Joe Solmonese organized the Democratic National Convention largely from his Chilmark home.
Jeanna Shepard

Virtual Democratic Convention Grounded in Chilmark Soil

When Joe Solmonese was hired as CEO of the 2020 Democratic National Convention a little over a year ago, he knew that there were going to have to be some changes.

When Joe Solmonese, a longtime political strategist and year-round Island resident, was hired as CEO of the 2020 Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee a little over a year ago, he knew that there were going to have to be some changes.

He just didn’t know he was going to be making them from Chilmark.

“I came back to Chilmark on March 16,” Mr. Solmonese said in an interview with the Gazette this week. “And the first thing we did was reschedule. Now, it just seems like such a naive notion, to say ‘oh, we’ll just push it back five weeks.’ But at the time we thought we’d maybe solved the problem. Of course, we didn’t.”

“By the end of that week,” he recalled, “I knew that we would have to be prepared to think very differently about this.”

Over the course of the next six months, Mr. Solmonese led the effort to completely overhaul last week’s unprecedented 2020 Democratic convention, transforming it from a traditionally raucous, in-person affair into an intimate, but entirely virtual production — all from his house in the hills of Chilmark.

The timeworn traditions of live audiences, packed arenas and hotels, interminable political soliloquies, button collecting and delegate meet-and-greets were done away with, replaced with testimonials from regular Americans, fireside chats, a live-streamed roll call and an extremely strict five-minute time limit on Bill Clinton’s speaking slot.

Joe Solmonese (center) with husband Jed Hastings and their dog Owen.
Joe Solmonese (center) with husband Jed Hastings and their dog Owen.

A force majeure known as Covid-19 had made those changes necessary. But for Mr. Solmonese, who has been to every Democratic nomination convention since 1988, they were changes he had been, to some extent, planning all along ­— the natural evolution of an ancient, but now antiquated political tradition that had over time become more spectacle than substance.

It was the extent — and the immediacy of those changes — that he didn’t expect.

“We were thinking already about being more concise. We were already talking about having a more strategic narrative arc. We were already talking about the idea of having real people tell their stories,” Mr. Solmonese said. “A lot of that was already under way. But when Covid hit, what became apparent over April, May and June, was the degree to which we were going to have to do it virtually.”

Mr. Solmonese was hired to be CEO of the convention approximately one year ago. Although he had a long career in politics, working as a staffer in the Dukakis administration and as head of both EMILY’s List, a pro-choice political action committee, and the Human Rights Campaign, he had never run logistics and programming for an event as large, and as consequential, as the DNC.

He quickly got an apartment in Milwaukee and began commuting between Chilmark, where he has lived for the past two years with his husband Jed Hastings and their dog Owen, and Wisconsin. The first six months were relatively normal, focusing on event logistics while preparing for the usual shifts and unpredictability that come with political work in an election year.

“We were just in the initial planning phases. How many hotel rooms do we need to rent? How many buses do we need to rent? What does the security footprint look like?” Mr. Solmonese said. “That’s a lot of what the early convention planning is, the operational part of it, and the raising of the money. Then you kind of have to wait and see.”

Last day of the convention in Milwaukee.
Courtesy Joe Solmonese
Last day of the convention in Milwaukee.
Courtesy Joe Solmonese

He didn’t have to wait long. By Super Tuesday, the once-crowded political field had played itself out ­— in incredibly fast and conclusive fashion, with Joe Biden emerging as the presumptive nominee.

But only days later, a much more serious problem than a crowded primary arose. It’s one thing to organize a convention when you don’t have the candidate. It’s another to have the candidate and not know if you can organize the convention.

A week after Super Tuesday, on Friday, March 13, Mr. Solmonese closed his Milwaukee office because of the pandemic and immediately moved back to Chilmark full time. His days started at 7 a.m. and ended after 11 p.m., with the scheduling of Zoom calls, phone calls and, of course, one very important roll call, packed in between.

“It was challenging,” Mr. Solmonese said. “At first, you’re functioning like it’s a snow day . . . and then the situation just kept getting worse and worse.”

The first move was to postpone the event. Two weeks later, Mr. Solmonese said it was clear that the team would have to shrink attendance. About a month after that, Mr. Solmonese made the decision to tell most delegates that they wouldn’t be able to come at all.

As the pandemic improved in Massachusetts over the summer, it surged elsewhere, including in Wisconsin. About a month ago, his team made the decision to have no one in the convention room. And then, two weeks ago, with the event looming, Vice President Biden himself made the decision not to travel. Everything had to go virtual. Mr. Solmonese traveled to Wisconsin. Almost no one else did.

“At each of those steps along the way, the many months worth of planning that we had done, had to be completely reimagined,” Mr. Solmonese said.

