| |
First
Lady
says
husband
`a man
we can
trust'
By DAVID
ESPO and
MATTHEW
DALY
Associated
Press
CHARLOTTE,
N.C. -
First
lady
Michelle
Obama
lovingly
praised
her
husband
Tuesday
night in
a
prime-time
Democratic
Convention
speech
as a
devoted
husband
and
caring
father
at home
and a
"man we
can
trust"
to
revive
the
nation's
weak
economy
as
president,
beckoning
the
country
to
return
him to
the
White
House
despite
agonizingly
slow
recovery
from
recession.
"He
reminds
me that
we are
playing
a long
game
here ...
and that
change
is hard,
and
change
is slow
and it
never
happens
all at
once,"
she told
a nation
impatient
with
slow
economic
progress
and
persistently
high
unemployment
of 8.3
percent.
"But
eventually,
we get
there,
we
always
do," she
said in
a speech
that
blended
scenes
from 23
years of
marriages
with the
Obamas'
time in
the
White
House.
Mrs.
Obama,
given a
huge
ovation
and
describing
herself
as the
"mom in
chief,"
made no
mention
of
Republican
challenger
Mitt
Romney.
But
those
who
preceded
her to
the
podium
on the
first
night of
the
president's
convention
were
scathing.
"If Mitt
were
president,
he'd
fire the
reindeer
and
outsource
the
elves,"
declared
former
Ohio
Gov. Ted
Strickland
in one
biting
speech.
Tapped
to
deliver
the
keynote
address,
San
Antonio
Mayor
Julian
Castro
said
Romney
was a
millionaire
politician
who
"quite
simply,
doesn't
get it"
when it
comes to
the
needs of
the
middle
class.
Referring
to the
Republican's
support
for
mandatory
health
insurance
when he
was
governor
of
Massachusetts,
he
added,
"Gov.
Romney
has
undergone
an
extreme
makeover,
and it
ain't
pretty."
Polls
made the
race for
the
White
House a
tight
one,
almost
certain
to be
decided
in a
string
of eight
or 10
battleground
states
where
neither
the
president
nor
Romney
holds a
clear
advantage.
There
was
ample
evidence
during
the day
of an
underperforming
economy,
including
a report
that
said
manufacturing
activity
declined
for a
third
straight
month
and an
announcement
from the
Treasury
that the
government's
debt
exceeded
$16
trillion
at the
close of
the
business
day.
There
was no
end to
the
appeals
for
donations
to
Obama's
re-election
campaign,
falling
further
behind
Romney
in cash
on hand
with
each
passing
month.
"If you
think
Barack's
the
right
man for
the job,
please
show
your
support
with a
donation
of $5 or
more
today,"
the
first
lady
emailed
supporters
a little
more
than 90
minutes
before
her
speech.
She
walked
out to
the
crowd's
cheers
as the
band
played
Stevie
Wonder's
"Signed,
Sealed,
Delivered
I'm
Yours,"
the song
he sang
onstage
at
Obama's
Denver
convention
ifour
years
ago.
The
president
was back
home in
the
White
House
after a
campaign
appearance
in
Virginia
as
delegates
cheered
every
mention
of his
name
from the
convention
podium.
He
promised
he'd be
watching
on
television
when his
wife
spoke.
"Believe
it or
not,
when we
were
first
married,
our
combined
monthly
student
loan
bills
were
actually
higher
than our
mortgage,"
she told
the
convention.
"We were
so
young,
so in
love and
so in
debt."
She
confided
that at
family
dinners
in the
White
House
with her
and
their
daughters,
the
president
joins in
"strategizing
about
middle
school
friendships."
Mrs.
Obama's
poll
numbers
are
better
than her
husband's,
and her
speech
was
aimed at
building
support
for him,
much as
Ann
Romney's
remarks
at last
week's
Republican
National
Convention
were in
service
to her
husband's
presidential
ambitions.
"When it
comes to
rebuilding
our
economy,
Barack
is
thinking
about
folks
like my
dad -
who
worked
at a
municipal
water
plant -
and his
own
grandmother,
a bank
secretary,"
the
first
lady
said.
Referring
to her
own
children
as well
as those
of
others,
she
said,
"If we
want to
give
them
that
sense of
limitless
possibility,
that
belief
that
here in
America
there is
always
something
better
out
there if
you are
willing
to work
for it,
then we
must ...
stand
together
for the
man we
can
trust to
keep
moving
this
great
country
forward,
my
husband,
our
president,
President
Barack
Obama."
The weak
economy
hung
over the
convention
as it
dominates
the
election.
Obama
"knows
better
than
anyone
there's
more
hard
work to
do" to
fix it
said
Castro.
He said
that
after
the deep
recession,
the
nation
is
making
progress
"despite
incredible
odds and
united
Republican
opposition."
He
declared
that 4.5
million
jobs
have
been
created
since
the
president
took
office -
though
that
number
refers
only to
private
sector
employment
gains
over the
past 29
months
and
leaves
out
state
and
local
government
jobs
that
continue
to
disappear
each
month.
Castro,
the
first
Hispanic
chosen
to
deliver
a
keynote
address,
was
unsparing
in
criticizing
Romney,
suggesting
the
former
Massachusetts
governor
might
not even
be the
driving
force on
the
Republican
ticket
this
fall.
