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Dublin: 12 °C Tuesday 21 May, 2013

US 2012: Clinton backs Barack Obama

The former President of America spoke at the Democratic convention yesterday, reaffirming his support for Obama.

Image: AP Photo/David Goldman

FORMER PRESIDENT BILL Clinton’s speech to the Democratic convention served as a high-energy validation of President Barack Obama’s policies — and may also have started setting the stage for another White House bid by his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton.

In a wide-ranging address that mixed policy details with political points, Clinton portrayed Obama as a sensible pragmatist who had put aside any political grudges for the good of the country.

Clinton said to loud cheers and a standing ovation:

He appointed Cabinet members who supported Hillary in the primaries. Heck, he even appointed Hillary!
I’m so proud of her and grateful to our entire national security team.

Obama bested Hillary Clinton in a months-long battle for the Democratic nomination in 2008 that left considerable bitterness on both sides. Clinton’s endorsement of his wife’s erstwhile rival and willingness to put Obama’s name in nomination represented the final reconciliation between the Democratic heavyweights.

Hillary Clinton

As America’s top diplomat, the former first lady cannot participate in politics. She was on a mission to Asia on Wednesday, leaving her husband and daughter, Chelsea, to represent her in Charlotte.

Chelsea Clinton, now a special correspondent for NBC News, led a panel on civic engagement for youth before listening to her father’s speech in the convention hall.

At a news conference in East Timor, Hillary Clinton said he had read parts of her husband’s speech. “It is a great honor for him to be nominating the president,” she said. “This is the first convention I’ve missed in many, many years.”

Later, the former first lady watched the speech online while at the home of the US ambassador.

“It was great,” Hillary Clinton told reporters aboard her plane as she prepared to leave East Timor.

The former president didn’t mention his wife again, but the subtext was clear: The Clintons remain a force to be reckoned with in the Democratic Party.

Reaffirm support

Bill Clinton took his time, using the 50-minute speech both to reaffirm his support for Obama and to remind voters of the robust economy he presided over during two terms in the White House with Hillary Clinton prominently by his side.

In nominating Obama as the Democratic standard-bearer, Clinton said the president began the long road to recovery and has laid the foundation for a stronger economy.

As Obama listened with delegates to the Democratic convention, Clinton said Americans have a choice between the winner-take-all society supported by Republicans and a Democratic vision of shared responsibility and prosperity.

Clinton, rebutting the Republican contention that the economy has worsened under Obama, said Republicans would return to the failed policies of the past. He posed his own version of the Republicans’ “Are you better off?” question:

What kind of country do you want to live in?

Clinton said that is the most important question facing the nation as it decides whether to return Obama to the White House or replace him with Republican Mitt Romney.

If you want a ‘you’re-on-your-own, winner-take-all’ society, you should support the Republican ticket. If you want a country of shared prosperity and shared responsibility — a we’re-all-in-this-together society — you should vote for Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Clinton said Obama inherited a damaged economy and “put a floor under the crash.” He said he then laid the foundation for a more balanced economy that will produce millions of jobs, new businesses and riches to innovators.

Clinton appeared at the convention as Obama’s top validator — an antidote to Republican claims that Obama has made the economy worse and a reminder of a recent period in history when the economy boomed.

The Obama campaign sent out a fundraising email under Clinton’s name Wednesday. The message: “It is absolutely urgent we win this election.”

Earlier, Clinton told NBC News he was not trying to promote another presidential campaign for his wife, who will be 69 in 2016.

We’re not kids anymore. I don’t have any idea if she’ll ever run again. She says she won’t.

Hillary Clinton’s popularity has soared since her bruising campaign against Obama, and she would begin the 2016 nomination contest as a heavy favorite if she were to pursue it.

After Clinton finished his speech, several former aides to Clinton hugged and slapped high-fives in the back of the arena. Longtime adviser Harold Ickes beamed with pride.