Back home and ready to rest.
Jeanna Shepard
Back home and ready to rest.
Jeanna Shepard

But his vision for the event remained largely the same. And without a traditional presidential summer, the event took on more significance, and that vision, in fact, became even more essential.

“I love a convention,” Mr. Solmonese said. “But if you think about a party convention . . . you are really televising the proceedings of the convention, and there are a lot of people in the arena who are very excited to be there, and everybody at home is just sort of watching. So, for us, it was a question of, how do we change that up? And how do we make it so that if you’re tuning in from home, it’s a more impactful experience.”

Speeches were no longer written with applause lines. Speakers were chosen not on the volume of their voice, but the power of their message. In a convention where no one could attend physically, Mr. Solmonese made it his mission that everyone could feel like they were included. Accomplishing party business and satisfying internal politics became secondary. Diversity became primary. And most importantly, the focus was shifted away from criticizing Donald Trump and onto telling Joe Biden’s story.

Incumbents only have to convince people to re-elect them, Mr. Solmonese explained. But challengers have to convince people to fire the incumbent and hire them instead. It’s a trickier needle to thread, especially when it has to be done fiber optically.

“To spend a lot of time bashing Donald Trump in an arena full of people, where the crowd is affirming what you’re doing, is one thing,” he said. “But in direct conversation with the American people, you need to do it in a different way.”

That way was through storytelling — through a 13-year-old with a stutter who Joe Biden had helped on the campaign trail, or a woman whose father had died of Covid-19, and was really telling a broader story about health care in America.

“The best way to talk to the American people about Joe Biden, is for people to tell their stories about Joe Biden,” Mr. Solmonese said. “And there’s no better story than a story about Joe Biden.”

And there are few better storytellers than the Obamas, he also said. While President Obama gave his speech from Independence Hall in Philadelphia, Michelle Obama gave her speech from the Vineyard. Mr. Solmonese said it was important to him that people spoke from locations that made them comfortable. For Ms. Obama, that place was the Island.

“Those were very different speeches than they would normally give,” Mr. Solmonese said about the Obamas. “The cadence, the flow, that was all designed to be an intimate conversation with people. And of course, what is so extraordinary about Michelle Obama is that she just knew exactly what she needed to do, and did it in the most powerful way.”

Mr. Solmonese said the most nerve-wracking bridge to cross during the production was a literal one — the panoramic shot above Alabama’s Edmund Pettus Bridge at the beginning of the virtual roll call. The roll call involved continuous live-streams in all 57 states and territories, a difficulty he underestimated.

But other difficulties that normally plague organizers ­— like having to jockey with celebrities and big-ego politicians for limited stage time — were mostly non-existent for this convention.

“I had a standard answer for most people,” Mr. Solmonese said. “Which was, this year, Bill Clinton is getting five minutes. That put everything else in perspective.”

He returned to the Island Sunday. He’s barely left Lucy Vincent Beach. Looking back on the experience of the past year, he felt the pandemic had finally made it possible for the convention to focus on the inclusivity of stories. He was simply thankful he had the opportunity to help Americans listen to them.

“It’s a thing that had never been done before,” Mr. Solmonese said, speaking about the virtual convention. “So last Friday, when I woke up, it was sort of surreal . . . my desire was for it to be more impactful, that we do a better job telling a story and delivering a message. And I think we had no choice but to do that, because of the fact that all we were left with, right, was the opportunity to tell a story.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/27/2020 - 22:02

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Ginny WT

The DNC was so well done -- my congratulations to Mr. Salmonese who, presented with an immense challenge rose to the occasion and put together a massive expression of what "we the people" are experiencing and thinking. I have no TV so I depend upon the internet for newspaper websites and NPR/WCAI for news and opinion pieces. I have never watched the conventions because all that rah rah stuff and the lengthy smoke cloud speeches are always so frustrating and infuriating. I watched most of the convention however, with great interest, and with some deep appreciation and empathy for what people had to tell us. There were even smiles and tears. To the young man who stuttered (what a brave kid!) as well to so many other people thanks for telling your stories. And to some of the forgotten heros such as Sally K Yates, Fiona Hill and Marie Yavonovitch as well as the principals more thanks. Their stories were filled with true views of the America and our democracy which have been under such a deep and insidious attack since January of 2017..

Ginny WT

Apologies for misspelling Mr. Solmonese's last name. After rereading and reflecting on the GOP convention and the many transgressions of truth, ethics, attention to the law, etc. the DNC convention stands head and shoulders above for many reasons and on many levels! Thank you for providing content that truly represented the thoughts, opinions, and lives of "we the people."

