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Bill
Clinton
fires up
Democrats
ahead of
Obama's
speech
By JULIE
PACE and
CALVIN
WOODWARD
Associated
Press
CHARLOTTE,
N.C. -
God is
back in
the
Democratic
platform
and
people
rooting
for
President
Barack
Obama
hope the
dazzle
is back
in him.
With war
ending,
the
health
care
system
recast
and the
creaky
economy
overshadowing
all,
Obama
takes
the
stage of
the
Democratic
National
Convention
on
Thursday
to
appeal
for a
second
term
before a
huge
prime-time
audience.
He's got
several
tough
acts to
follow -
his wife
Michelle's
crowd-swooning
speech
of a few
days
ago,
former
President
Bill
Clinton's
rollicking
turn on
stage
Wednesday
night
and his
own
soaring
oratory
of four
years
ago.
Clinton,
the
one-time
"comeback
kid,"
offered
a
rousing
defense
of
Obama's
economic
stewardship
in a
speech
setting
up
Obama's
moment
to come.
"He
inherited
a deeply
damaged
economy,
put a
floor
under
the
crash,
began
the long
hard
road to
recovery
and laid
the
foundation
for a
more
modern,
more
well-balanced
economy
that
will
produce
millions
of good
new
jobs,"
said
Clinton
- the
last
president
to see
sustained
growth,
in the
1990s.
"Conditions
are
improving
and if
you'll
renew
the
president's
contract,
you will
feel
it."
He also
preached
bipartisanship
and a
pullback
from
politics
as
"blood
sport" -
this
near the
end of
back-to-back
conventions
that
feasted
on
rhetorical
red meat
and even
as he
ripped
the
Republican
agenda
as a
throwback
to the
past, a
"double-down
on
trickle-down"
economics
that
assumes
tax cuts
for the
wealthy
will
help
everyone
down the
ladder.
Obama
watched
Clinton's
speech
from
backstage,
then
strolled
out and
embraced
him,
bringing
happy
roars
from the
crowd in
his
first
convention
appearance
and
making
for a
spirited
ending
to a
trying
day for
Democrats.
After
passing
their
platform
a day
earlier
in a
smoothly
scripted
show of
unity,
Democrats
reopened
it to
restore
a
reference
to God
that had
been
stripped
out in
earlier
deliberations.
Republican
rival
Mitt
Romney
called
quick
attention
to the
omission,
branding
it as
evidence
that the
Democrats
are a
"party
that is
increasingly
out of
touch
with the
mainstream."
White
House
aides
said
Obama
himself
ordered
the
party to
get God
back in.
The
platform
also was
altered
to
declare
that
Jerusalem
"is and
will
remain
the
capital
of
Israel,"
a view
at odds
with a
carefully
neutral
U.S.
policy
but in
tune
with
campaign
sensibilities.
Citing a
chance
of
thunderstorms,
convention
organizers
scrapped
plans
for
Obama to
speak to
an
enormous
crowd in
a
74,000-seat
outdoor
stadium
and
shoehorned
the
event
under
the roof
of the
convention
arena,
holding
up to
15,000.
That
meant no
opportunity
to
reprise
the
massive
show of
support,
excitement
- and
on-scene
voter
registration
- from
Obama's
2008
acceptance
speech
before
84,000
in
Denver.
Republicans
said
Democrats
made the
switch
because
they
feared
the
sight of
empty
seats.
For
Obama,
the
evening
speech
provided
one of
his best
opportunities
not just
to
persuade
undecided
voters
to swing
his way
in a
tight
election
but to
put fire
in the
belly of
his
supporters
and get
them to
come out
on
Election
Day.
That
wasn't
an issue
in 2008,
but the
anemic
recovery
has
raised
questions
about
the
motivation
of
Democrats
as Obama
seeks to
become
the
first
president
since
the
Great
Depression
to win
re-election
with
joblessness
so high.
It was
no
accident
the
president
devoted
many
stops on
a
pre-convention
tour of
battleground
states
to
campus
crowds
of the
sort
that
lifted
him to
the
Democratic
nomination
and the
presidency
last
time.
"Barack's
challenge
here is
to sort
of wake
up
America
and make
them
realize
how
serious
this
election
is,"
Democratic
Rep. Sam
Farr of
California
said in
an
interview
at the
convention.
Judging
from his
town
hall
meetings
in
August,
when
only 15
or 20
people
showed
up
instead
of the
usual
hundreds,
there is
a "big
apathy
about
politics
right
now,"
regardless
of
party.
Farr
added,
"If we
have an
apathetic
America,
I'm
terrified."
Motivation
was not
an issue
in the
convention
hall, at
least
not when
Clinton
spoke.
The hall
rocked
with
cheers
as
Clinton
strode
onstage
to
Fleetwood
Mac's
"Don't
Stop,"
his 1992
campaign
theme
song,
and he
held the
crowd
rapt as
he
drifted
off his
prepared
remarks
for
about 50
minutes.
He
accused
Republicans
of
proposing
"the
same old
policies
that got
us into
trouble
in the
first
place"
and led
to a
near
financial
meltdown.
Those,
he said,
include
efforts
to
provide
"tax
cuts for
higher-income
Americans,
more
money
for
defense
than the
Pentagon
wants
and ...
deep
cuts on
programs
that
help the
middle
class
and poor
children."
"As
another
president
once
said,
`There
they go
again,'"
Clinton
said,
paraphrasing
Ronald
Reagan,
who
often
uttered
"There
you go
again"
as a
rebuke
to
Democrats.
"In
Tampa,"
said
Clinton,
"the
Republican
argument
against
the
president's
re-election
was
pretty
simple:
We left
him a
total
mess, he
hasn't
finished
cleaning
it up
yet, so
fire him
and put
us back
in."
Clinton's
speech
marked
the
seventh
consecutive
convention
in which
he has
spoken
to party
delegates,
and the
latest
twist in
a
relationship
with
Obama
that has
veered
from
frosty
to
friendly.
The two
men
clashed
in 2008,
when
Obama
outran
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton,
the
former
president's
wife,
for the
Democratic
presidential
nomination.
Hillary
Clinton,
then a
New York
senator
and now
Obama's
secretary
of
state,
was in
East
Timor as
the
party
met but
made a
cameo
appearance
on the
huge
convention
screens
in a
video
that
celebrated
the 12
Democratic
female
senators
now in
office.
Party
leaders
did
their
best to
draw as
little
attention
as
possible
to the
changes
in the
platform,
making
the
switch
even
before
the
prayer
that
opened
the
second
night of
the
convention.
They
restored
wording
from the
2008
platform
calling
for a
government
that
"gives
everyone
willing
to work
hard the
chance
to make
the most
of their
God-given
potential."
The
switch
on
Jerusalem
puts it
in line
with
what
advisers
said was
the
president's
personal
view, if
not the
policy
of his
administration.
"Jerusalem
is and
will
remain
the
capital
of
Israel,"
it says.
"The
parties
have
agreed
that
Jerusalem
is a
matter
for
final
status
negotiations.
It
should
remain
an
undivided
city
accessible
to
people
of all
faiths."
Three
times
Los
Angeles
Mayor
Antonio
Villaraigosa,
the
convention
chairman,
called
for a
voice
vote on
the
changes
and each
time the
yes and
no votes
seemed
to
balance
each
other
out. On
the
third
attempt,
Villaraigosa
ruled
the
amendments
were
approved
-
triggering
boos
from
many in
the
audience. |