The Rev. Bernice King, the youngest child of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., was the final Georgian to appear on the stage of this Democratic National Convention.

King was one of three who gave this evening’s invocation, and she asked the Almighty to put a thumb on the scales in November, in the name of a country:

“Where unity trumps division, peace trumps war, and love trumps hate. We ask, dear Lord, that you anoint Madam Hillary Clinton as our 45th president, to lead us to become a stronger and compassionate nation.”

At the Republican gathering last week in Cleveland, a number of pastors asked God for a different result.

The other Georgians who appeared on stage during the convention were state House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams of Atlanta, state Rep. Park Cannon of Atlanta, former state Sen. Jason Carter of Atlanta, former President Jimmy Carter (via video), AIDS activist Daniel Driffin, former Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin and Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed.

Jim Galloway

Newtown shootings discussed at Georgia meeting

U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Esty of Connecticut, speaking Thursday to Georgia’s delegation to the Democratic National Convention, explained why she sat next to Atlanta U.S. Rep. John Lewis last month on the floor of the U.S. House – a sit-in that protested the lack of action by Congress on gun violence.

The short answer is easy. Esty represents Newtown, where 20 children and six adults were gunned down at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Esty had been elected to Congress but had not yet been sworn into office on Dec. 14, 2012. She was in Boston, in a class for new members for Congress, when her phone started ringing.

“By noon, I’d thrown my clothes in the car and drove straight to the firehouse in Newtown, crying the whole way,” Esty said. “I sat there while families were notified.

“I remember hearing one woman screaming and crying and saying, ‘She was sick, she didn’t want to go to school. I wanted to go Christmas shopping. I made her go. And if I hadn’t done that, she’d be alive today.’ No parent in America should have to live with that guilt.”

Esty added, “It is not anybody’s fault other than the U.S. Congress for not taking action because we are a better country than that.”

— Jim Galloway

Smyre sees optimism as answer

State Rep. Calvin Smyre of Columbus, a former party chairman with strong connections to Hillary Clinton, joined those pointing to the optimistic notes that Democrats are sounding during their convention, and he compared it to a harsher portrait that Republicans painted at their convention last week in Cleveland.

“It was clear to me last night that the message ought not to be anti-Trump, but it ought to be pro-America and pro-growth and pro-economic development,” Smyre said. “Instead of trying to tear down America, build up America.”

— Jim Galloway

He shoots, he scores

Retired basketball star Kareem AbdulJabbar might have delivered the biggest laugh line of the night, if not the entire Democratic convention.

“I’m Michael Jordan and I’m here with Hillary,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “I said that tonight because Donald Trump couldn’t tell the difference”

— Greg Bluestein

‘American Sniper’ actor under fire

Bradley Cooper’s appearance at the Democratic National Convention has irked some conservative fans of the actor’s portrayal of Navy SEAL Chris Kyle in 2014’s “American Sniper.”

Cooper was spotted by TV cameras Wednesday night seated at the meeting in Philadelphia.

Some Twitter users say they plan to boycott Cooper’s future films over his presence at the convention. Another commented that they thought his experience playing Kyle would have rubbed off on him.

The complaints have been mocked by others who say Cooper was simply acting a role when playing Kyle and conservatives shouldn’t be surprised.

Cooper, a native of the Philadelphia area, earned an Oscar nomination for “American Sniper,” which became a blockbuster thanks in part to an enthusiastic reception among conservative moviegoers.

— Jennifer Brett