Cape Breton Post

Bill Clinton to nominate Obama in unusual bid to cheer voters tired of long U.S. recession

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Bill Clinton, the popular former president who oversaw America’s 1990s boom days, nominates Barack Obama for a second White House term Wednesday night, an unusual move by a Democratic Party determined to lift the spirits of voters who have lived through the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

Obama’s challenger, businessma­nturned-politician Mitt Romney, is seen by voters as better qualified to manage the country’s still-struggling economic recovery. Clinton has been assigned to change that.

Polls find Americans evenly split in what looks to be the closest U.S. presidenti­al election in recent memory. While the multimilli­onaire Romney has an edge on economic issues, Obama is seen as better able to relate to the needs of ordinary Americans.

The president arrived in the Democratic National Convention city Wednesday afternoon as he decided not to deliver his Thursday night acceptance speech at a 74,000-seat outdoor arena, citing bad weather. Instead, he’ll accept the nomination indoors at the convention site, which holds 15,000. The shift ensured there would be no repeat of the extraordin­ary scene from 2008, when Obama accepted the Democratic nomination in a packed 84,000-seat stadium.

Republican­s asked whether the venue change was for other reasons. “Problems filling the seats?” Republican spokeswoma­n Kirsten Kukowski said in a statement.

The president and his two daughters watched from the White House on Tuesday night as First Lady Michelle Obama ended the convention’s opening night with star power and a deeply personal, yet unmistakab­ly political, testimonia­l. “I have seen firsthand that being president doesn’t change who you are, it reveals who you are,” she said to huge cheers.

The first lady took the stage as the most popular figure in this year’s presidenti­al campaign. Michelle Obama earns higher favourabil­ity ratings than her husband or Romney, according to the latest Associated Press-GfK poll. And views of her tilt favourably among independen­ts and women, two focal points in her husband’s campaign for reelection.

She declared that after nearly four years as president, her husband is still the man who drove a rusty car on their early dates, rescued a coffee table from the trash and knows the struggles of everyday Americans because he lived them.

Romney was formally nominated at the Republican convention last week. His name appeared nowhere in Mrs. Obama’s remarks, but there was no mistaking the contrast she was drawing. She declared that “how hard you work matters more than how much you make, that helping others means more than just getting ahead yourself.”

Clinton’s nominating address, which highlights Wednesday’s events, was expected to mark the healing of a difficult relationsh­ip between the former and current presidents, who sparred in the 2008 Democratic primaries when Clinton was supporting his wife Hillary’s campaign for the party’s nomination.

Already, speaker after speaker have blasted the Republican challenger and his party.

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