"First
they
called
it
`trickle
down,
the
supply
side,"
he said
of the
economic
proposals
backed
by
Republicans.
"Now
it's
Romney/Ryan.
Or is it
Ryan/Romney?"
"Either
way,
their
theory
has been
tested.
It
failed.
...Mitt
Romney
just
doesn't
get it,"
Castro
said.
Romney's
running
mate is
Wisconsin
Rep.
Paul
Ryan.
The
divide
over
taxes
goes to
the core
of the
campaign.
Romney
and the
Republicans
favor
extension
of all
of the
existing
Bush-era
tax cuts
due to
expire
on Dec.
31, and
also
want to
cut tax
rates 20
percent
across
the
board.
Obama,
too,
wants to
keep the
existing
tax cuts
in place
- except
for
people
with
earnings
of
$250,000
a year
or more.
Democrats
criticized
Romney
last
week for
failing
to offer
a
detailed
plan to
fix the
economy.
But
nowhere
in their
own
convention's
first
evening
of
speechmaking
did
anyone
present
proposals
for
reining
in
deficits
that now
exceed
$1
trillion
annually.
Delegates
in the
convention
hall
cheered
whenever
Obama's
image
showed
on the
huge
screen
behind
the
speaker's
podium,
and
roared
when the
late
Sen.
Edward
M.
Kennedy
was
shown
mocking
Romney
in their
1994
Senate
race.
"On the
issue of
choice,
I am
pro-choice,
my
opponent
is
multiple
choice,"
the late
senator
said as
cheers
grew
louder.
Romney
supported
abortion
rights
while
serving
as
governor;
he
opposes
them
now.
Democrats
unspooled
insult
after
insult
as they
took
their
turn the
week
after
the
Republicans
had
their
convention
in
Tampa,
Fla.
Illinois
Gov. Pat
Quinn
said
that
Republicans
had
omitted
mention
of
Romney's
term as
Massachusetts
governor
at their
gathering.
"We
already
knew
this
extremely
conservative
man
takes
some
pretty
liberal
deductions.
Evidently
that
includes
writing
off all
four
years he
served
as
governor,"
Quinn
declared.
Said
Senate
Majority
Leader
Harry
Reid of
Nevada,
speaking
of
Romney:
"Never
in
modern
American
history
has a
presidential
candidate
tried so
hard to
hide
himself
from the
people
he hopes
to
serve."
"When
you look
at the
one tax
return
he has
released,
it's
obvious
why
there's
been
only
one. We
learned
that he
pays a
lower
tax rate
than
middle-class
families.
We
learned
he chose
Swiss
bank
accounts
and
Cayman
Island
tax
shelters
over
American
institutions."
Obama,
by
contrast,
was
lauded
for
helping
win
approval
of
health
care
legislation
and for
supporting
abortion
rights
and gay
marriage.
In his
campaign
trip to
Virginia
earlier
in the
day,
Obama
told an
audience
at
Norfolk
State
University
that the
economy
will get
worse if
Romney
wins the
White
House
this
fall and
that
Election
Day
apathy
was his
enemy -
and
theirs.
Republicans
are
"counting
on you,
maybe
not to
vote for
Romney,
but
they're
counting
on you
to feel
discouraged,"
he said.
"And
they
figure
if you
don't
vote,
then big
oil will
write
our
energy
future,
and
insurance
companies
will
write
our
health
care
plans,
and
politicians
will
dictate
what a
woman
can or
can't do
when it
comes to
her own
health."
On the
final
stop of
a
pre-convention
campaign
circuit
of
several
battleground
states,
the
president
also
dropped
off a
case of
White
House-brewed
beer at
a local
fire
station.
The
Republican
challenger
was in
Vermont
as the
Democratic
convention
began,
preparing
for
three
fall
debates
with
Obama
almost
certain
to be
critical
to the
outcome
of the
election.
There
was no
shortage
of
political
calculation
behind
the
program
of the
convention's
first
night -
or for
any
other.
Democratic
delegates
bestow
their
nomination
on Obama
and Vice
President
Joe
Biden on
Wednesday,
the same
night
former
President
Bill
Clinton
delivers
a
prime-time
speech
aimed at
voters
disappointed
with the
results
of the
past
four
years
yet
undecided
how to
cast
their
ballots.
White
men
favor
Romney
over
Obama in
public
and
private
polls,
but a
Gallup
survey
taken in
July
showed
that 12
years
after
leaving
office,
Clinton
was
viewed
favorably
by 63
percent
of the
same
group
and
unfavorably
by only
32
percent.
Obama's
acceptance
speech
caps the
convention
on
Thursday
night at
the
74,000-seat
Bank of
America
football
stadium.
Aides
kept a
wary eye
on the
weather
in a
city
that has
been hit
in
recent
days
with
strong
afternoon
rains.
Republicans
did
their
best to
rain on
Obama's
convention,
whatever
the
weather.
Vice
presidential
candidate
Paul
Ryan
spoke in
Westlake,
Ohio,
standing
behind a
lectern
bearing
a sign
that
read
"Are you
better
off?"
Republicans
released
a web
video
that
interspersed
images
of Obama
and the
economy's
weak
performance
with
slightly
out-of-focus
video
clips of
former
President
Jimmy
Carter
discussing
the
nation's
economic
woes
when sat
in the
Oval
Office
more
than 30
years
ago.
|