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  • Romney turns up intensity on day one of fall sprint

    Brian Snyder / Reuters

    Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney takes questions from reporters Friday at the airport in Sergeant Bluff, Iowa.

    ABOARD THE ROMNEY CAMPAIGN PLANE -- After a week of debate prep and minimal campaigning while Democrats soaked up the political spotlight in Charlotte, N.C., Mitt Romney on Friday opened day one of the fall campaign sprint to Nov. 6 by launching himself out of the starting blocks like Usain Bolt at the Olympics.

    Aided by access to an ever-growing pot of general election money, the former Massachusetts governor's campaign announced Friday it was taking to the airwaves with no fewer than 15 new television ads in eight swing states.


    When the tepid August jobs report numbers were announced at 8:30 a.m. Friday, Romney aides told reporters he'd make himself available for a morning press conference, a rarity for the traveling press following either candidate this cycle. That session with reporters would ultimately be crammed in on the tarmac in Sioux City, Iowa, between Romney's one-on-one interview with Fox News' Brett Baier and the first of two large swing-state rallies of the day.

    At his rally in Orange City, in a deeply conservative corner of Iowa carried easily by Rick Santorum in January's caucuses, Romney hammered the president for an "extraordinarily disappointing" convention speech, and tried to offer his own hopeful take on the nation's future.

    "I know there’s a lot of bad news out there, but I’m looking beyond the bad news," Romney said. "I’m looking over the hill and seeing what’s going to happen just down the road just a bit. And what’s going to happen is America’s about to come roaring back. I’m absolutely convinced."

    Friday evening, Romney was scheduled to host another rally in New Hampshire in a baseball stadium, inviting direct comparison with President Barack Obama, who also held a rally in the Granite State Friday morning.

    The full court press continues this weekend, when Romney will attend a rally in Virginia and take in a NASCAR race. On Sunday, Romney will appear in an exclusive interview on NBC's “Meet the Press,” his first appearance on the most-watched Sunday public affairs show since announcing his second run for president. Viewers who change the channel to ABC or CBS will find interviews with Rep. Paul Ryan, Romney's running mate, who Friday held his own rally in Sparks, Nev.

    With 60 days to go, it’s a marathon, and a sprint.

  • Romney attacks Obama on convention speech and jobs numbers

    Evan Vucci / AP

    Republican presidential candidate greets supporters Friday during a campaign rally in Orange City, Iowa.

    ORANGE CITY, Iowa -- In his first rally since President Barack Obama accepted the Democratic nomination for president, Mitt Romney on Friday called Obama's speech in Charlotte, N.C., "extraordinarily disappointing" and castigated Obama for not proposing how to solve joblessness.

    "I read that this morning, you perhaps got the chance to do that," Romney said of the speech, suggesting he didn't watch the event live on television Thursday night.

    "But if you did, perhaps like me you found it extraordinary disappointing -- surprisingly disappointing," Romney continued, adding later, "I was surprised by his address because I expected him to confront the major challenges of the last four years, which is an economy which has not produced the jobs that the American people need."


    Romney made the remarks to several thousand people inside a basketball gym at Northwestern College, a small Christian liberal arts school here in conservative northwest Iowa.

    Campaign officials said 2,600 people were inside the gym, and another 800 to 1000 people were inside an overflow room, which Romney visited briefly afterward.

    The event came on the same day the Labor Department released a sour jobs report showing employers added 96,000 jobs in August and that more than 350,000 people had stopped looking for work.

    "It’s just simply unimaginable," Romney said of the numbers.  "The president said that by this time we’d be at 5.4 percent unemployment. 5.4 percent. Instead, we’re at about 8 percent."

    Romney said the difference accounts for 9 million people who could be working.

    Earlier Friday, Romney called the report a "hangover" after the Democrats' "party" in Charlotte.

    "This is a tough time for the middle class of America," Romney told reporters on a tarmac in Sioux City.  "There's almost nothing the president has done in the past three and a half, four years that gives the American people confidence that he knows what he's doing when it comes to jobs and the economy."

    Before Romney took the stage here in Orange City, campaign aides tossed to the crowd blue foam gloves designed to look like baseball mitts. 

    A scoreboard inside the gym had been programmed to list one team as "Mitt" and the other "Romney."  Scores were listed as 11 and 6, a reference to the Nov. 6 general election.

    Romney was introduced by two Iowa Republicans, Gov. Terry Branstad and Rep. Steve King, who represents the 5th district here and is running for re-election.

    Making an apparent pitch for Romney's conservative credentials, King told the crowd that Obama "undermines" the values of northwest Iowa "day after day after day."

    "Don't doubt this man's faith. Don't doubt his conviction," King said of Romney.  "Do not doubt his patriotism or his faith, and his love for Jesus Christ, our savior."

    Romney later urged the crowd inside the overflow room to re-elect King.

    "I wanna make sure he's in Washington when I get there so we can do the things we're promising doing," Romney said.

  • Paul Ryan on Obama: Good at speeches, 'really bad at creating jobs'

    Cathleen Allison / AP

    Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan greets the crowd at Peterbilt Truck & Parts Equipment in Sparks, Nev., on Friday.

    SPARKS, Nev. -- Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan continued his harsh words for President Barack Obama and the Democrats Friday while campaigning in the battleground state of Nevada on the day the most recent jobs numbers were released.

    “President Obama is not a bad guy. He's good at giving great speeches, he's just really bad at creating jobs,” Ryan told the crowd outside Peterbilt Truck Parts & Equipment.

    Friday morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced the US economy added just 96,000 jobs, which was below expectations and the unemployment rate dropped from 8.3 percent to 8.1 percent.


    "We got some pretty disappointing news just today,” the House Budget Chairman said in front of roughly 1,400 people. “You know we learned today that for every person that got a job, nearly four people stopped looking for a job. They gave up. We can’t keep doing this.”

    Ryan continued: “Our economy needs to create just 150,000 jobs every month just to keep up with the growth of our population. Friends, this is not an economic recovery, this is nowhere close to an economic recovery. We need a new president, and we need a real economic recovery.”

    Friday’s event outside of Reno marked the seven-term Wisconsin congressman’s second public event in the Silver State since being tapped as Mitt Romney’s running mate in early August. Ryan reminded the crowd, surrounded by truck cabs, just how crucial their vote on Nov. 6 is.

    “Nevadans you know this. You have a lot of power in your hands … you're a battleground state,” he said. “That means you have a very special responsibility. Lots of people around the country are depending on you. You also have a great opportunity. Because if we meet this moment for what it is, we can get ourselves back on the right track.”

    Ryan will now turn his full attention to fundraising while on the West Coast. He holds a pair of private fundraisers Friday night in the San Francisco area and then will be in Fresno, Calif., Saturday before heading to Portland, Ore., and Seattle on Monday.

  • Obama touts bright spot in disappointing jobs report

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    President Barack Obama greets supporters Friday during a campaign event at Strawbery Banke Museum in Portsmouth, N.H.

    President Barack Obama traveled to Portsmouth, N.H., looking to maintain the momentum from his Thursday night Democratic convention address despite a disappointing jobs report released Friday morning.

    Trying not to put too much of a damper on the event – his first since his convention prime-time acceptance speech -- the president sought to put a positive light on the jobs report, which showed a lower-than-expected 96,000 jobs created in August and an 8.1 percent unemployment rate.

    “Today we learned that after losing around 800,000 jobs a month when I took office, business once again added jobs for the 30th month in a row,” he told the 6,000-person crowd at the Strawbery Banke Museum.


    “But that's not good enough,” he continued. “We need to create more jobs faster. We need to fill the hole left by this recession faster.  We need to come out of this crisis stronger than when we went in.”

    He spent much of the rest of his speech hitting similar notes as he did Thursday night – explaining in broad, aspirational language his goals for a second term, including adding a million jobs over the next four years; cutting oil imports in half by 2020; improving access to education and overhauling the tax code.

    He also, as he did Thursday night, ridiculed Republicans for what he said was a plan that relied solely on tax cuts for the wealthy intended to encourage economic growth among lower-income people.

    “All they've got to offer is the same prescriptions that they've had for the last 30 years:  tax cuts, tax cuts, gut some regulations -- oh, and more tax cuts,” he said. “Tax cuts when times are good, tax cuts when times are bad, tax cuts to help you lose a few extra pounds -- (laughter) –  tax cuts to improve your love life -- I -- it'll cure anything, according to them,” he joked.

    It was a similar line to one he used Thursday night, when he also characterized Republicans as depending on tax cuts as a cure-all.

    “Feel a cold coming on? Take two tax cuts, roll back some regulations and call me in the morning,” he joked at the Time Warner Cable arena in Charlotte, N.C., at the convention.

    On the flight from Charlotte to Portsmouth, White House senior adviser David Plouffe downplayed any sort of positive effect the convention would have on the president’s standing in the polls.

    “We come out of the convention with momentum. That doesn't mean the race is going to change significantly. But we think that we come out of here with some momentum in terms of putting together the electoral picture,” he told reporters traveling on the president’s plane.

