President Barack Obama addresses the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina
THE TICKET
President Barack Obama, transformed from inspiring hope-and-change
candidate into struggling stay-the-course incumbent, promised Americans
wary of giving him another term that "our problems can be solved" if
only they will give him for more years.
"Know this, America: Our problems can be solved," he told thousands of
delegates to the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C. "Our
challenges can be met. The path we offer may be harder, but it leads to a
better place. And I'm asking you to choose that future."
His appeal aimed to build on a rousing speech from Michelle Obama and
former president Bill Clinton. The first lady assured disenchanted
voters who backed her husband in 2008 but are wary or wavering today
that four years of political knife fights and hard compromises had not
stripped her husband of his moral core. And Clinton cast the current
president as the heir to the policies that charged the economy of the
1990s and yielded government surpluses, reports The Ticket.
"I won't pretend the path I'm offering is quick or easy. I never have,"
Obama told the cheering crowd in Time Cable Warner Arena and a
television audience expected to number in the tens of millions. "You
didn't elect me to tell you what you wanted to hear. You elected me to
tell you the truth. And the truth is, it will take more than a few years
for us to solve challenges that have built up over a decade."
Obama's main vulnerability is the still-sputtering economy, with
stubbornly high unemployment at 8.3 percent nearly four years after he
took office vowing to restore it to health. In Charlotte, he ridiculed
the Republican approach championed by Mitt Romney.
"All they have to offer is the same prescriptions they've had for the
last thirty years: 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, to laughter and
cheers from the crowd.
And it was with ridicule, too, that he portrayed Romney and vice
presidential candidate Paul Ryan as heirs to George W. Bush's foreign
policy, and unfit to manage America's relations with the world.
"My opponent and his running mate are new to foreign policy, but from
all that we've seen and heard, they want to take us back to an era of
blustering and blundering that cost America so dearly," he said.
"After all, you don't call Russia our number one enemy—not al Qaeda,
Russia—unless you're still stuck in a Cold War mind warp, he said.
"You might not be ready for diplomacy with Beijing if you can't visit
the Olympics without insulting our closest ally. My opponent said it
was "tragic" to end the war in Iraq, and he won't tell us how he'll end
the war in Afghanistan. I have, and I will." (In fact, Romney has
supported an Obama-endorsed, NATO-approved timetable to withdraw the
alliance's combat troops by the end of 2014.)
The speech reflected Obama's drive to convince voters to see the
election as a choice, not a referendum on an embattled incumbent whose
job approval ratings are below the 50-percent mark, a traditional danger
zone.
"On every issue, the choice you face won't be just between two
candidates or two parties. It will be a choice between two different
paths for America. A choice between two fundamentally different visions
for the future," he said.
At the same time, he did not spell out in detail his plans for a second
term should he get one -- even as he acknowledged that he is not the
candidate he was when he made his history-making 2008 drive for the
White House.
"You know, I recognize that times have changed since I first spoke to
this convention. Times have changed — and so have I," he said. "If you
turn away now — if you buy into the cynicism that the change we fought
for isn't possible, well, change will not happen."
Obama's speech came after an evening studded with stars, from
Hollywood's Scarlett Johansson, who pressed young voters to register and
cast ballots in November, to James Taylor, who quipped: "I'm an old
white guy and I love Barack Obama" in between renditions of his folksy
classics. And he was preceded onstage by Vice President Joe Biden, who
gave a long-form version of this memorable re-election slogan: "Osama
Bin Laden is dead, and General Motors is alive."
In addition to the economy, the president highlighted his support for
access to abortion, and offered his longest remarks on the fight against
climate change in recent memory.
"Yes, my plan will continue to reduce the carbon pollution that is
heating our planet — because climate change is not a hoax. More
droughts and floods and wildfires are not a joke. They're a threat to
our children's future. And in this election, you can do something about
it."
Obama had moved his speech from nearby Bank of America Stadium into the
Time Warner Cable Arena citing concerns about the weather. Republicans
charged he merely feared not being able to fill the 74,000-seat space.
Democrats countered that they had more than 65,000 ticket holders.
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