The Standard (St. Catharines)

Stakes are high for Clinton

Presidenti­al nominee must show American citizens that she is ready for the White House

- JULIE PACE and ROBERT FURLOW ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHILADELPH­IA — It’s Hillary Clinton’s turn.

After three days of Democratic stars, including a pair of presidents, asserting she is ready for the White House, Clinton must make that case for herself on her nominating convention’s final night.

The first woman to lead a major U.S. political party toward the White House, Clinton will be greeted Thursday by a crowd of cheering delegates eager to see history made in the November election. But her real audience will be millions of voters who may welcome her experience but question her character.

For Clinton, the stakes are enormous.

She’s locked in a tight general election contest with Republican Donald Trump, an unconventi­onal candidate and political novice. Even as Clinton and her validators argue Trump is unqualifie­d for the Oval Office, they recognize the businessma­n has a visceral connection with some voters in a way the Democratic nominee does not.

Clinton also must urgently blunt her dropping standing with voters, a majority of whom are skeptical of her honesty and trustworth­iness. A pre-convention controvers­y over hacked Democratic Party e-mails showing favouritis­m for Clinton in the primary threatens to deepen the perception that Clinton prefers to play by her own rules.

Former Oklahoma senator Fred Harris said it was important for his party’s nominee to showcase the “original Hillary Clinton, before she became so guarded.”

A parade of speakers at the Philadelph­ia convention vigorously tried to do just that. First lady Michelle Obama, former president Bill Clinton and Vice-President Joe Biden each cast Clinton as champion for the disadvanta­ged and a fighter who has withstood decades of Republican attacks. Advocates and other Americans who have met Clinton throughout her career spoke of their quiet moments with one of the world’s most famous women.

The week’s most powerful validation came Wednesday night from President Barack Obama, her victorious primary rival in 2008. Obama declared that Clinton not only can defeat Trump’s “deeply pessimisti­c vision” but also realize the “promise of this great nation.”

Seeking to offset possible weariness of a politician who has been in the spotlight for decades, he said of Clinton: “She’s been there for us, even if we haven’t always noticed.”

Clinton appeared unannounce­d on the platform as Obama closed his remarks to soak up the midnight roar of cheering Democrats. She pointed at the man who denied her the White House eight years ago, smiled wide and gave him a hug.

A studious wonk who prefers policy discussion­s to soaring oratory, Clinton has acknowledg­ed she struggles with the flourishes that seem to come naturally to Obama and her husband. She’ll lean heavily on her “stronger together” campaign theme, invoking her 1996 book It Takes a Village, her campaign said.

Indeed, the Democratic convention has been a visual ode those mantras: The first African-American president symbolical­ly seeking to hand the weightiest baton in the free world to a woman. A parade of speakers — gay and straight, young and old, white, black and Hispanic — cast Trump as out-of-touch with a diverse and fast-changing nation.

In a statement Thursday, Trump accused Democrats of living in a “fantasy world” during the convention, ignoring economic and security troubles as well as Clinton’s controvers­ial e-mail use at the State Department. He said in his vision of the world, “we will put America first.”

Clinton’s campaign believes there are opportunit­ies to woo moderate Republican­s who are unnerved by Trump.

That effort was hammered home Wednesday by former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, a Republican-turned-independen­t, who implored Americans to “elect a sane, competent person with sane, internatio­nal experience.”

Ret. Marine Gen. John R. Allen, a former commander in Afghanista­n, will underscore the same point. He’s one of several military leaders and service members who have taken the stage to vouch for Clinton’s national security experience.

To Democrats, Trump’s comments this week about Russia underscore­d their concerns about him becoming commander in chief.

Following reports Russia hacked Democratic Party e-mails, Trump said he’d like to see Moscow find the thousands of e-mails Clinton deleted from the account she used as secretary of state.

The appearance of him encouragin­g Russia to meddle in the presidenti­al campaign enraged Democrats and Republican­s, even as he dismissed suggestion­s from Obama and other Democrats that Moscow already was intervenin­g on his behalf.

Hours later, Trump told Fox News he was being “sarcastic” although shortly after his remarks on Wednesday, he tweeted that Russia should share the e-mails with the FBI.

 ?? WIN McNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Delegates hold up signs in support of Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton on the fourth day of the Democratic National Convention at the Wells Fargo Center on Thursday in Philadelph­ia, Penn.
WIN McNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES Delegates hold up signs in support of Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton on the fourth day of the Democratic National Convention at the Wells Fargo Center on Thursday in Philadelph­ia, Penn.

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