He knows how to make the case. I’ve seen him make the case even when he doesn’t have much to work with. He has a lot to work with. “He made a very powerful case for re-election.

Obama’s speech tonight been moved from an outdoor stadium, with 74k capacity, to an indoor one with 20k capacity. The official reason for the move is weather, but it has raised concerns about his ability to draw a crowd.

Read: He’s her man: First Lady praises husband Barack Obama during prime-time speech>

Read: President Obama: “I need you to stand with me, Ohio”>

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Comments (31 Comments)

  • Good man Bill. I notice the Republican party didn’t roll out former president G.W. Bush out to endorse their candidate. Wonder why that is? ;)

    Reply
    • No, Obama gets a liar and a person that cheats on his wife.

      Reply
    • And his infidelities affect anyone besides Hillary how……?

      It is shocking, truly shocking that Bills penis is in some way responsible for this mess.
      All the prosperity, all the good he did would have guaranteed Gore the presidency in 2000 but people decided to vote on Clinton’s mickey instead of his record.
      Americas obsession with family values is terrifying especially when 1 in 2 marriages end in divorce.
      If you think of it that pretty much precludes 50% of the population ever running for president.
      Never mind the historical symbolism of a black man, a woman or a hispanic ever becoming president , when a divorcee becomes president thats when we will know America has really grown up

      Reply
    • Would you use that excuse on your partner? “sorry love but half of marriages break up anyway so I havent done anything wrong”. I know a guy that once tried an excuse that he was in a different when he was caught out Youre almost as comical as him.

      Reply
    • Reg, Ronald Reagan was divorced. Nancy Reagan was his second wife

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    • Great to see felix that you lead such an extraordinarily striaght laced life that you have not made mistakes or done anything that might be the least bit stupid or have any faults at all.

      Everyone has flaws and faults, the sum total of someone makes them the person they are and Bill Clintons ability to connect and understand the needs of those less well off and to put himself deeply into all the crisies that happened during his presidency made him a good President.

      Reply
    • Gerry of course I make mistakes, who doesnt? But doing the dirty on someone youre meant to love isnt counted as a mistake, no one ever tripped and fell out of their clothes into bed with someone else. Or an I just doing it wrong?

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    • Felix, it happens all the time, to all sorts of families, but it is just one part of someones character. I think that it has little to do with his politics or political ability and certainly nothing to do with his record, one which we in this island should be grateful for after all his work in helping make the peace in Northern Ireland a reality. If Hillary has moved on surely you should.

      Reply
  • I watched the speech and it was a great speech. Clinton summed up the economic situation in tge united states perfectly. He blew the republicans off the map. Nobody should deny that.

    Reply
  • Clinton’s speech was a cracker. one of the best of his career, If only Presidents were still allowed to serve more than 2 terms I’d like to see Clinton back in the White House he’s got better with age

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  • Polifact have been rating all the facts Clinton used in his speech last night, with all of them coming in as “very true”. Compared this to many of the speeches last week when republican “facts” were getting ratings anywhere from “half truth” down as far as “liar liar pants on fire”. Hopefully this turns out to be one of elections that is won by good solid facts rather than lies, fear mongering and hatred.

    Reply
  • So, Romney supporters want to compare one man’s infidelity, to putting millions out of work, killing and seriously maiming thousands in Iraq etc and every other black mark on Bush’s record? Yeah right. How you can equate the two in your heads, I cannot fathom.

    It is better to send thousands of US soldiers to their death, than cheating on your wife. Not to mention that it’s a matter between Bill and Hillary. Sanity wept.

    Bill’s skill and prowess on the stage was second to none. A class act. He debunked the Romney Ryan lies. Faux ‘news’ have 2 gripes with his speech.
    1. Too long. (attention span of less than 20 mins)
    2. Too many facts. (difficult to digest, with rusty, bigoted cog wheels)

    His speech took longer because he had to inform the electorate of all the misinformation they had been fed by the Ryan Romney campaign. The more lies, the more time he needed to put the record straight.