    Obama went on to Iowa City, Iowa, where he was to address students at the University of Iowa. He will then travel to St. Petersburg, Fla., where on Saturday he will kick off a two-day bus tour.

  • First Thoughts: Obama makes his case

    Obama makes his case… He does it by setting up the choice, trying to turn Romney into a punch line, and arguing that now isn’t the time to change horses… Who won the last two weeks? Hard not to conclude that it was Obama and the Dems… But who won the jobs report? Hard not to think it was Romney and the GOP... The economy added 96,000 jobs but unemployment rate drops to 8.1%...  What Obama accomplished and didn’t accomplish… Romney’s new TV ad blitz… And both Obama and Romney stump in Iowa and New Hampshire.

    The Daily Rundown's Chuck Todd talks about President Barack Obama's DNC speech Thursday night in comparison to his previous ones.

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- It probably won’t go down as one of his most memorable or poetic addresses, but President Obama’s acceptance speech last night served several purposes -- it attempted to rally his base, tried to take advantage of the opening his opponent left for him, and it looked to define the election as a choice. Motivating his supporters two months before Election Day, Obama 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. If you give up on the idea that your voice can make a difference, then other voices will fill the void.” He seized on Romney not mentioning Afghanistan last week, and he devoted a larger-than-expected share of the night to national security. “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.” And after Romney’s very nostalgic speech that focused on the past, Obama’s address concentrated mostly on the future. “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.”

    *** Setting up the choice, turning Romney into a punch line, and arguing that now isn’t the time to change horses: Obama did a few more things in his speech. He attempted to make the case this is a choice election, using the words “choice” or “choose” more than 20 times. “The choice you face won’t just be between two candidates or two parties. It will be a choice between two different paths for America.” He tried to turn Romney into a punch line. “You don't call Russia our number one enemy -- and not al Qaeda -- unless you're still stuck in a Cold War time warp,” he said. “You might not be ready for diplomacy with Beijing if you can't visit the Olympics without insulting our closest ally.” And Obama argued that now isn’t the time to change horses. “The truth is, it will take more than a few years for us to solve challenges that have built up over decades. It will require common effort, shared responsibility.” 

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    Democratic presidential candidate, U.S. President Barack Obama waves on stage during the final day of the Democratic National Convention at Time Warner Cable Arena on September 6, 2012 in Charlotte, North Carolina.

    *** Who won the last two weeks? The answer: Obama and the Dems:  Last week, the consensus was that Mitt Romney gave a good speech for Romney... Today, some are judging Obama on not meeting the height of past speeches, as well as this week’s other addresses by Michelle Obama and Bill Clinton. But when you compare Romney’s speech with Obama’s and the GOP convention vs. the Dem convention, it’s easy to conclude that Obama and the Democrats won the past two weeks. Indeed, maybe the best way to judge the Democratic convention isn’t by Obama’s speech last night but rather by the whole three days. You saw the building up of Obama the man by Michelle; the contrast and the economic narrative from Bill Clinton; and the way forward from Obama. Another way to look at it -- Michelle put down the building blocks, Clinton put up the walls, and Obama put on the roof. Beyond a concerted effort to make Romney more likeable, you didn’t see the same thing last week in Tampa. And now we head to the post-convention polls, and perhaps the best way to look at any bounce isn’t by the head-to-head numbers, but rather by what each side set out to do. So for Romney, let’s look to see if his favorability numbers increase. And for Obama, let’s see if those enthusiasm/interest numbers go up.  

    *** Who won the jobs report? The answer: Romney and the GOP: But the last two weeks aren’t over, and that brings us to today’s other big story: the August job numbers. The economy added 96,000 jobs, which was below expectations. But the unemployment rate dropped from 8.3% to 8.1%. It was four years ago when, the morning after Barack Obama’s acceptance speech in Denver, John McCain announced his selection of Sarah Palin, which quickly changed the story. And history repeats itself today with another big story -- the monthly jobs coming -- coming the morning after Obama’s acceptance speech here last night. Expect the job numbers to be the backdrop of Obama and Romney both criss-crossing between Iowa and New Hampshire today, with the president stumping in the Granite State first and then heading to the Hawkeye State, while Romney starts in Iowa and ends in New Hampshire. 

    *** What Obama accomplished (and what he didn’t): Returning to Obama’s speech last night, we listed four challenges that he needed to meet. First, convince viewers his economic policies are better than Romney’s. On that score, he definitely made the case that the Romney/GOP approach on tax cuts, less regulation isn’t the way to go. But he didn’t persuasively argue that his approach is the best. (However, Clinton probably made that point for him the night before.) Second, describe how he would break the partisan fever in Washington. But he didn’t address this at all, and it might have been the speech’s biggest shortcoming (although one of his messages last night was how the bottom up can create change). Third, lay out what he could achieve in a second term. On that score, Obama pointed to several concrete -- if not necessarily new -- things. Examples: boost manufacturing by rewarding companies that create jobs in the U.S., recruit 100,000 new math and science teachers in the next 10 years, reduce debt based on the principles of the Simpson-Bowles commission. And fourth, rekindle enthusiasm and excitement, which might have turned out to be the biggest accomplishment from his speech and the three-day convention. 

    *** Romney’s new ad blitz: Meanwhile, not too long after Obama finished his remarks last night, the Romney campaign unveiled 15 new TV ads in eight battleground states. Here’s a sampling of these new ads -- on the looming defense cuts, on the deficit/debt, and on standing up to China. But here’s perhaps the biggest conclusion from these new TV ads: The eight states don’t include Michigan, Pennsylvania, or Wisconsin. Rather they’re the usual Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, and Virginia. After all the conventions, after all the advertising, and after all the events of the past few months, the battleground hasn’t changed. If Romney concedes Wisconsin to the president, Romney would win seven of these eight battleground states and still lose the Electoral College if he loses Florida. Think about that… 

    *** On the trail: Obama departs Charlotte on Air Force One at 10:00 am ET and holds a rally in Portsmouth, NH at 12:20 pm ET (with Michelle Obama, Joe Biden, and Jill Biden), and they hold another rally in Iowa City, IA at 6:20 pm ET… Romney stumps in Orange City, IA at 1:00 pm ET and then rallies in Nashua, NH at 7:10 pm ET… Paul Ryan campaigns in Nevada… And Ann Romney hits Leesburg, VA.

    *** Romney to appear on “Meet”: On Sunday, NBC’s David Gregory will interview Romney on “Meet the Press.”

    Countdown to 1st presidential debate: 26 days
    Countdown to VP debate: 34 days
    Countdown to 2nd presidential debate: 39 days
    Countdown to 3rd presidential debate: 45 days
    Countdown to Election Day: 60 days

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  • Programming notes

    *** Friday’s “Jansing & Co.” line-up: MSNBC’s Chris Jansing interviews Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO), Democratic pollster Celinda Lake, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders (I), the Washington Post’s Anne Kornblut, National Journal’s Major Garrett, Democratic strategist Chris Kofinis and  GOP strategist Rich Galen, and the Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler.

    *** Friday's “MSNBC Live with Thomas Roberts” line-up: MSNBC’s Thomas Roberts talks with Power Panelists Karen Finney, Susan Del Percio and Matt Miller.  CNBC’s Ron Insana and Jared Bernstein breaks down the August jobs Report.  Ret. General Wesley Clark talks Obama and foreign policy.

    *** Friday’s “NOW with Alex Wagner” line-up: Alex Wagner’s guests include New York Magazine National Affairs Editor John Heilemann, Bloomberg Businessweek Editor Josh Tyrangiel, CNBC’s Eamon Javers, Radio Host Kurt Andersen, Demos Vice President Heather McGhee, and Inside the Actors Studio’s James Lipton

    *** Friday’s “Andrea Mitchell Reports” line-up: NBC’s Andrea Mitchell interviews Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA), pollster Peter Hart, Time’s Michael Duffy, ghe Washington Post’s Ruth Marcus, Dem strategist and speechwriter Bob Shrum, The Economist’s Greg Ip, and NBC’s Peter Alexander and Kristen Welker on the campaign trail.

    *** Friday’s “News Nation with Tamron Hall” line-up: MSNBC’s Tamron Hall interviews Dem strategist David Goodfriend, GOP strategist Chip Saltsman, The Hill’s AB Stoddard, Michael Smerconish and Zachary Karabell.

    *** Saturday’s and Sunday’s “Weekends with Alex Witt”: In advance of the 9-11 anniversary, Alex Witt’s weekly “Office Politics” segment is with MSNBC Terrorism Analyst Evan Kohlmann.

     

  • 'Hopeful' Obama asks for four more years

     

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- After nearly four years in office, President Barack Obama asked America on Thursday night to give him a second term, in a speech reaching back to the touchstone of "hope and change" that propelled him to the White House in 2008, while also acknowledging the unfinished work in achieving that promise.

    President Barack Obama accepts the Democratic presidential nomination and addresses the DNC, Thursday, in Charlotte, N.C.

    In his formal acceptance speech, the president embraced the contrast that his party had tried to draw between himself and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney throughout this week’s Democratic National Convention. Obama said the GOP only offered voters the “same prescription they’ve had for the last thirty years,” and laid out policies that he said would move America in the direction of Obama’s campaign theme: “Forward.”

