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Showing posts with label Bill Clinton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Clinton. Show all posts

Tuesday, 11 September 2012

President Obama And Romney Prepare For Finish Line


WASHINGTON — U.S. presidential elections, like pro basketball or football games, are played in quarters; the Democrats just won the third, giving President Barack Obama a small, not decisive, advantage going into the final stretch.
Chalk this up mainly to Republican miscues: Mitt Romney’s flawed trip to Europe; the offensive comments about women by the Missouri Republican Senate candidate Todd Akin, and a missed opportunity to better define the election at the party’s convention in Tampa, Florida. With a little more than eight weeks left, and the Democrats riding a little momentum from their convention, Mr. Obama is where he wanted to be at this stage.
Almost certainly, however, this will be one of those close U.S. elections, like 1960, 1968, 1976 and 2000, that may not be settled until the closing days.
Over the last 40 years, the shape of most presidential races was evident in the September soundings after the convention. Two anomalies, as measured by the Gallup poll: Four years ago, when Senator John McCain of Arizona got a bump that even most Republicans knew wouldn’t last. And in 2000, when the Democratic nominee, Al Gore, again with a convention bump, had a lead (actually, Mr. Gore ended up winning the popular vote that year). The real outlier was 1980, when Ronald Reagan trailed Jimmy Carter by seven points in early September and ended up winning by almost 10 points; campaigns can matter.
Much of the calculations from the campaigns and the pundits centers on the four national debates, slated between Oct. 3 and Oct. 22. Yet, since Mr. Reagan, these debates have made a difference only when a candidate made a careless mistake — Michael Dukakis fumbling over what he would do if his wife were raped, George H.W. Bush looking at his watch, Mr. Gore sighing. John Kerry, most experts said, had the upper hand in the 2004 debates; his margin of defeat in November was identical to the September survey.
Mr. Obama and Mr. Romney, both very smart and very cautious, aren’t apt to make unforced errors. More important may be which camp sets the agenda over the next three and a half weeks.
Mr. Romney wants the conversation to be dominated by the nation’s persistent economic struggles — underscored by the weak jobs report last week — the fading American dream and the prospect of four more years of the same. The Republican candidate’s campaign seems intent on accentuating, not playing down, its vice-presidential nominee, Paul D. Ryan, and his economic prescriptions.
Mr. Obama wants to focus on the choice between whether to favor the middle class or the rich, whether to move forward with Bill Clinton-type policies or return to the George W. Bush years. The reliance on Bill Clinton, at the convention, in the Obama video and commercials, and on the stump, is striking.
The influence of money in this presidential campaign is exaggerated. The Obama campaign won’t enjoy the huge resource advantage it had four years ago; it will have plenty of funds to be competitive anywhere it chooses. The Republican advantage with outside money, perhaps decisive in congressional races, will have less impact on the presidential contest.
In a close election there are critical constituency groups. There is much chatter about the Republicans’ “gender gap” with women. Conversely, Mr. Obama has a gender gap with white males. He lost that vote 57 to 41 in 2008; this time, he probably needs to get three out of every eight of these voters.
Married women with children went 51 percent to 47 percent for the Democratic nominee last time. Both candidates need to carry that swing group, about 15 percent of the electorate. Suburban independents narrowly went for the Democrat last time and are an obvious battleground group.
If the fast-growing Latino vote turns out like it did in 2008, it’s bad news for Mr. Romney, who, as the San Antonio mayor, Julián Castro, said in his keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention, “just rubbed the Hispanic community the wrong way” with his immigration-bashing during the primaries.
Geographically, the most pitched battleground will be the Midwest. Rich Beeson, Mr. Romney’s political director, says the two states that have most come into play in the past few months are Iowa and Wisconsin, which had been considered reliably Democratic. Ohio, as usual, is prime real estate.
It is uncertain, too, which side will best turn out its voters. Team Obama points out that in 2008, more than half of new voter registration occurred after Labor Day and predicts a repeat performance this year.
The much-discussed electoral map, which only matters if it’s one of those close elections decided by a point or less, favors the president. It’s almost impossible to see Mr. Romney winning this election without carrying both Ohio and Florida.
One leading indicator over the next week, says the Democratic pollster Peter Hart, is the content of the television commercials. “If you see the Obama acceptance speech up, you know all that you need to know about the success of the speech” at the convention, he notes. “If not, the speech didn’t sell.” He says the Romney campaign, since Tampa, has gone back to running strictly attack ads.