    Ryan Romney will have to come up with some new untruths. Maybe they could say that Obama and Jack the Ripper are pen pals? Too crazy? Nothing’s too crazy for the Tea Party.

    Reply
    • People should bare in mind though that this “Tea Party Mentality” is something that only has its roots in the 1980’s with Reagan and his advisors and the beginnings of the neo-con movement. There is a significant portion of the Republican party that are moderate people, Mitt Romney ironically enough being one of them. However the pure hatred and loud mouthed brashness of those over on the far-right, represented by the likes of Pat Buchanan, Michelle Bachmann and Sarah Palin etc. has scared these people into silence. The moderates need to realise that by rendering control of the Republican Party to the extremists, they won’t stand a chance of ever getting into the White House again.

      Reply
    • Romney is capable of anything crazy, since he believes in mormonism. It’s far too easy to attack so I won’t bother.

      Correct me if I’m wrong here, but isn’t he planning on lowering taxes on the rich (trickle down economics for him and his buddies Koch and adelson) and taking money from the poor and middle class? Giving to the 1% and taking from the 99%. This does not seem like a winning strategy, politically, using basic arithmetic.

      I understand that there are Republicans (RINO’s) who are far, far left of the mad hatters’ Tea Party. I heard about Republicans for Obama on a podcast. They have a website and a FB page.

      Clinton called out Mitch McConnell on his obstructionism quote: “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.”

      The country is in dire straits and all they (GOP) could think about was how much they personally disliked Obama. They are children. Traitors. Shysters. Crooks.

      Reply
    • @ Val: Very true. US parties are broad coalitions, which really encompass a lot of different types of party.

      I read an estimate that only 25-30% of Republicans are also Tea Party members, but that they have a higher voting record and more money. This has given them their power since 2008 and has meant that any Republican in a close race seeking to be elected had had to change their positions – just like Romney.

      Many moderates dislike the Tea Party movement, but they did make significant electoral gains in 2010. However if Romney loses I would think that the moderates might reassert themselves and try to take back their party.

      Reply
    • @ Kevin – Very true that Romney is in favour of those things, but those measures are very close to the center. He also has been forced to go back or hide some of his most fundamental beliefs such as there being some cases abortion is acceptable and medicare by those on the far right.

      He wants to cut taxes for the rich, keep abortion in certain cases and have a state run medical program such as the one he set up in Massachusetts.

      Those on the far right who have usurped the party want to ban the teaching of evolution in schools, ban abortion in all cases and remove government and its legislation which in the end will hand the reigns of power over to those funding them, who happen to be some of the most powerful corporation in the world, which will make them free to do as they please even more so than now.

      Reply
    • John McCain is the prime example of a moderate Republican – see his response to a woman who claimed Obama was an Arab on the road during the 2008 election run in, as well as how he told Sarah Palin she had to save the Republican Party from the extremists without realising she was one of them.

      Reply
  • Seems to be as simple as a choice between a rock & a hard place…………..

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  • I’m paraphrasing, but didn’t Clinton once say of Obama “there was a time when he would have been carrying my bags” when he was looking for the presidential nomination himself?

    Reply
  • The backing of a sexual deviant…kudos.

    Reply
  • 2 soon to be ex presidents.

    Reply
  • Republic vs Democrat…nasty globocop vs nice globocop….Siamese twins doing a double-act for the Pentagonian/Nato empire…wakey wakey…Hillary wears the trousers, always did. She’s AIPAC’s tool. next stop Iran…whether its Mitt or Obambi driving..just like here…when the electorate start to get pissed off with the cute hoorism of Bertie..we get the new shiny Enda to implemnent the same policies. Complete with pink stamp from our Labour pension-chasers.

    Reply
  • Colour me shocked! I thought he was going to support Mitt the twit

    Reply

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