    "I recognize that times have changed since I first spoke to this convention. The times have changed ... I’m no longer just a candidate. I’m the president," Obama told the crowd at Charlotte's Time Warner Cable Arena, where his speech was moved after weather concerns disrupted plans for an outdoor event.

    Slideshow: Democratic National Convention

    “But as I stand here tonight, I have never been more hopeful about America,” the president added, in a line emblematic of his efforts to once again stir enthusiasm in his candidacy.

    The speech capped a convention designed to reignite enthusiasm with Obama’s winning voting coalition from 2008, including dozens of speeches paying testament to the president’s character and condemning Romney in the same breath.

    Chris Keane / Reuters

    President Barack Obama addresses the final session of the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina September 6, 2012.

    On foreign policy, for instance, Obama ridiculed Romney as inexperienced and naïve.

    “After all, you don’t call Russia our number one enemy – and not al Qaida – unless you’re still stuck in a Cold War time warp,” he said. “You might not be ready for diplomacy with Beijing if you can’t visit the Olympics without insulting our closest ally.”

    Related: Four challenges for Obama

    The Democratic convention this week was constructed in part to rebut last week’s Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., during which Romney seized on disappointment in Obama after four years, and argued “the time has come to turn the page.”

    Convention speeches have served as major milestones for Obama in his path to the White House. His 2004 keynote speech as a Senate candidate rocketed him to national stardom, and Obama’s 2008 speech as the Democratic presidential nominee helped propel him to victory.

    On Thursday evening, Obama nodded toward the disillusionment of the high-soaring rhetoric of his last campaign, but said that he was still moved by the “hope” that animated his 2008 bid, and asked for more time to achieve his goals.

    “You didn’t elect me to tell you what you wanted to hear. You elected me to tell you the truth,” he said. “And the truth is, it will take more than a few years for us to solve challenges that have built up over decades.”

    Republicans, including Romney, have made issue of that tarnished sense of hope. The GOP nominee, who said he didn’t plan to watch Obama’s speech, nonetheless expected it to dwell on “forgotten promises.” Romney’s campaign manager said Obama’s speech had only made “the case for more of the same policies that haven't worked for the past four years.”

    Republican-leaning super PACs and the state of the economy are two issues causing concern for President Obama's re-election campaign as the Democratic National Convention wraps up in Charlotte, North Carolina. NBC's Kristen Welker, Chuck Todd, and Tom Brokaw report.

    But tonight’s acceptance speech was characteristic of a convention that devoted much of its energy to building up Obama and knocking down Romney.

    Vice President Joe Biden's speech earlier in the evening was, in many ways, a warm-up act for the president, with Biden serving as the "character witness" for Obama.

    The vice president hailed Obama's "gutsy" decisions, from rescuing the auto industry to ordering the mission to kill Osama bin Laden. And he made the case that the both of them had more work to do in a second term.

    "We know we have more work to do. We know we’re not there yet. But not a day has gone by in the last four years when I haven’t been grateful that Barack Obama is our president," said Biden, “because he always has the courage to make the tough decisions.”

    Biden also assumed the more traditional role for a vice president by going aggressively after Romney and his ticket-mate Paul Ryan -- keeping with the constant stream of scrutiny leveled toward the Republican duo at this week's convention.

    "Folks, the 'Bain Way' may bring your firm the highest profits," said Biden, referring to the private equity firm Romney had co-founded, experience from which the GOP nominee cites as a chief credential. "But it’s not the way to lead our country from the highest office."

    The notion of conviction was also a theme in Sen. John Kerry’s foreign policy-oriented speech earlier in the evening.

    The 2004 Democratic presidential nominee said Romney “hasn’t learned the lessons of the past decade,” referring to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan initiated by President George W. Bush. Kerry also accused Romney of reversing himself and being inconsistent in criticizing Obama’s handling of Afghanistan and Libya.

    “Talk about being for it before you were against it,” exclaimed Kerry, riffing on the infamous line from his 2004 campaign that fueled charges that Kerry – like Romney now – was a “flip-flopper.”

    Obama’s speech – along with Romney’s last week – marked a turning point in the 2012 campaign, which now heads into its most intense leg leading up through Election Day. Convention speeches are regarded as some of the few opportunities for candidates to affect the trajectory of the race, though it will take days, if not more, to know whether the dueling powwows in Tampa and Charlotte will have moved the needle at all.

    Both campaigns will hit the road on Friday to begin making their cases until a series of debates in October – the next major turning point in the campaign – one that could help determine the outcome of the election.

    On Friday, Obama and Biden will campaign together in both Iowa and New Hampshire, two key swing states that their ticket won in 2008.

    Romney, meanwhile, will campaign in New Hampshire while vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan campaigns in Nevada.

    Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

    Democrats gather in Charlotte, N.C., to officially nominate President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden as the party's candidates for the 2012 presidential election.

  • Obama to argue 'it will take a few more years' in case for re-election

     

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. – President Barack Obama will ask voters for another four years in office tonight, arguing that he needs more time in order to fully address some of the nation’s deepest-rooted problems.

     “I won’t pretend the path I’m offering is quick or easy. I never have. You didn’t elect me to tell you what you wanted to hear,” Obama will say tonight at the Democratic National Convention, according to excerpts released by his campaign.

    “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 decades,” he will add.

    NBC's Chuck Todd, Savannah Guthrie and Tom Brokaw join Brian Williams to discuss the events of the last day of the Democratic National Convention.

    Related: Obama faces another defining convention speech

    The president’s pitch seems, in part, to acknowledge voters’ disappointment that the “change” Obama had promised to bring about during his 2008 campaign had come slowly, something the president himself often notes on the campaign trail.

    But as Republicans continue to argue this week that voters today are no better off than when Obama took office, Obama will lay out elements of a second-term agenda he would seek if re-elected.

    Slideshow: Democratic National Convention

    Among Obama’s promises would be a $4 trillion reduction in the deficit over the next decade, and creating 1 million new manufacturing jobs by the end of his second term. Obama will also call for halving net oil imports by 2020 and cutting the growth rate of college tuition in half over the next 10 years, too.

    It’s not clear whether Obama will offer much detail as to how he might accomplish these proposals, especially since tonight’s speech is essentially a political one. The preview offered by his campaign says, though, that savings associated with ending wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would be re-invested in the economy.

    “But know this, America: Our problems can be solved. 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,” Obama will say. “That’s what we can do in the next four years, and that’s why I’m running for a second term as president of the United States.”

  • Kerry to launch foreign policy broadside against Romney

     

    Updated 6:40 p.m. - CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Sen. John Kerry will launch a broadside against Mitt Romney this evening on an issue -- foreign policy -- that has largely taken a backseat to a weeklong focus on the economy.

    Jason Reed / REUTERS

    Senator and former presidential candidate John Kerry, D-Ma., stands at the podium during a walk through of the stage area ahead of the second session of the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, September 5, 2012.

    Kerry, the 2008 Democratic presidential nominee and the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, will cast GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney's foreign policy as either incomprehensible or a retread of the Bush administration.

    Recommended: Obama faces another defining convention speech

    "In this campaign, we have a fundamental choice: Will we protect our country and our allies, advance our interests and ideals, do battle where we must, and make peace where we can?" Kerry will say, according to advance excerpts of his speech. "Or will we entrust our place in the world to someone who just hasn't learned the lessons of the last decade?" 

    Slideshow: Democratic National Convention

    Democrats have criticized Romney for barely referencing foreign policy in his nomination acceptance speech last week in Tampa, making no reference at all to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that stretched must of the last decade. (Romney has defended himself by pointing to remarks he delivered the day before that focused largely on issues of foreign policy and national security.)

    Ahead of tonight's speeches, the Romney campaign argued Thursday would be an excercise in rewriting history in Obama's record.

    "An inventory of his record shows that by nearly all measures, President Obama has diminished American influence abroad and compromised our interests and values," wrote Romney policy director Lanhee Chen.

    First lady Michelle Obama speaks to NBC's Brian Williams about keeping life balanced for her daughters. She is focused on keeping their lives as normal as possible while allowing them to appreciate their chance to witness history.

    Foreign policy hasn't been at the forefront of this week's Democratic National Convention, but Kerry will look to turn the spotlight tonight to that issue, on which Obama owns an advantage over Romney in the polls.

    Recommended: Booker hints at 2013 run for New Jersey governor

    Kerry will take aim at two of Romney's central criticisms of Obama in the speech, relating to Israel and the management of the war in Afghanistan. (Romney has accused Obama of throwing Israel "under the bus," and has criticized Obama's timetable for withdrawing from Afghanistan too dangerous, though Romney wouldn't keep a full level of troops there for that much longer.)

    Video: Giffords leads Pledge of Allegiance at DNC

    "Barack Obama promised always to stand with Israel -- to tighten sanctions on Iran and take nothing off the table. Again and again the other side has lied about where this President stands and what this President has done," Kerry will say.

