The Commercial Appeal

‘Four more years’

Obama says ‘our challenges can be met’

- By David Espo and Robert Furlow CHARLOTTE, N.C.

— His re-election in doubt, President Barack Obama conceded only halting progress Thursday night toward fixing the nation’s stubborn economic woes, but vowed in a Democratic National Convention finale, “Our problems can be solved, our challenges can be met.”

“Yes, our path is harder — but it leads to a better place,” he declared in a prime-time speech to convention delegates and the nation that blended resolve about the challenges ahead with stinging criticism of Republican rival Mitt Romney’s proposals to repair the economy. Obama acknowledg­ed “my own failings” as he asked for a second term, four years after taking office as the nation’s first black president.

“Four more years,” delegates chanted over and over as the 51-year-old Obama stepped to the podium, noticeably grayer than four years ago when he was a history-making candidate for the White House.

First lady Michelle Obama and the couple’s daughters, Michelle and Sasha, joined the president on stage in the moments after the speech, followed by other family members and Vice President Joe Biden and his wife. Strains of “Only in America” filled the hall as confetti filled the air.

The president’s speech was the final act of a pair of scripted national political convention­s in as many weeks, and the opening salvo of a two-month drive toward Election Day that pits Obama against Republican rival

Romney. The contest is ever tighter for the White House in a tough season of economic struggle for millions.

Biden preceded Obama at the convention podium and proclaimed, “America has turned the corner” after experienci­ng the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

Obama didn’t go that far in his own remarks, but he said firmly, “We are not going back, we are moving forward, America.”

With unemployme­nt at 8.3 percent, the president said the task of recovering from the economic disaster of 2008 is exceeded in American history only by the challenge Franklin Delano Roosevelt faced when he took office in 1933.

“It will require common effort, shared responsibi­lity and the kind of bold persistent experiment­ation” that FDR employed, Obama said.

In an appeal to independen­t voters who might be considerin­g a vote for Romney, he added that those who carry on Roosevelt’s legacy “should remember that not every problem can be remedied with another government program or dictate from Washington.

He said, “The truth is, it will take more than a few years for us to solve challenges that have built up over the decades.”

The hall was filled to capacity long before Obama stepped to the podium, and officials shut off the entrances because of a fear of overcrowdi­ng for a speech that the campaign had originally slated for the 74,000-seat football stadium nearby. Aides said weather concerns prompted the move to the convention arena, capacity 15,000 or so.

To the cheers of delegates, Obama retraced the steps he took to halt the economic slide, including the auto bailout that Romney opposed. “After a decade of decline, this country created over a half million manufactur­ing jobs in the last two and a half years,” he said.

Turning to national security, he said he had promised to end the war in Iraq, and had done so. “We’ve blunted the Taliban’s momentum in Afghanista­n, and in 2014 our longest war will be over,” he said.

“A new tower rises above the New York skyline, al- Qaida is on the path to defeat and Osama bin Laden is dead,” he declared, one of the night’s repeated references to the special operations forces raid that resulted in the terrorist mastermind’s demise more than a year ago.

He lampooned Romney’s own economic proposals.

“Have a surplus? Try a tax cut. Deficit too high? Try another. Feel a cold coming on? Take two tax cuts, roll back some regulation­s and call us in the morning,” he said.

Mocking Romney for his overseas trip earlier this summer, Obama said, “You might not be ready for diplomacy with Beijing if you can’t visit the Olympics without insulting our closest ally.”

That was a reference to a verbal gaffe the former Massachuse­tts governor committed while visiting London.

The economy is by far the dominant issue in the campaign, and the difference­s between Obama and his challenger could hardly be more pronounced.

Romney wants to extend all tax cuts that are due to expire on Dec. 31 with an additional 20 percent reduction in rates across the board, arguing that job growth would result.

He also favors deep cuts in domestic programs ranging from education to parks, repeal of the health care legislatio­n that Obama pushed through Congress and landmark changes in Medicare, the program that provides health care to seniors.

Obama wants to renew the tax cuts except on incomes higher than $250,000, saying that millionair­es should contribute to an overall attack on federal deficits.

He also criticizes the spending cuts Romney advocates, saying they would fall unfairly on the poor, lower-income college students and others.

 ?? BRIAN BLANCO, EPA /LANDOV ?? President Barack Obama applauded Democratic delegates Thursday night as they cheered his appearance and speech. Obama acknowledg­ed the nation faces economic problems, but insisted “America has turned the corner.”
BRIAN BLANCO, EPA /LANDOV President Barack Obama applauded Democratic delegates Thursday night as they cheered his appearance and speech. Obama acknowledg­ed the nation faces economic problems, but insisted “America has turned the corner.”
 ?? CAROLYN KASTER /ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vice President Joe Biden looks up at the television monitor as he is nominated for a second term at Thursday’s Democratic National Convention.
CAROLYN KASTER /ASSOCIATED PRESS Vice President Joe Biden looks up at the television monitor as he is nominated for a second term at Thursday’s Democratic National Convention.

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