EXPLORE: World News              Romney             Ann Romney                Paul Ryan     Obama            Todd Akin              Jillian Manus                
Akin's Apology 
   Obama's Remarks           White House            Medicare            U.S           Religion 
    CBO             Voters Undecided             Clint Eastwood              Bill Clinton


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

Sunday, 9 September 2012

Point By Point, Bill Clinton Supports Obama (Video)


CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Former President Bill Clinton grabbed the spotlight at the Democratic National Convention Wednesday night to recall the "roaring" economy of the 1990s and hold forth the promise of a new era of prosperity under President Obama.
Clinton, earning an onstage embrace from Obama at the conclusion of a 49-minute speech, urged an ecstatic, cheering crowd of Democrats to fight for the president's health care and economic stimulus plans, policies that almost certainly would be reversed with the election of Republican candidate Mitt Romney.
"When we vote in this election, we'll be deciding what kind of country we want to live in," Clinton, the party's popular elder statesman, said in one of the most animated speeches of his long public career. "If you want a winner-take-all 'you're-on-your-own' society, you should support the Republican ticket. If you want a country of shared opportunities and shared responsibility -- a we're-all-in-it-together' society -- you should vote for Barack Obama and Joe Biden."
Clinton's speech, an often ad-libbed point-by-point rebuttal of the GOP convention in Tampa, capped a night of withering critiques of Republican tax and budget policies by a Democrats, including Minnesota labor leader David Foster, who told the audience, "We don't need a president who fires steelworkers, or says, 'Let Detroit go bankrupt.'"
Century Fox Post Report:   CLINTON IS OBAMA'S MOST VALUABLE WEAPON
Clinton served as a reminder of the party unity that he helped forge after Obama defeated his wife, Hillary Clinton, in the 2008 Democratic primaries, a coalescing that paved the way to Obama's election and the appointment of the former first lady as secretary of state.
Clinton's speech, the most anticipated of the convention other than Obama's remarks Thursday, presented risks as well as validation for the president, who is presiding over a tepid economic recovery that Republicans hope will drive him from the White House.
Clinton's approval ratings are at his personal best, affording him a stature that some observers said could upstage Obama.
Despite the questions, Obama advisers believe the president could benefit from Clinton's forceful critique of Republican economic policies under former President George W. Bush, who left office amid a deep financial crisis.
"In Tampa ... the Republican argument against the president's re-election was pretty simple, pretty snappy," Clinton said. "'We left him a total mess, he hasn't cleaned it up fast enough, so fire him and put us back in.'"
'Upward trajectory'
As Clinton has stayed active in politics, he also has forged deep connections in Minnesota, where he addressed the Humphrey-Mondale Dinner last month to raise money and fire up state DFL Party activists, many of them now at the convention in Charlotte.
"I can't think of a better person to lay out not only what has happened in the past but how important it is for our country and our state to re-elect President Obama so that he can continue this upward trajectory of getting our country back on track," DFL Party Chair Ken Martin said.
To Democratic delegates from Minnesota and around the nation, Clinton also was a reminder of the good old days of Democratic victories.
"Bill Clinton proved himself to be a winner," said Bill Davis, a Democratic National Committeeman and co-chair of the DFL African-American Caucus. "He understands the economy, and he understands what it means to move the ball forward."
Recognizing Clinton's popularity, the Romney campaign responded with a statement contrasting his legacy with that of Obama.
"When it comes to the state of the economy, President Obama just can't match President Clinton," Romney spokeswoman Amanda Henneberg said. "Just this week, gas prices set a new record, the national debt topped $16 trillion, manufacturing slowed and the number of Americans on food stamps hit a record high."
Romney backers also note that Clinton has described Romney's business record as "sterling" and that he has differed with Obama on immediately repealing the Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy amid this year's economic malaise.
Anticipating a stirring Clinton endorsement of Obama, Romney surrogates such as former Minnesota Sen. Norm Coleman have been building up the narrative that the former president represents the past, not the future.
"Bill Clinton is up there talking about what he did in the 1990s," Coleman told Minnesota Republicans at their national convention in Tampa last week. "Well, somebody should remind [Obama] and Joe Biden that it's the 21st century."
'Looking at the future'
Despite GOP criticism, Democrats were eager to showcase one of their best cheerleaders during prime-time television.
"It's no accident that Democrats celebrate their past presidents, while Republicans virtually banish theirs," said U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer of New York.
Ben Finkenbinder, the Midwest press secretary for the Obama campaign, said Clinton's appearance reminded voters of "what the president's done to help the nation recover from the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression."
As Clinton praised Obama's efforts to reverse the economic slide he inherited from Bush, he also called out Romney's claims that the president has been trying to weaken the work requirements of Clinton's historic welfare reform law as a "doozy."
"The claim that President Obama weakened welfare reform's work requirement is just not true," he said. "But they keep running ads claiming it."
To many Democrats in Time Warner Cable Arena, Clinton still presented a model for growing an economy with tax policies and domestic programs that aid low-income and middle-class families, as well as small businesses.
"He's not just some blast from the past," Minnesota Democrat Amy Klobuchar, who appeared on the podium with other women Democrats in the U.S. Senate. "He's someone who has remained relevant."
Among those making a personal connection to the Clinton years was David Wellstone, the son of the late U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone. "I remember when Bill Clinton came out and campaigned with my dad, people said, 'Well, Bill Clinton is much more to the middle.'" But their common bond, Wellstone said, was that "they had this focus on the working families."
Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton, in Charlotte for the convention, recalled Clinton's speech in the Twin Cities last month. "There is nobody better at looking at the future and describing the future than President Clinton," he said.
Clinton's speech emphasizing Democratic unity came after an awkward moment of division arising from party leaders' decision to reinstate a controversial plank to the convention platform recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
Republicans have sought to portray Obama as a more left-leaning version of Clinton. But some Democrats say Clinton could also help embolden the president to more forcefully challenge Republicans in Congress, who have been largely unified in opposition to his agenda.
Said U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison, a Minnesotan who co-chairs the Congressional Progressive Caucus: "I think what Obama can learn from Clinton is to get in the room and mix it up in Congress.

EXPLORE: World News     Romney     Ann Romney     Paul Ryan     Obama   
Akin's Apology            Obama's Remarks          White House           Medicare         U.S      Religion             CBO             Voters Undecided           Clint Eastwood      



Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

Friday, 7 September 2012

Will President Obama Keep His Promises, This Time?



President Barack Obama addesses the DNC Thursday night in Charlotte, N.C.
CHARLOTTE — President Obama appealed to the nation Thursday night for another four years in office, asserting that his policies are slowly returning the country to economic prosperity while arguing that his Republican opponents would pursue a course that would set the country back and harm the well-being of middle-class families.


Obama said the choice between him and Republican Mitt Romney represents the clearest in a generation, a choice between sharply contrasting visions and political philosophies. But after entering office in January 2009 amid outsized expectations, he cautioned that the path he offers may be hard but will lead to “a better place.”

“The truth is, it will take more than a few years for us to solve challenges that have built up over decades,” he said. “It will require common effort, shared responsibility and the kind of bold, persistent experimentation that Franklin Roosevelt pursued during the only crisis worse than this one.”
Obama’s speech wrapped up a Democratic National Convention that combined a withering critique of Romney with a defense of the president’s record that Obama’s campaign team hopes will tip a closely fought election in their direction by November. Obama was aided immensely by the other two major speakers, first lady Michelle Obama and former president Bill Clinton.