    On Afghanistan, the Massachusetts senator (and potential future secretary of state in the Obama administration) will say: "It isn’t fair to say Mitt Romney doesn’t have a position on Afghanistan. He has every position."

  • Booker hints at 2013 run for N.J. governor

    Jason Reed / REUTERS

    Newark, New Jersey Mayor Cory Booker addresses delegates during the first session of the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, September 4, 2012.

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Newark Mayor Cory Booker on Thursday gave another hint that his political future could involve a run for governor in the Garden State.

    The New Jersey Democrat assured the LGBT caucus (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) gathered here at the Democratic National Convention that a marriage-equality bill would soon pass in the state, and it could be his signature that enacts it into law.  

    Recommended: With unique place in presidential politics, Biden to take the stage in Charlotte 

    "I’m telling you right now, it’s not a matter of if we’re going to win marriage-equality in New Jersey," Booker said. "It’s a matter of when we’re going to win it. And I know in my heart of hearts, if God is willing, I will be there on that day that bill is signed. I might even have a very good seat when it gets done.”

    Recommended: Obama apologizes to supporters for venue move

    In recent months, rumors have swirled that Booker could be interested in facing off against current New Jersey governor and rising star of the Republican party, Chris Christie. The men are friendly -- and even made a parody YouTube video together earlier this year -- but Booker's remark today may be further proof that the prominent mayor would not back down from squaring off against Christie.

    Newark Mayor Cory Booker energetically outlines the new National Democratic Party platform.

    During the DNC this week, Booker's name has even been mentioned as a possible contender for the White House in 2016, though that would be a difficult thing to pull off. If he were to win the governorship -- no easy task against a so far fairly popular Christie -- he would only be in office a year and a half before he would have to start campaigning for the Democratic presidential primary.

    Recommended: Bill Clinton steps up to lay out the case for Obama, Democrats 

    It would also be crass for Booker to appear to be looking like he was thinking about running for president and leaving the job of governor even before he had it. 

    Booker has spoken to the delegations of important primary and caucus states like Iowa and New Hampshire. Booker was swarmed by admiring Democrats after his speech to Granite State delegates Thursday morning, hoping for pictures and a chance to shake his hand.

    Video: Giffords leads Pledge of Allegiance at DNC

    Booker was even more well received later Thursday when he spoke to the LGBT caucus.

    "I'm at home," he said to thunderous applause when he took the stage. "When it comes to movements for justice in the United States of America, this room is full of heroes each and every one of you.”

    Recommended: Warren attacks 'rigged' political, economic system

    He related the struggles of African Americans, Irish and Jews to the hurdles the gay community now faces.

    "Hatred is hatred," Booker said. "Bigotry is bigotry. And we need to wake up America to understand that inequality is inequality. Every person who says I am a citizen of the United States of America should have equal citizenship rights."

    Booker took the stage shortly after Second Lady Jill Biden, who had similar praise for President Obama's support for gay rights.

  • Romney says he doesn't plan to watch Obama's speech

    CONCORD, N.H. -- Count GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney among those not planning to tune in for President Obama's nomination acceptance speech tonight. 

    Romney told reporters today he has not been watching the Democratic convention, and didn't plan to start tonight -- unless the president planned to report on promises made in 2008, rather than conduct what Romney referred to as a "promises reset."

    Recommend: With unique place in presidential politics, Biden to take the stage in Charlotte 

    First lady Michelle Obama speaks to NBC's Brian Williams about keeping life balanced for her daughters. She is focused on keeping their lives as normal as possible while allowing them to appreciate their chance to witness history.

    "I think this is a time not for him to start restating new promises, but to report on the promises he made. I think he wants a promises reset. We want a report on the promises he made," Romney said after ticking off a list of what he considered to be Obama's broken promises, including tackling the national debt and boosting job creation.

    "The president needs to report tonight on his promises, rather than try and reset a whole series of new promises that he also won't be able to keep," he continued.

    Related: Romney camp dismisses Clinton as 'good soldier'

    The unannounced appearance today by Romney at a veteran's event staged by his campaign -- his second semi-public "drop by" in the battleground Granite State -- included Romney briefly addressing vets gathered to phone bank on his campaign bus. He later talked to a pooled group of reporters and took a handful of questions.

    In a new TV ad criticizing President Obama, Mitt Romney's campaign appears to be targeting single women voters who may like the president a great deal but are skeptical if he can deliver the type of change that he was talking about. NBC's David Gregory reports.

    Among the questions Romney faced: Why did he choose not to mention the war in Afghanistan during his own acceptance speech last week? Romney parried, saying he addressed the issue the day before, to an albeit much smaller audience, at the American Legion national convention in Indianapolis. 

    Slideshow: Democratic National Convention

    And he said the word "Afghanistan" just once in that speech.

    Then Romney took a swipe at Obama for not also addressing the group. "The president was also invited to the American legion, and uh, he was too busy to go," Romney said. "It was during my convention. I went to the American Legion, described my views with regards to our military, our commitment to the military -- my commitment to our men and women in uniform."

  • With unique place in presidential politics, Biden to take the stage in Charlotte

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Vice President Joe Biden occupies a unique place in the politics of 2012 and will get his moment in the spotlight Thursday night when he addresses the convention in Charlotte before President Barack Obama, once again accepting his party’s nomination as the second half of of the Democratic ticket.

    Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden explains whether his father will run for the presidency in 2016 and also discusses the vice president's less prominent role during this week's DNC.

    Of the four men running for national office, Biden has by far the longest history as a national figure. His career as an elected official is longer than the other three men's careers combined.

    Elected to the Senate at age 29, when Richard Nixon was president and the Vietnam War was at its height, Biden was first elected to public office – the New Castle County Council in Delaware – the same year that Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan was born: 1970.

    Recommended: Ryan takes aim at Obama on final day of Democratic convention

    In fact, Biden might well have been elected president a quarter century ago. He was a strong contender for the 1988 Democratic nomination, but was forced to quit the race after admitting that  he’d lifted certain distinctive phrases from British Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock in one of his campaign speeches. He also admitted that he’d committed plagiarism in law school.

    Video: Giffords leads Pledge of Allegiance at DNC

    But if the phrase “senior statesman” implies caution, somberness and a certain gravitas, Biden is not quite an exact fit. Even after 42 years in politics, the vice president remains as spontaneous and irrepressible as ever.

    Campaigning three weeks ago in Danville, Va., he caused a stir by using the phrase “They're going to put you all back in chains,” to a largely African-American audience when describing Republican nominee Mitt Romney’s approach to deregulation of Wall Street and the financial sector.

    Recommended: Four challenges for Obama

    Last week he approached two men – whom he apparently thought were Greek-Americans – in a restaurant in Warren, Ohio, by saying, “I’m Joe Bidenopoulos.”

    At the Republican convention last week, when Clint Eastwood came on stage and told the empty chair representing Obama that “You’re getting as bad as Biden,” he didn’t need to explain what that meant: prone to blurting things out. (At the White House signing of the health care overhaul law, Biden said to Obama, "This is a big f----ing deal.")

    Yet despite his reputation for unscripted moments, Biden retains a deep reservoir of support from Democratic activists in states such as Iowa, where the jockeying for the 2016 nomination will soon begin.

    Iowa delegate Dean Genth, from Mason City, said Thursday, “Joe Biden has a really special place in my heart, as a gay delegate, because a long time ago, back in 2008, during that campaign season he told me personally how important same-sex rights and equality were for him. He looked me in the eye and took my hand and said, ‘Dean, you know I’m going to fight all the way for all the equality we can for our LGBT community.’”

    John Brecher / NBC News

    Dean Genth at the Iowa delegation's breakfast on Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012, in Charlotte, North Carolina during the DNC.

    Genth said, “He was out ahead (of the other 2008 presidential contenders) and it really came from a well-thought-out position. It wasn’t something he was just doing to pander for votes. It was a part of his core being.”

    Related: Bill Clinton steps up to lay out the case for Obama, Democrats 

    Another Iowa delegate, Cedar Rapids lawyer Sara Riley, was a fervent Biden supporter when he ran for the 2008 nomination. “He was the most prepared” to be president, Riley said Thursday.

    She vividly recalls a speech Biden gave on Sept. 10, 2001, in which he said the threat to America wouldn’t come from a nuclear missile attack, but from a terrorist plot in a plane or the hold of a cargo ship. “It was amazing. He literally outlined what the biggest threat to our country was and the very next day Sept. 11 happened,” Riley said.

    John Brecher / NBC News

    Sara Riley at the Iowa delegation's breakfast on Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012, in Charlotte, North Carolina during the DNC.

    Well-settled into his vice-presidential role, there’s no doubt Biden found it exasperating four years ago when he had to vie with Obama and Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination.

    "It’s awful hard, understandably, to get above the sort of celebrities,” Biden told a coffee shop crowd in LeMars, Iowa, as he campaigned in September 2007. “It’s a pretty cool thing” that one Democratic presidential contender was an African-American and another was a woman, he said, but “it sucked all the oxygen out of the air.”