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 05:46

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ROBERT S. RUSSELL Edgartown, Ma

I found the DN Convention very well done considering all of the potential obstacles Mr Solmonese had to overcome. I think what was accomplished was fascinating & I’m thrilled that one of my Vineyard neighbors (I’m a Snow Bird) was the brain’s behind it all.
Another Martha’s Vineyard “Miracle”.!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 05:47

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a hodson harrisville, nh

Thanks to Mr Solmonese and his team, a small-step-for-Dems-large-leap-for-Democracy effort.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 06:13

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Mitzi Pratt Aquinnah

You did a spectacular job Joe. The DNC told a story of who we are at our best and the contrast with the gaslighting this week could not be more stark. Please everyone, not only VOTE yourselves, get others to do so too.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 07:02

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Linda Vadasz West Tisbury

I congratulate Mr. Solmonese for the brilliant task that he and his team accomplished. It was at the same time inclusive and intimate. I hope that future conventions will follow the standard that he set. It is no wonder that someone whose name evokes the biblical king who ended a dispute between two women over the life of a baby could deal with the competing narratives of scores of politicians, Hollywood celebrities and ordinary Joes. Well done!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 09:22

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Pat Levin Boston

This was the first convention I watched in it’s entirety. So interesting. A job very well done.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 09:22

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Janis Wightman W. Tisbury

I too congratulate Joe on an amazing event. I feel I can call him Joe sine he was my piano student back in Attleboro a few (: years ago. Job well done; I know your mom and dad would be proud.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 10:09

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Elizabeth Oak Bluffs

Sorry, but the RNC out performed the DNC - big time - on everything from production values to messaging. Time to wake up Chilmark.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 10:29

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Susan

You did a remarkable job, Mr. Solomonese.
Thank you for Billy Porter!
His performance of the Stephen Stills song "For What It's Worth" revived memories, and was a stunning message for the younger generation.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 11:35

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Tom Edgartown

I’ve never been so embarrassed in my life watching Julia Louis Dreyfus make a mockery of The pronouncement of the Vice President’s name. It was a low point in American politics. Whoever is responsible is a disgrace! Drinking the Koolaid should only go so far!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 11:57

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Judy Pennington, NJ

I was truly impressed with the Democratic Convention. The production value was superb but did not mask the sincerity of the message. I felt far more connected to this event than watching conventions in the past.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 12:23

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Patrick Walker Rhode Island

What a cool story. Great reporting as always, Noah. Joe, I hope you get to spend all month at Lucy with friends and family.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 12:54

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Kris Waldron Thomas Upstate NY

A terrific job done by Mr. Solmonese and his team. This year's virtual DNC convention was so much better to watch than those in the past. I'm sure there were plenty of challenges to pull this one off - and they rose well above those challenges.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 14:03

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June Manning Aquinnah

Thank you Mr. Solmonese. A job well done ! You should be very proud of your accomplishment in the midst of a pandemic which proved to be very challenging but professionally presented. We enjoyed every minute of the DNC which was more compelling than previous ones. Take a deep breath and get to Lucy Vincent Beach !

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 15:25

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Bradley DeForge Lancaster Pennsylvania

Congratulations Mr. Solomonese orchestrating a fine fine convention. Your family dog looks just like my German shorthair!!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 18:55

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Lisa Central Mass

Bravo to Mr Solmonese. The convention was unifying, inspiring, and intelligent. The messages heart felt, important, and relatable. Thank you to the DNC team.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 20:29

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Geoff Garin Edgartown

Democrats owe Mr. Solmonese a big debt of gratitude for putting on a convention that was inclusive, uplifting, and interesting from gavel to gavel.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 21:31

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Gail Schoenbrunn Newton

How to turn a daunting job in the best of times into the best job in daunting times. Can’t wait to see what Joe tackles next.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2020 - 22:09

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Elizabeth Moffet Tiburon, Ca

I have attended 4 conventions. I have enjoyed them all, for the camaraderie & spirit of being together with a terrific combination of policy wonks, committed Democrats, elected officials, celebrities & people who have come from all over the country to party. That is what I missed this year. However, this is the first time I watched every moment & felt connected to every speech & speaker. Thank you Mr Solmonese for an amazing production that felt natural & inspirational..

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 08/30/2020 - 04:48

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Terri Yelin Durham, NC

Congratulations on pulling off a brilliantly unifying and substantive Convention for the DNC. I usually pass on political conventions-watching bits and pieces but not this year. It was a pleasure watching all four nights. It was compelling, deeply heart-felt and extraordinarily well done. Whatever challenges, and I am sure there were some, you and your team certainly rose to the occasion. Thank you Mr. Solmonese for making the first ever virtual convention well worth watching. You and your team did an amazing job--the speakers told a story that connected with viewers in ways that traditional conventions just do not. It was an amazing and intelligent production for which the DNC and viewers like me are incredibly grateful and so proud. Thank you for making the 2020 DNC Convention the most impressive and inspirational event that connected with the American people. I hope you are enjoying well deserved rest and relaxation.

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