First Lady says husband 'a man we can trust'

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — First lady Michelle Obama lovingly praised her husband Tuesday night in a prime-time Democratic Convention speech as a devoted husband and caring father at home and a "man we can trust" to revive the nation's weak economy as president, beckoning the country to return him to the White House despite agonizingly slow recovery from recession.
"He reminds me that we are playing a long game here ... and that change is hard, and change is slow and it never happens all at once," she told a nation impatient with slow economic progress and persistently high unemployment of 8.3 percent. "But eventually, we get there, we always do," she said in a speech that blended scenes from 23 years of marriages with the Obamas' time in the White House.
Mrs. Obama, given a huge ovation and describing herself as the "mom in chief," made no mention of Republican challenger Mitt Romney. But those who preceded her to the podium on the first night of the president's convention were scathing.
"If Mitt were president, he'd fire the reindeer and outsource the elves," declared former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland in one biting speech.
Tapped to deliver the keynote address, San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro said Romney was a millionaire politician who "quite simply, doesn't get it" when it comes to the needs of the middle class. Referring to the Republican's support for mandatory health insurance when he was governor of Massachusetts, he added, "Gov. Romney has undergone an extreme makeover, and it ain't pretty."
Polls made the race for the White House a tight one, almost certain to be decided in a string of eight or 10 battleground states where neither the president nor Romney holds a clear advantage. There was ample evidence during the day of an underperforming economy, including a report that said manufacturing activity declined for a third straight month and an announcement from the Treasury that the government's debt exceeded $16 trillion at the close of the business day.
There was no end to the appeals for donations to Obama's re-election campaign, falling further behind Romney in cash on hand with each passing month. "If you think Barack's the right man for the job, please show your support with a donation of $5 or more today," the first lady emailed supporters a little more than 90 minutes before her speech.
She walked out to the crowd's cheers as the band played Stevie Wonder's "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours," the song he sang onstage at Obama's Denver convention ifour years ago.
The president was back home in the White House after a campaign appearance in Virginia as delegates cheered every mention of his name from the convention podium. He promised he'd be watching on television when his wife spoke.
"Believe it or not, when we were first married, our combined monthly student loan bills were actually higher than our mortgage," she told the convention. "We were so young, so in love and so in debt."
She confided that at family dinners in the White House with her and their daughters, the president joins in "strategizing about middle school friendships."
Mrs. Obama's poll numbers are better than her husband's, and her speech was aimed at building support for him, much as Ann Romney's remarks at last week's Republican National Convention were in service to her husband's presidential ambitions.
"When it comes to rebuilding our economy, Barack is thinking about folks like my dad — who worked at a municipal water plant — and his own grandmother, a bank secretary," the first lady said.
Referring to her own children as well as those of others, she said, "If we want to give them that sense of limitless possibility, that belief that here in America there is always something better out there if you are willing to work for it, then we must ... stand together for the man we can trust to keep moving this great country forward, my husband, our president, President Barack Obama."
The weak economy hung over the convention as it dominates the election.
Obama "knows better than anyone there's more hard work to do" to fix it said Castro. He said that after the deep recession, the nation is making progress "despite incredible odds and united Republican opposition."
He declared that 4.5 million jobs have been created since the president took office — though that number refers only to private sector employment gains over the past 29 months and leaves out state and local government jobs that continue to disappear each month.
Castro, the first Hispanic chosen to deliver a keynote address, was unsparing in criticizing Romney, suggesting the former Massachusetts governor might not even be the driving force on the Republican ticket this fall.
"First they called it 'trickle down, the supply side," he said of the economic proposals backed by Republicans. "Now it's Romney/Ryan. Or is it Ryan/Romney?"
"Either way, their theory has been tested. It failed. ...Mitt Romney just doesn't get it," Castro said. Romney's running mate is Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan.
The divide over taxes goes to the core of the campaign.
Romney and the Republicans favor extension of all of the existing Bush-era tax cuts due to expire on Dec. 31, and also want to cut tax rates 20 percent across the board.
Obama, too, wants to keep the existing tax cuts in place — except for people with earnings of $250,000 a year or more.