    At that coffee shop in LeMars, a woman named Carrie Kappen told Biden, “I want to vote for a president who speaks like you, who looks like you, who will tell it like it is like you. How can we get you to be above Mrs. Clinton and Obama? You need to be number one!”

    Not missing a beat, Biden replied, “I love you. My wife is down the street, but will you marry me?”

    Biden’s flair for humor often overshadows his serious accomplishments, and especially his role in shaping the Supreme Court’s membership.

    The Daily Rundown's Chuck Todd previews Thursday's DNC lineup, which includes speeches by Vice President Joe Biden and President Barack Obama.

    In 1987, as Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, Biden led the successful Democratic effort to defeat Ronald Reagan’s archconservative Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork. That led Reagan ultimately to appoint Anthony Kennedy to the high court, where the justice has proven to be the decisive swing vote.

    But Biden was unable to stop Clarence Thomas in 1991. And he was outmaneuvered by John Roberts and Samuel Alito, President George W. Bush’s Supreme Court nominees, during their confirmation hearings.

    The 2012 campaign may be the last hurrah for Biden – or might be a prelude to a run for president in four years.

    As for this year, Biden, who will turn 70 on Nov. 20, knows how to campaign and hasn’t grown tired of it. He still seems to draw his energy from crowds, usually lingering to shake hands and clasp the cheeks of adoring fans long after his remarks conclude.

    Related: Warren attacks 'rigged' political, economic system

    On the campaign trail, in between visits to the union halls and auto dealerships where he makes his blue-collar pitch, he relishes impromptu visits to high school football practices, Dairy Queens and fire stations. While some other surrogates are busy making targeted pitches to niche voters, Biden is often moving through small towns, ordering milkshakes and doling out advice to football running backs before the glare of the Friday night lights.

    First lady Michelle Obama speaks to NBC's Brian Williams about keeping life balanced for her daughters. She is focused on keeping their lives as normal as possible while allowing them to appreciate their chance to witness history.

    Of course, Biden has made his share of pitches to other constituencies, serving as Obama's ambassador to major gatherings of black and Latino supporters.

    But his bread and butter remains constant appeals to organized labor groups. Within the past several months, he has spoken to the International Association of Fire Fighters and the American Federation of Teachers. His travels to Michigan and Ohio typically involve at least one stop at a UAW hall where he lashes Mitt Romney for opposing the auto bailout.

    Visitors to his suite at the Time Warner Cable Arena in Charlotte, N.C., on the first night of the Democratic convention included the heads of the AFL-CIO, National Education Association and the Service Employees International Union.

    There’s still sometimes the sense that Biden feels a need to show he’s not inferior – one thing that scuttled his 1988 presidential bid. A New Hampshire voter asked Biden where he had gone to law school and how well he had done. “I think I probably have a much higher IQ than you do," Biden replied testily.

    Slideshow: Democratic National Convention

    On the campaign trail this year, Biden never hesitates to remind voters of his close relationship with Obama.

    "I spend four to six hours a day with him every single day since we got elected, with the exception of the last five weeks when we've both been campaigning," Biden bragged recently. "I can tell you and I've known eight presidents, three of them intimately," he added, winning giggles from a few in the audience.

    NBC News’ Carrie Dann contributed to this report.

  • Obama apologizes to supporters for venue move

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- In a conference call with some of the supporters shut out of his acceptance speech due to weather, President Obama expressed his regret over having to relocate the speech inside. But he urged his supporters to not let the weather concerns get them down and to “roll with it.”

    Recommended: Romney camp dismisses Clinton as 'good soldier'

    The campaign held the call as a consolation effort for the 65,000 grassroots supporters who lost their “community credentials” to the president’s speech Thursday night after it was relocated from the larger, outdoor Bank of America Stadium to the Time Warner Cable Arena due to projections of inclement weather.  “My main message is: We can’t let a little thunder and lightning get us down. We’re going to have to roll with it,” he said.  

    Tom Daschle shares his thoughts on how the bond between President Barack Obama and Bill Clinton has evolved throughout the years.

    The latest hour-by-hour projections by Weather.com show a very strong chance of thunderstorms in Charlotte on Thursday afternoon. 

    Many of these ticketholders had earned their credentials by volunteering a specific amount of hours. But the president said he and his staff could not fathom putting volunteers and other supporters in harm’s way.  “The problem was a safety issue,” he said. “It would have been a problem and we would have had a situation where we were putting you guys at risk. I know it’s disappointing,” he said.

    Related: Four challenges for Obama

    The president also said that he hoped to continue the momentum of the previous two nights of the convention, which he called “unbelievable, citing a few speakers in particula -- his wife Michelle, San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, and former President Bill Clinton. Obama said Clinton, with whom he shared an onstage hug after his speech, “broke down the issues as effectively as anybody.”  

    The president also used the occasion of the call to plug voter registration efforts in North Carolina, a state whose 15 electoral votes Obama campaign is battling hard to win again in 2012. “North Carolina is Exhibit A of the unbelievable work that’s being done at the grassroots level; you guys are blowing it out when it comes to registering voters,” he said.  

    With Bill Clinton's anxiously awaited speech out of the way, all eyes now turn to President Barack Obama, who will make the speech that could make or break his re-election. Obama senior advisor Valerie Jarrett discusses.

    Republicans have pilloried the Democrats for moving the speech inside, saying the decision was driven not by the weather but by low voter enthusiasm that might have led to empty seats.  

    But campaign manager Jim Messina pushed back on that notion before the president got on the call, telling the supporters that the evening would have been “standing room only, it would have been an amazing night but safety has to be always the No.1.” 

  • Ryan takes aim at Obama on final day of Democratic convention

     

    COLORADO SPRINGS, CO –- Paul Ryan wasted no time on Thursday in attacking President Barack Obama and the Democrats on the final day of the Democratic National Convention.

    “The president is going to be in Charlotte tonight with the Democratic convention. Their convention actually began with a tribute to big government. They actually said government is the only thing we all belong to,” Ryan told the crowd. “Then, they cut references to God out of their platform. They reversed course on that one yesterday – it wasn’t really a popular reversal if you watched it on TV.”

    In a new TV ad criticizing President Obama, Mitt Romney's campaign appears to be targeting single women voters who may like the president a great deal but are skeptical if he can deliver the type of change that he was talking about. NBC's David Gregory reports.

    Continuing inside an airplane hangar: “But to quote a popular journalist from Wisconsin, ‘they were against God before they were for him.’” [The journalist, POLITICO’s Jim VandeHei, made the comments on MSNBC’s Morning Joe Thursday morning.] 

    Related: Romney back on air

    Speaking in the Centennial State – where four years ago, Obama officially accepted the Democratic Party's presidential nomination – the Republican vice presidential candidate said the president hasn’t lived up to his promises and has made the economy worse.

    “You know, right here in Colorado, four years ago with the Styrofoam Greek columns, the big stadium, the president gave this long speech with lots of big promises,” Ryan said speaking inside WestPac Restorations. “And he said, let me quote ‘if you don’t have a record to run on, then you paint your opponent as someone people should run from.’ You know what, that is what he said four years ago and that is exactly what he is doing today. He has no record to run on.”

    Sen. Bob Menendez and Sen. Chris Coons discuss how Vice President Joe Biden will help President Barack Obama, and touch on the Democratic platform.

    The attacks are coming from both sides.

    Recommended: Bill Clinton steps up to lay out the case for Obama, Democrats 

    Wednesday night, former President Bill Clinton spoke at the convention in Charlotte, NC and did not hold back on attacking the Romney-Ryan ticket.

    “When Congressman Ryan looked into that TV camera and attacked President Obama's Medicare savings 'the biggest, coldest power play,' I didn't know whether to laugh or cry,” Clinton said. “Because that $716 billion is exactly to the dollar the same amount of Medicare savings that he had in his own budget! You got to admit one thing, it takes some brass to attack a guy for doing what you did.”

    Congressman Ryan, who in Iowa on Wednesday morning praised Clinton for working with Republicans while in office, made no reference to the remarks made at the convention last night by the 42nd president.

    Video: Wednesday night's DNC speeches

    The House Budget Committee Chairman, however, did acknowledge he may have finally found one thing to agree on with current Vice President Joe Biden.

    “You know it was just reported that in the middle of President Obama’s debt ceiling negotiations last summer Vice President Biden said quote, ‘You know if I were doing this I’d do it totally different,’” Ryan told the nearly 3,000 people here in Colorado about the upcoming Bob Woodward book, "The Price of Politics."

    "Sounds like Joe and I finally agree on something," the congressman deadpanned.

  • Romney camp dismisses Clinton as 'good soldier'

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Despite Bill Clinton's rousing defense of President Obama last night at the Democratic National Convention, the Romney campaign is doubling down on trying to use the former president to its advantage.

    In a new video, the campaign dismisses Clinton's endorsement of Obama now as merely him being a "good soldier." It then cuts to video from the hotly contested 2008 primary battle between Hillary Clinton -- Bill's wife -- and Obama, when Clinton said, "Give me a break. This whole thing's the biggest fairy tale I've ever seen."

    Recommended: Four challenges for Obama

    It's unclear where or if the ad is running. The campaign did not immediately respond to an email on where the ad may run and rarely shares any guidance on its TV strategy. If it does run, it would be the first TV ad for the Romney campaign in more than a week and comes on the heels of the Romney campaign's $4.5 million TV buy made today and first reported by First Read.

    The Romney campaign has been invoking Clinton on the campaign trail and in advertising as a way to draw a wedge between the president and moderate Democratic voters, particularly in the industrial Midwest. 

    Slideshow: Democratic National Convention

    But by elevating Clinton and turning him into a fair arbiter, the Romney campaign took a big risk. And last night, Clinton showed he can speak for himself, clearly. 

    Here's the script of the ad:

    ANNOUNCER: As the economy gets worse, Barack Obama calls on Bill Clinton to help his failing campaign.

    CLINTON FROM OBAMA TV AD: “It’s about which candidate is more likely to return us to full employment. 

    ANNOUNCER: He’s a good soldier helping his party’s president. But what did Bill Clinton say about Barack Obama in 2008.

    CLINTON FROM 2008: “Give me a break. This whole thing’s the biggest fairy tale I’ve ever seen.”

    ANNOUNCER: 23 million Americans struggling for work. The middle class falls further behind.

    CLINTON VOICE FROM 2008: Give me a break. I’m Mitt Romney, and I approve this message.

  • Romney going back on air

    In a new TV ad criticizing President Obama, Mitt Romney's campaign appears to be targeting single women voters who may like the president a great deal but are skeptical if he can deliver the type of change that he was talking about. NBC's David Gregory reports.

     

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Mitt Romney’s getting back in the game.

    His campaign went dark on television 11 days ago, but today it booked $4.5 million (so far) in TV ads in eight battleground states today, according to NBC News and ad-tracker SMG Delta.

    There was a lot of free media out of the convention for Romney, but it was striking that the only advertising run was from the Obama campaign and pro-Romney outside groups.

    Recommended: Dems twist jobs numbers and GOP Medicare ideas 

    Romney is also able now to tap into general-election funds, which he wasn’t able to prior to accepting the nomination a week ago.

    The states seeing the biggest spending in this buy round are Virginia, Ohio, and Florida with about $1 million each.

    Also notably, Romney is spending about $600,000 in this buy on North Carolina, a state most analysts see as beginning to trend toward Romney, but close enough that he may have to spend money here.

    The other states he will be up in with this buy – Colorado, Iowa, New Hampshire, and Nevada. 

    Brian Snyder / Reuters

    Republican presidential candidate and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney talks briefly with reporters after stopping to buy two pizzas at Lui-Lui restaurant in West Lebanon, New Hampshire September 5, 2012.

    Ad spending has now reached $573 million for this general-election presidential race. With the help of outside groups, Romney and allies are outspending Obama and his supporters $303 million to $269 million. 

    President Obama’s campaign is the biggest-single advertiser at $218 million. Romney has spent just $79 million on ads. But the Crossroads groups are making up the difference big time, spending $106 million.

    Slideshow: Democratic National Convention

    Another noteworthy fact, for all that Restore Our Future did for Romney in primaries and for all the talk of Priorities USA’s fundraising problems, Priorities has actually outspent Restore this election, $45 million to $41 million.

    The problem for Democrats is that there are multiple outside groups supporting Romney who are spending substantial amounts of money. In addition to Crossroads and Restore, the Koch Brothers’-backed Americans for Prosperity has spent $47 million, for example.

    The Washington Post's Chris Cillizza, Democratic strategist and former top advisor to VP Al Gore, Michael Feldman and President of the Center for American Progress Neera Tanden talk about what President Barack Obama needs to say in his speech to lay out a vision for the next four years.

    And once again, there is no advertising for Romney in Wisconsin (despite the pick of Paul Ryan as VP), Michigan, or Pennsylvania.

  • First Thoughts: Obama's four challenges

    Obama’s four challenges tonight… Clinton comes to the president’s defense… He also praises Bush, while lashing out at “hate” of GOP… The danger of the Romney campaign elevating Clinton… Before Clinton’s speech, however, Wednesday was a day full of headaches for the Democrats… A diminished Biden… Obama camp releases “Promises Kept” video, while RNC unveils “The Breakup” ad… And Romney to do “Meet the Press” this Sunday.

    The Daily Rundown's Chuck Todd previews Thursday's DNC lineup, which includes speeches by Vice President Joe Biden and President Barack Obama.

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- After Michelle Obama’s remarks on Tuesday and Bill Clinton’s on Wednesday, we now come to President Obama’s acceptance speech, which he’ll deliver exactly two months before Election Day. Just like we did a week ago for Mitt Romney, we look at the four challenges Obama has going into tonight’s address after 10:00 pm ET. One, he needs to convince viewers that his policies are better than Romney’s to improve the economy. (While Bill Clinton made this case last night, the August NBC/WSJ poll found Romney with a six-point advantage over Obama on having good ideas to fix the economy.) Two, he needs to describe how his re-election would truly break the partisan “fever” in Washington and would be different than his first four years in office. (The same NBC/WSJ poll had Romney with a six-point edge on changing business as usual in DC.) Three, Obama needs to lay out what he could possibly achieve in a second term, and maybe even introduce a new idea. And four, as we wrote earlier this week, he needs to rekindle that enthusiasm and excitement from four years ago -- something made tougher by the move from Bank of America Stadium to the arena (though TV viewers won’t really notice the difference).

    *** Clinton comes to Obama’s defense: It was just 12 years ago when Al Gore, with pretty good reason, distanced himself from Bill Clinton in the 2000 presidential election. Four years ago, Barack Obama was trying to turn the page on the Clintons and Bushes. But fast-forward to last night, when Obama arranged his convention so Americans could see him hugging Clinton. National Journal’s Fournier might have summed up Clinton’s speech the best: He did the dirty work for Obama. “Clinton branded the GOP as extremist and obstructionist and hateful… And he took the central question of Mitt Romney's campaign – ‘Are you better off than you were four years ago’ -- and turned it on its head.” Here’s what Clinton said: "No president -- not me or anyone before me -- no one could have fully repaired all the damage that he found in just four years," Clinton said of the economy. But conditions are improving, and if you'll renew the president's contract you will feel it." And as Fournier adds, Clinton’s look in the past last night allows Obama to focus his speech tonight on the future.

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    U.S. President Barack Obama addresses a crowd at the University of Colorado Boulder, September 2, 2012.

    *** I come to praise Bush, not bury him: The speech was classic Clinton -- very smart and very undisciplined -- but it was maybe less of a speech and more of a story by your favorite uncle from the South. (Was there a “g” Clinton didn’t drop last night?) And one of the more striking stories that Clinton told, at least as it might relate to political independents, was his praise of past Republican presidents, including George W. Bush. In fact, outside of Jeb, we don’t think we heard kinder words in Tampa for George W. Bush than we heard from Clinton last night. And that praise then made this critique more effective. “I never learned to hate [Republicans] the way the far right that now controls their party seems to hate President Obama and the Democrats.” For veterans of the partisan wars of the late ‘90s, it’s amazing that of all people, Bill Clinton, has become the Democratic Party’s best spokesperson to independents.

    *** The danger of elevating Clinton: Clinton’s speech last night epitomized the risk the Romney campaign took when it elevated Clinton, first highlighting the former Democratic president’s comments on private equity and Bain Capital and then using Clinton in its TV ads hitting Obama on welfare. But as we’ve written before, there’s danger when you elevate someone who isn’t supporting your candidacy --you make that person seem like a fair arbiter in the contest and someone whose words carry extra weight. (Greg Sargent writes that senior Dems think Clinton “is seen by genuine undecided and swing voters as a kind of ‘referee’ figure.”) So in addition to Clinton’s defense of the past 3 ½ years and his critique of the current Republican Party, he also used his speech to play the role of fact-checker. He pointed out that modern Democratic presidents have created twice the jobs that GOP presidents had; he said that both the welfare and Medicare attacks on Obama aren’t accurate; and he stole a favorite talking point of Paul Ryan’s (“math”) and turned it against the GOP, arguing that the “arithmetic” in Romney’s budget math doesn’t add up. 

    First lady Michelle Obama speaks to NBC's Brian Williams about keeping life balanced for her daughters. She is focused on keeping their lives as normal as possible while allowing them to appreciate their chance to witness history.

     

    *** A day full of headaches for the Democrats: If Tuesday couldn't have been scripted better for Democrats and the Obama campaign, then Wednesday morning/afternoon could have created more headaches for the party. First, citing the weather, they decided to move tonight’s speech from Bank of America Stadium to the indoor confines of Time Warner Cable Arena. Next, after criticism from the right (and even within their own party), they did damage control by reinstating the language on Jerusalem being the capital of Israel, as well as the word “God-given,” back into their platform. (So now Republicans can joke, “Democrats were against God before they were for God.”) And when the convention tried to reinstate the language, they received boos from some of the delegates. Just ouch. That’s why Clinton’s speech was so important last night. After the very rocky start, Clinton ensured the evening ended on a high note.  By the way, don’t dismiss the Jerusalem-God controversies… We guarantee these issues will be showing up in direct mail pieces in Iowa, Wisconsin, Ohio and Florida, places where either religion or Israel matter to some swing voters.  

