Meet the Oldest Delegate at the DNC

“I started at 15. I sure in hell am not going to stop at 95.”

A woman holding up a t-shirt that reads "JOE'S Girls"

Sam Van Pykeren/Mother Jones

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In 1944, the Democratic Party held its convention in Chicago, where it nominated President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to a fourth term in office. Angie Gialloreto remembers it.

Eighty years on, a lot has changed—including White House term limits. But Democrats are back in Chicago, and Angie, who has been a Pittsburgh-area party official for more than six decades, is there as the convention’s oldest delegate. She’s 95 now, and says she’s most excited about young people getting their start in politics, like she did as a 15 year old growing up in Pennsylvania.

Mother Jones caught up with Gialloreto and spoke with her about the changes she’s lived and witnessed in Democratic politics, and her hopes for the future. Our conversation included Ellie Goluboff-Schragger, a 20-year-old University of Pennsylvania student who is the state’s youngest delegate.

Goluboff-Schragger thanked President Joe Biden for deciding to leave the campaign and endorse Vice President Kamala Harris, and for “recognizing that it’s time for a new generation.”

“What he did was not for me, not for you, but for our country,” Gialloreto says. “This is something spectacular, and we’re going to take advantage of it.”

After eighty years in the fray, Angie is urging a new generation to step up. “It’s time young people should have the voice and daggonit, they better have the opportunity to express it,” she says. “There’s been this closed door thing. ‘Oh, you’re too young.’ No! Do it. Express yourself. Let people know what you want and how you feel.”

“I started at 15,” she says. “I sure in hell am not going to stop at 95.”

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YOUR GIFT DOUBLES THROUGH FRIDAY

Right now, every dollar you give goes twice as far—but only until Friday’s midnight deadline. This is the moment to make your support count double.

In a climate where journalists face mounting pressure to back down, stay silent, or soften their reporting, Mother Jones refuses to flinch. We’re pushing back against intimidation and delivering fierce, independent journalism that holds power accountable—no matter who’s trying to silence us.

But here’s the reality: We’re a nonprofit newsroom with zero corporate backing and no financial cushion. We depend entirely on readers like you to fund the investigations that matter most.

Friday’s 2X match deadline is coming soon. We need you on the team right now. Please chip in and double your impact.

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