Min: °C Max: °C
» Weather Details

Updated
Clinton backers cloud Obama show
  • Obama promises 'workmanlike' acceptance speech
  • Michelle Obama disputes elitist charge
  • Edward Kennedy to be honoured
  • Mrs Clinton, speaking to sign-waving supporters from her home state delegation before the convention began, urged party unity. -- AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
    Holland (DENVER) - DEMOCRATS opened their national convention on Monday and a rift involving Mrs Hillary Clinton's resentful supporters threatened to rain on presidential hopeful Barack Obama's nominating parade.

    Democratic Party chairman Howard Dean pounded a gavel to open the four-day convention that Democrats say Mr Obama must use to unite the party, draw a sharp contrast with Republican rival John McCain and back up soaring oratory with a policy for leading the country.

    Mr Obama tried to assuage anxiety among some Democrats about a mild slide in opinion polls that has left him in a dead heat with Mr McCain heading toward the Nov 4 election.

    He said his nomination acceptance speech on Thursday would be 'workmanlike,' short on lofty words and long on policy details.

    He also played down divisions with the former president and first lady.

    'I am absolutely convinced that both Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton understand the stakes,' he told reporters in Moline, Illinois.

    The day's agenda was focused on outlining Mr Obama's personal story. In excerpts from her evening keynote speech, Mr Obama's wife, Michelle Obama, seemed to want to dispel Republican criticism of Mr Obama as an aloof celebrity.

    'And in the end, after all that's happened these past 19 months, the Barack Obama I know today is the same man I fell in love with 19 years ago,' she said.

    Mrs Michelle Obama also tried to cast her own personality in a popular glow.

    'I come here as a wife who loves my husband and believes he will be an extraordinary president. I come here as a mom whose girls are the heart of my heart and the center of my world,' she said.

    Democrats hoped a tribute to Massachusetts Sen Edward Kennedy, a symbol of Democratic liberalism who is battling brain cancer, would bring the party together. An aide to Mr Kennedy said the senator would attend but not speak.

    Casting a cloud over the convention was ongoing resentment from supporters of New York Sen Clinton, miffed that she lost the nomination and upset that she was not picked as Mr Obama's vice-presidential running mate. Mr Obama chose veteran Delaware Sen Joe Biden, who arrived at the convention on Monday.

    Mrs Clinton, speaking to sign-waving supporters from her home state delegation before the convention began, urged party unity.

    'We are after all Democrats, so it may take a while,' she said. 'We're not the fall-in-line party. We are diverse. But make no mistake, we are unified,' she said.

    In agreement on speeches
    Negotiators from the Clinton and Obama camps came up with a plan to placate Clinton supporters by allowing three speeches on behalf of a symbolic nomination for Mrs Clinton before the floor turns to nominating Obama as the Democratic candidate.

    Amid reports that former President Bill Clinton was upset that he was asked to speak about foreign policy on Wednesday night instead of the US economy, Mr Obama told reporters travelling with him that he had told Mr Clinton in a phone conversation last week he could talk about whatever he wanted.

    'I said, Mr President, you can say whatever you like. Bill Clinton is a unique figure in our politics,' Mr Obama said.

    A new opinion poll showed how much work lay ahead to rally Clinton supporters behind him. The CNN/Opinion Research Corp poll said the race between Mr Obama and Mr McCain was even, each with 47 per cent support.

    It said 66 per cent of Clinton supporters backed Mr Obama, down from 75 per cent at the end of June. Twenty-seven per cent of them said they would support Mr McCain in the Nov 4 election, up from 16 per cent in late June.

    On the convention floor, Ms Eufaula Frazier, a retired school teacher and a Democratic delegate from Florida, wore her 'Hillary for president' campaign button but said she is ready to vote for Mr Obama.

    'There may be a few of us who go for McCain, but most of us understand we need to kick Republicans out of the White House,' Ms Frazier said.

    Republicans who established a 'war room' in Denver sought to sow discord by staging a news conference with a former Clinton backer who now backs Mr McCain.

    The McCain campaign has sought to exploit the Democratic divide. Senior McCain aide Carly Fiorina said disgruntled women supporters of Hillary Clinton 'want a leader whose judgment and experience they can trust.' -- REUTERS

    S M T W T F S
    01 02 03 04 05 06 07
    08 09 10 11 12 13 14
    Best viewed at 1152x864 resolution with IE 6.0 or FireFox 2.0 and above Copyright © 2008 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co. Regn No. 198402868E | Privacy Statement | Terms & Conditions