      

    *** A diminished Biden: And here’s one more point we want to make about Clinton last night: By defending Obama and castigating the GOP, he played the traditional role of the VP. Just think if last night had been capped by Joe Biden and not Clinton. Would the evening still have ended on a high note? There’s no doubt that Biden has been a valuable member of the administration internally, and his issue portfolio has been as big if not even bigger than Dick Cheney’s. But here’s something to keep in mind before Biden’s speech before Obama’s tonight: His stature has been a bit diminished. So you have Clinton – not Biden – delivering last night’s final speech. You have Biden speaking in the 9:00 pm ET hour tonight. And you see that Pew poll featuring a lot of negative words when asked to describe the vice president.

    *** “Promises Kept” vs. “The Breakup”: In advance Obama’s acceptance speech tonight, his campaign releases a web video -- entitled “Promises kept” -- that replays his 2008 acceptance speech advocating for tax cuts for the middle class, investments and accountability in education, health care reform, equal pay for women, and the end of the Iraq war. Meanwhile, the RNC has anew TV ad (though it doesn’t say where it’s airing) that shows a woman dumping Obama as if on a date. It’s entitled “The Breakup.” 

     

    *** Thursday’s convention schedule:

    7:00 pm ET hour: Obama Campaign Manager Jim Messina, Antonio Villaraigosa, Beau Biden (who places his father’s name into nomination), Tammy Baldwin
    8:00 pm hour: Caroline Kennedy, John Lewis, Jennifer Granholm, Eva Longoria, Brian Schweitzer, Charlie Crist, John Kerry
    9:00 pm hour: Jill Biden, Joe Biden
    10:00 pm hour: Dick Durbin, Barack Obama

    *** Romney to appear on “Meet”: Lastly, we want to note that NBC’s David Gregory will interview Mitt Romney on “Meet the Press” this Sunday. It’s Romney’s first MTP interview since 2009.

    Countdown to 1st presidential debate: 27 days
    Countdown to VP debate: 35 days
    Countdown to 2nd presidential debate: 40 days
    Countdown to 3rd presidential debate: 46 days
    Countdown to Election Day: 61 days

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    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    Democrats gather in Charlotte, N.C., to officially nominate President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden as the party's candidates for the 2012 presidential election.

  • Programming notes

    *** Thursday's "The Daily Rundown" (live from Charlotte): Gov. Bev Perdue (D-NC), Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) on what to watch for tonight… Former Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-RI) and Ted Kennedy Jr. on their father’s legacy and the Kennedy-Obama connection… Florida GOP Chair Lenny Curry on tonight’s appearance by former Gov. Charlie Crist (I-FL) and their new ad hitting him in Florida…  More campaign trail news and analysis with the Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza, Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter, Democratic strategist Mike Feldman and Neera Tanden of the Center for American Progress.  

    *** Thursday’s “Jansing & Co.” line-up: MSNBC’s Chris Jansing interviews Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Education Secretary Arne Duncan, AFSCME President Lee Saunders, the Atlantic’s James Fallow, former GOP speechwriter Jonathan Horn, the Washington Post’s Dana Millbank, the Atlantic’s Molly Ball, and Rep. Chris Van Hollen.

    *** Thursday’s “MSNBC Live with Thomas Roberts” line-up: :MSNBC’s Thomas Roberts talks with MSNBC’S Rev. Al Sharpton, Sandra Fluke, Award-Winning Comedian and actress Wanda Sykes and Meghan Mccain.  Power Panel guests include The Washington Post’s Jonathan Capehart, Fmr. Governor Ed Rendell and Fmr. Santorum Press Secretary Alice Stewart.

    *** Thursday’s “NOW with Alex Wagner” line-up: Hosting from Charlotte, Alex Wagner’s guests include the New York Times’ Mark Leibovich, New York Magazine National Affairs Editor John Heilemann, the Huffington Post’s Sam Stein, BBC World News America’s Katty Kay, Rep. James Clyburn, and New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn 

    *** Thursday’s “Andrea Mitchell Reports” line-up: Anchoring from Charlotte, NBC’s Andrea Mitchell interviews Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden, White House senior adviser Valerie Jarrett, Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA), former Sen. Tom Daschle (D-SD), former RNC chairman Michael Steele, the Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza and Eugene Robinson and actress and activist Ashley Judd.

    *** Thursday’s “News Nation with Tamron Hall” line-up: MSNBC’s Tamron Hall interviewsRep. Cleaver, former Gov. Ed Rendell,the Chicago Sun-Times’ Lynne Sweet, Star Jones, Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter, Rep. Tammy Baldwin, presidential Historian Doug Brinkley, and Melissa Harris Perry. 

  • Dem convention: Bill makes his case

    “President Obama and his Republican opponents have fought to a draw for nearly four years over the best way to fix the economy. On Wednesday, Obama turned to the Democratic Party's explainer-in-chief to win the argument: Bill Clinton,” USA Today writes. “The former president did what he does best. He made the case for a Democratic-style economic revival based on investments in individuals and innovation. He stood up for the man who defeated his wife four years ago and stated the case against Mitt Romney better than anyone else has been able to do. For 48 minutes, he delivered a stunning tour de force that had delegates on their feet.”

    Politico’s Haberman: Hurricane Bill made landfall here Wednesday night. Former President Clinton’s stem-winder at the Time Warner Arena ran longer than his infamous 1988 convention keynote speech as he urged voters to give President Barack Obama a second chance in office. In classic Clinton style, the 48-minute nominating address frequently digressed from the script, the teleprompter freezing as the 42nd president ticked off statistics and improvised lines about Paul Ryan’s ‘brass’ and the signal his wife and Obama have sent about avoiding politics as a ‘bloodsport.’ He easily blew past the 11 p.m. prime-time TV cut-off, but the networks stayed with him. In his speech, Clinton was clearly, if indulgently, enjoying himself in a way that Obama rarely seems to, as he prosecuted the case on the 44th president’s behalf in less than an hour better than the Oval Office occupant has been able to over the last two years The crowd went wild repeatedly. It was a display of political force that underscored what a singular figure Clinton is in American politics, in either party.”

    The Boston Globe: “Former president Bill Clinton, in a fiery nominating speech Wednesday at the Democratic National Convention, mixed passion, policy detail, and humor with an urgent plea for Americans to stay the course with President Obama, who made a surprise appearance by joining Clinton on stage after his speech. Following a booming welcome from 20,000 delegates and guests, Clinton turned the tables on a familiar Republican critique of the president — that the country is worse off than in 2008 — by making a forceful argument that the reverse is true.”

    AP: “Obama, Clinton seal alliance with bow, bear hug.” From the story: “[T]hey didn’t milk the moment. After just 60 seconds, they walked off the stage together, both smiling, Obama with his hand still clasping Clinton’s shoulder. On the convention floor, several former Clinton aides hugged and slapped high-fives.”

    “Former President Clinton, once again in the political spotlight, electrified the Democratic National Convention Wednesday by passionately proclaiming that four more years of President Obama is the best choice for America’s future,” the New York Daily News writes.

    “A USA Today/Gallup poll conducted prior to both political party conventions finds former President Bill Clinton with a 69% favorable rating -- a personal best spanning his presidential and post-presidential years,” Political Wire writes.

    The Globe’s Johnson: “Elizabeth Warren used a national audience Wednesday night to deliver a campaign message that has hit a roadblock back at home. The Harvard Law School professor and US Senate candidate tried to boost President Obama’s reelection prospects at the Democratic National Convention by talking about his commitment to her pet cause: creating a consumer watchdog agency, most especially in the aftermath of the 2008 economic collapse. In doing so, Warren promoted Obama’s concern for a key political demographic, the struggling middle class. But she also connected herself to a still-popular political figure in Massachusetts while trying to stave off the prospect of ticket-splitting voters in her approaching Election Day showdown with Republican Senator Scott Brown.”

  • Dem convention: Previewing the final night

    “Folksy and loose, passionate and sometimes off script, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. arrives onstage Thursday night as the president’s most important political partner, policy enforcer, conscience, scold and occasional albatross,” the New York Times writes, adding, “[I]f the president’s campaign strategists are counting on Mr. Biden to woo working-class white voters in Midwest battleground states, they also know a certain creative destruction comes with the territory… On Thursday evening, at least, it is reasonably certain Mr. Biden’s script has been well scrubbed and he will stick to it, as he did four years ago when he talked about his roots and the perils of Republican rule. Bumped out of his own night in the spotlight by former President Bill Clinton, Mr. Biden will introduce Mr. Obama before all of the broadcast networks tune in (NBC will show it; CBS and ABC will not). His role in his 25-minute address, aides said, is to validate Mr. Obama the president, much as Michelle Obama validated Mr. Obama the family man.”