“If you turn away now,” he said, “if you buy into the cynicism that the change we fought for isn’t possible, well, change will not happen. . . . Only you can make sure that doesn’t happen. Only you have the power to move us forward.”
Pointing to last week’s Republican convention in Tampa, Obama said the speakers there talked more about the country’s problems than about how they would fix them: “They want your vote, but they don’t want you to know their plan. And that’s because all they have to offer is the same prescription they’ve had for the last 30 years.”
Obama’s convention played out against the backdrop of a country still mired in problems caused by the huge financial and housing collapse four years ago this month. The economy’s weakness and the public’s dissatisfaction with Obama’s handling of it pose the greatest threat to his prospects for reelection.
Obama spoke with the jobless rate at 8.3 percent — the 42nd consecutive month it has been above 8 percent — and with the economy adding jobs at a slow pace for months. The latest monthly jobs report will be issued early Friday morning, but economists have forecast little dramatic change in the jobless rate between now and Election Day in November.
He spoke to criticism that his policies have led to a bigger role for government in the economy and people’s lives: “We don’t think government can solve all our problems. But we don’t think that government is the source of all our problems — any more than are welfare recipients, or corporations, or unions, or immigrants, or gays, or any other group we’re told to blame for our troubles.
Obama belittled the economic proposals of Romney and his running mate, Rep. Paul Ryan. He said Romney’s budget math doesn’t add up, and he vowed never to “turn Medicare into a voucher.” His second-term policies, he said, could cut $4 trillion out of the deficit over a decade, create a million manufacturing jobs by 2016, cut net oil imports in half by the end of the decade and reduce the growth of college tuition by 50 percent over the next 10 years.
Those goals are likely to be closely scrutinized by experts, given the fact that many of the objectives he laid out four years ago have not been met. Obama says that’s because of the depth of the problems he inherited. Republicans argue that it is because he has pursued policies that have made things worse.
He also was sharply critical of Romney’s foreign policy positions. “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. His opponents are “still stuck in a Cold War time warp,” he said, and he made fun of Romney’s recent foreign trip.
Vice President Biden used his acceptance speech to offer personal testimony about the president’s leadership and decision-making. “I’ve seen him tested,” he said. “I know his strength, his command, his faith. I also know the incredible confidence he has in all of you. . . . Yes, the work of recovery is not yet complete, but we are on our way. The journey of hope is not yet finished, but we are on our way. The cause of change is not fully accomplished, but we are on our way.”
Biden focused on two big decisions, the one to bail out the auto industry and the one to take out Osama bin Laden. He summed up Obama’s record, as he has before, by saying, “Osama bin Laden is dead, and General Motors is alive.
On autos, he said Obama went against the advice of some advisers and others and contrasted the president’s position with that of Romney’s.
Of Romney, he said: “I just don’t think he understood what saving the automobile industry meant — to all of America. I think he saw it the Bain way. I think he saw it in terms of balance sheets and write-offs. Folks, the Bain way may bring your firm the highest profit. But it’s not the way to lead your country from its highest office.”
The decision to go after bin Laden carried even greater risks, with many of the president’s most senior foreign policy advisers opposed. “Bravery resides in the heart of Barack Obama,” he said. “And time and time again, I witnessed him summon it. This man has courage in his soul, compassion in his heart and steel in his spine.
Biden was introduced by his wife, Jill. A few hours before he spoke, Biden was formally ratified as Obama’s running mate after his name was placed in nomination by his son Beau Biden, the attorney general of Delaware.
Sen. John F. Kerry (Mass.), who was the Democratic nominee eight years ago and gave Obama the keynote address that launched him on the national stage, spoke Thursday night in his capacity as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
Kerry said Obama has restored American credibility and moral authority abroad while keeping his promises to end the Iraq war and eliminate the threat posed by the al-Qaeda terrorist network that struck the country on Sept. 11, 2001. “Ask Osama bin Laden if he is better off now than he was four years ago,” he said.
Kerry argued that the choice in November is clear. “Will we protect our country and our allies, advance our interests and ideals, do battle where we must and make peace where we can?” he asked. “Or will we entrust our place in the world to someone who just hasn’t learned the lessons of the last decade?”
Kerry, who spoke just before a tribute to veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, ticked through a series of positions Romney has taken on different foreign policy crises. “Talk about being for it before you were against it!” he said, stealing a line of his own that was turned against him in his 2004 campaign. “Mr. Romney — here’s a little advice: Before you debate Barack Obama on foreign policy, you better finish the debate with yourself.”
The evening’s most poignant moment came just before 8 p.m., when Gabrielle Giffords, the former Arizona congresswoman who was shot and gravely wounded in January 2011, led the audience in the Pledge of Allegiance.
Giffords walked slowly across the stage unaided, accompanied by one of her closest friends in Congress, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who chairs the Democratic National Committee. Giffords recited the pledge with a strong, clear voice, and as delegates cheered and wiped away tears at the sight of her, she beamed a big smile back at them.
Speakers who appeared before the prime-time hour continued the pattern of the first two nights of the convention, appealing to crucial constituencies by warning that Republicans would take away abortion rights, or educational opportunity. Others skewered Romney as a wealthy, out-of-touch businessman whose record does not match his campaign’s claims that he knows how to turn around the economy.

More :    ROMNEY AND OBAMA ALL SET TO STAMP ON EACH OTHER FOR WHITE HOUSE RACE


Former Michigan governor Jennifer Granholm, shouting and pumping her fists through most of her speech, brought the audience to a fever pitch by attacking Romney for his opposition to the auto bailout. In a reference to the renovation of Romney’s California home, she said, “In Romney’s world, the cars get the elevator and the workers get the shaft.”
Obama spoke in the Time Warner Cable Arena after convention organizers scrubbed plans to hold Thursday’s program in the Bank of America outdoor football stadium. Forecasts for more rain and potentially severe weather forced the change in venue. Rain pelted downtown Charlotte on Thursday afternoon, but the skies cleared later in the day.
EXPLORE: World News         Romney          Ann Romney            Paul Ryan       Obama          Obama's Remarks         White House          Medicare           U.S      Religion        CBO           Voters Undecided         Clint Eastwood          Bill Clinton



Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

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