvin's heirs, Catholicism has a more positive take on the possibilities of human culture and politics that would fit Obama's politics of hope nicely."

Here's a simple, but very effective video ad that could be broadly-used by Democratic candidates for the white house and Congress -- and making a point that merits repetition.

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