Democrats criticized Romney last week for failing to offer a detailed plan to fix the economy. But nowhere in their own convention's first evening of speechmaking did anyone present proposals for reining in deficits that now exceed $1 trillion annually.
Delegates in the convention hall cheered whenever Obama's image showed on the huge screen behind the speaker's podium, and roared when the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was shown mocking Romney in their 1994 Senate race.
"On the issue of choice, I am pro-choice, my opponent is multiple choice," the late senator said as cheers grew louder.
Romney supported abortion rights while serving as governor; he opposes them now.
Democrats unspooled insult after insult as they took their turn the week after the Republicans had their convention in Tampa, Fla.
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn said that Republicans had omitted mention of Romney's term as Massachusetts governor at their gathering.
"We already knew this extremely conservative man takes some pretty liberal deductions. Evidently that includes writing off all four years he served as governor," Quinn declared.
Said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, speaking of Romney: "Never in modern American history has a presidential candidate tried so hard to hide himself from the people he hopes to serve."
"When you look at the one tax return he has released, it's obvious why there's been only one. We learned that he pays a lower tax rate than middle-class families. We learned he chose Swiss bank accounts and Cayman Island tax shelters over American institutions."
Obama, by contrast, was lauded for helping win approval of health care legislation and for supporting abortion rights and gay marriage.
In his campaign trip to Virginia earlier in the day, Obama told an audience at Norfolk State University that the economy will get worse if Romney wins the White House this fall and that Election Day apathy was his enemy — and theirs.
Republicans are "counting on you, maybe not to vote for Romney, but they're counting on you to feel discouraged," he said. "And they figure if you don't vote, then big oil will write our energy future, and insurance companies will write our health care plans, and politicians will dictate what a woman can or can't do when it comes to her own health."
On the final stop of a pre-convention campaign circuit of several battleground states, the president also dropped off a case of White House-brewed beer at a local fire station.
The Republican challenger was in Vermont as the Democratic convention began, preparing for three fall debates with Obama almost certain to be critical to the outcome of the election.
There was no shortage of political calculation behind the program of the convention's first night — or for any other.
Democratic delegates bestow their nomination on Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on Wednesday, the same night former President Bill Clinton delivers a prime-time speech aimed at voters disappointed with the results of the past four years yet undecided how to cast their ballots.
White men favor Romney over Obama in public and private polls, but a Gallup survey taken in July showed that 12 years after leaving office, Clinton was viewed favorably by 63 percent of the same group and unfavorably by only 32 percent.
Obama's acceptance speech caps the convention on Thursday night at the 74,000-seat Bank of America football stadium. Aides kept a wary eye on the weather in a city that has been hit in recent days with strong afternoon rains.
Republicans did their best to rain on Obama's convention, whatever the weather.
Vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan spoke in Westlake, Ohio, standing behind a lectern bearing a sign that read "Are you better off?"
Republicans released a web video that interspersed images of Obama and the economy's weak performance with slightly out-of-focus video clips of former President Jimmy Carter discussing the nation's economic woes when sat in the Oval Office more than 30 years ago.
___
Matthew Daly reported from Norfolk, Va. Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Ohio, Kasie Hunt in Vermont, Jack Gillum and Tom Raum in Washington, Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, and Ken Thomas and Matt Michaels in Charlotte contributed.
"He reminds me that we are playing a long game here ... and that change is hard, and change is slow and it never happens all at once," she told a nation impatient with slow economic progress and persistently high unemployment of 8.3 percent. "But eventually, we get there, we always do," she said in a speech that blended scenes from 23 years of marriages with the Obamas' time in the White House.
Mrs. Obama, given a huge ovation and describing herself as the "mom in chief," made no mention of Republican challenger Mitt Romney. But those who preceded her to the podium on the first night of the president's convention were scathing.
"If Mitt were president, he'd fire the reindeer and outsource the elves," declared former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland in one biting speech.
Tapped to deliver the keynote address, San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro said Romney was a millionaire politician who "quite simply, doesn't get it" when it comes to the needs of the middle class. Referring to the Republican's support for mandatory health insurance when he was governor of Massachusetts, he added, "Gov. