Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

CLINTON INTRODUCES KAINE

Raucous rally a contrast to Trump-Pence event

- By KEN THOMAS and LISA LERER

MIAMI — Hillary Clinton debuted running mate Sen. Tim Kaine on Saturday as a can-do progressiv­e committed to social justice and equality — “everything Donald Trump and Mike Pence are not” — at a boisterous rally ahead of next week’s Democratic National Convention.

“He is qualified to step into this job and lead from Day One. And he is a progressiv­e who likes to get things done,” Clinton declared at Florida Internatio­nal University.

Kaine, a bilingual former Virginia governor, detailed his life in public service. “I like to fight for right,” he said.

And, as Clinton smiled broadly at her choice for vice president, Kaine greeted the largely Hispanic audience in Spanish. “We’re going to be ‘compañeros de alma,’ in this great ‘lucha’ ahead,” he said, or “soul mates in this great fight ahead.”

Trump, in a text to his own supporters, said President Barack Obama, Clinton and Kaine were “the ultimate insiders” and implored voters to not “let Obama have a 3rd term.”

At the splashy rally, Democrats sought to offer a contrast with Trump and Pence, whose first appearance together in a New York City hotel ballroom included a lengthy speech by the GOP businessma­n and much more limited remarks from Pence, the Indiana governor. The two only briefly posed for photos at their campaign kickoff.

Clinton chose to introduce Kaine as her running mate in the battlegrou­nd state of Florida, waving to the large crowd of cheering supporters as they bounded on stage with their hands raised in the traditiona­l sign of unity. Clinton sought to present the partnershi­p as one built in optimism, panning the Republican convention, which ended two days earlier, as a display of “fear,” ”anger and resentment.”

She noted that Kaine had taken a year off from Harvard Law School to do missionary work in Honduras and had worked as a civil rights attorney specializi­ng in equal housing. Clinton said Kaine as governor worked with Republican­s and helped his home state navigate the Great Recession without sacrificin­g funding for education.

She also pointed to his work on gun control after the deadly Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, praising his efforts to curb gun violence before a nation still reeling from a series of shootings and violence against police.

“Behind that smile Tim also has a backbone of steel. Just ask the NRA,” Clinton said.

Choking up, Kaine described the Virginia Tech shooting as the “worst day … of my life.”

Kaine, 58, was long viewed as a likely choice because of his resume in government and his time as chairman of the Democratic National Committee. He also had a particular­ly powerful backer in Obama, whom Kaine endorsed in 2007. Obama considered him for vice president a year later.

Kaine showed a willingnes­s to mix it up with the Republican ticket, assailing Trump as someone who had left “a trail of broken promises and wrecked lives wherever he goes.”

He also vouched for Clinton’s trustworth­iness, a major liability with voters, telling the crowd, “She has always delivered.”

Kaine is likely to be a valuable asset for the Democratic ticket in appealing to Hispanic Americans turned off by Trump’s harsh rhetoric about immigrants.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., appear at a rally at Florida Internatio­nal University Panther Arena in Miami on Saturday. Clinton has chosen Kaine to be her running mate.
ANDREW HARNIK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., appear at a rally at Florida Internatio­nal University Panther Arena in Miami on Saturday. Clinton has chosen Kaine to be her running mate.

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