    “Republicans freely made fun of Vice President Biden at last week's Republican National Convention in Tampa. Biden's speech here tonight could go a long way toward giving him the last laugh,” USA Today writes, adding, “Biden has two main tasks: to recount the many economic and foreign-policy challenges Obama has tackled during his term, and to renounce the solutions being proposed by Romney and Ryan. There is another opportunity, but it's one the vice president won't discuss, at least not in public and not until after the election: to show he could be a serious contender for the Democrats' presidential nomination in 2016, when he'll be 73 years old.”

  • Romney: Debate prep

    AP’s Hunt: “Obama-Biden signs dot the back roads of Vermont, a state that has voted for a Democratic president since 1988. One of the shops in the nearby town of Woodstock is called ‘‘The Collective.’’ And yet, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney chose a friend’s home in rural Vermont to hunker down to prepare for a trio of high-stakes debates. Presidential candidates in the past have chosen their homes or battleground states for debate preparation. Not Romney — and his timing is unusual, too. Candidates usually spend the week of Labor Day campaigning heavily in battleground states. Romney, though, is staying largely out of the spotlight as President Barack Obama and the Democratic Party hold their convention in Charlotte, N.C.”

  • Bill Clinton steps up to lay out the case for Obama, Democrats

     

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Democrats formally nominated President Barack Obama for a second term following a rousing speech from former President Bill Clinton casting Obama as a centrist dealmaker and a candidate who did his best to avert a recession.

    Clinton, one of the most popular figures in American politics today, delivered a speech portraying his fellow Democrat as a well-intentioned moderate who was spurned by Republicans throughout the past four years – following the trail first blazed by Clinton in the 1990s.

    Slideshow: Democratic National Convention

    Almost seemingly responding to Republicans’ use of a well-worn argument in recent days, asking whether Americans are better off today than they were four years ago, when Obama was elected, Clinton said the answer was a definitive “yes.”

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Former President Bill Clinton speaks on stage during day two of the Democratic National Convention at Time Warner Cable Arena on September 5, 2012 in Charlotte, N.C.

    Are we where we want to be today? No. Is the president satisfied? Of course not,” Clinton said. “But are we better off than we were when he took office?” The crowd replied with shouts of yes. 

    Of the precarious economic situation Obama faced upon assuming office, Clinton added that “no one could have repaired all the damage he found in just four years.”

    The speech by Clinton, a former adversary of Obama’s when his wife, Hillary Clinton was competing against Obama for the 2008 Democratic nomination, drew one of the most energetic responses of the second day of the Democratic National Convention.

    At the outset of his speech, Clinton also formally entered Obama’s name up for the Democratic presidential nomination, something that the convention officially ratified in a state-by-state roll call vote early Thursday morning.

    NBC News political director Chuck Todd talks with former chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Terry McAuliffe, about former President Bill Clinton's preparation for his speech to the DNC, how he's developed a connection with independent voters, and the evolution of his relationship with President Obama.

    Obama himself joined Clinton onstage shortly after the conclusion of his speech, which had to battle a marquee, prime-time opening-night NFL matchup between the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants across the television dial.

    Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has repeatedly referenced the former Democratic president on the campaign trail, in order to argue that Obama has governed well to the left of Clinton, whose centrism was a core element of his political identity.

    Clinton indirectly rebuffed that by painting the president as an actor who genuinely sought compromise.

    “One of the main reasons America should re-elect President Obama is that he is still committed to constructive cooperation,” said Clinton.

    And Clinton on Wednesday evening rejected Romney’s proposals as inconsistent and fiscally unsound.

    Of Romney’s balanced budget proposals, Clinton said: “The Romney plan fails the first test of fiscal responsibility; the numbers don’t add up.”

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    Former President Bill Clinton hugs President Barack Obama on stage during day two of the Democratic National Convention at Time Warner Cable Arena on September 5, 2012 in Charlotte, N.C.

    The former president’s speech was the highlight of second day of the Democratic National Convention that seemed to largely chug along at a lower energy level than Tuesday’s opening festivities, when speakers led the audience in call-and-response cheers, and speeches by San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro and first lady Michelle Obama won multiple ovations.

    For the second night in a row, Democrats featured final speakers who took a less personal tone toward the Republican Party, a contrast to earlier speeches featuring unrelenting and aggressive attacks on the GOP. Democrats have broadcast their intention to showcase a sharp "contrast" betwen Obama and Romney during the convention, a consistent theme in Tuesday's speeches that continued into most of Wednesday.

    Democrats’ Wednesday night schedule featured some re-shuffling, most notably pushing contraceptive rights activist Sandra Fluke’s speech – unabashed in its criticism of Romney and the GOP – into the prime-time slot nationally broadcast by most networks.

    She said that in a Romney administration, “Your new president could be a man who stands by when a public figure tries to silence a private citizen with hateful slurs ... It would be an America in which you have a new vice president who co-sponsored a bill that would allow pregnant women to die preventable deaths in our emergency rooms.”

    Fluke spoke shortly before another Democratic favorite, Elizabeth Warren, the Democratic Senate candidate in Massachusetts, took the stage to deliver a strong defense of Obama.

    Related:Warren attacks 'rigged' political, economic system

    Warren, the Democratic Senate candidate in Massachusetts and a favorite of liberal activists, played on a broad sense of middle class anxiety in her speech, portraying Obama as the only antidote to voters’ hardships.

    She delivered a plainly populist speech, suggesting to Americans that the deck is stacked against them – a stark contrast to the Republican message that opportunity expands as business is freed from regulation.

    Women's rights activist Sandra Fluke speaks at the DNC on Wednesday.

    “People feel like the system is rigged against them. And here's the painful part: they're right. The system is rigged,” she said, adding: “We're Americans. We celebrate success. We just don't want the game to be rigged.”

    She also seized on Romney’s line more than a year ago at the Iowa State Fair, in which the then-candidate said, “Corporations are people, my friend,” in response to a heckler.

    “No, Gov. Romney, corporations are not people,” Warren said to rising applause from the audience. “People have hearts, they have kids, they get jobs, they get sick, they cry, they dance. They live, they love, and they die. And that matters – that matters because we don't run this country for corporations, we run it for people. And that's why we need Barack Obama.”

    Other speakers on Wednesday took more direct strides toward leveling specific attacks and courting specific groups of voters.

    Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, D-Mo., gives an impassioned speech at the DNC, Wednesday, backing the reelection campaign of President Obama.

    The Congressional Black Caucus chairman, Missouri Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, was one of the most memorable early speakers on Wednesday. An ordained United Methodist minister, Cleaver brought the crowd to its feet with a refrain of "Move on!" at one point marching in place to exhort fellow Democrats to work this fall for Obama.

    Maryland Rep. Chris Van Hollen, the ranking member of the House Budget Committee, was meanwhile charged with taking on Paul Ryan, the GOP vice presidential nominee, budget panel chairman and personal friend of Van Hollen’s.

    Related: Ryan tries to draw wedge between Clinton, Obama 

    “If Paul Ryan was being honest, he would have pointed to that debt clock and said: 'We built that,'" said Van Hollen, referring to the clock at last week’s Republican National Convention tabulating mounting U.S. debt during the gathering in Tampa. The Maryland Democrat blamed GOP-led tax cuts and the wars overseas for exploding the size of the national debt which Obama inherited.

    Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., endorses President Obama's plan to reduce the national deficit, while criticizing Mitt Romney's economic policies.

    Van Hollen, who is playing Ryan in debate preparations with Vice President Joe Biden, added: “Congressman Ryan, America is literally in your debt.”

    And AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka – one of several leaders in organized labor featured this evening – tried to portray Romney as out-of-touch, saying, “Mitt Romney doesn’t know a thing about hard work or responsibility.”

    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    Democrats gather in Charlotte, N.C., to officially nominate President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden as the party's candidates for the 2012 presidential election.

  • Clinton, Obama to appear together on stage at DNC

    President Obama and former President Bill Clinton will appear on stage together after Clinton's speech tonight, three Obama campaign sources tell NBC News.

    Officials had put out word that the Time Warner Arena was "at capacity." But NBC reported that the president would be making an appearance in the arena.

    Portions of the hall were shut off, and NBC reporters spotted a motorcade heading to the arena, which was likely for former President Clinton.

  • Clinton to slam GOP for creating 'total mess,' trying to blame Obama

    Former President Bill Clinton, who will address the Democratic National Convention tonight, told NBC's Brian Williams why he feels President Obama needs to be reelected.

    Former President Bill Clinton is set to eviscerate Republicans for being responsible for policies that led to the 2008 economic meltdown - and yet wanting voters to put them back in power.

    “In Tampa the Republican argument against the president's re-election was pretty simple: We left him a total mess, he hasn't finished cleaning it up yet, so fire him and put us back in," Clinton will say. “I like the argument for President Obama's re-election a lot better. He inherited a deeply damaged economy, put a floor under the crash, began the long hard road to recovery, and laid the foundation for a more modern, more well-balanced economy that will produce millions of good new jobs, vibrant new businesses, and lots of new wealth for the innovators."

    Recommended: Clinton: No one could have restored economy to full health in 4 years

    He will also tout the president's vision for the country.

    “The most important question is," Clinton will say, "what kind of country do you want to live in? 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.”

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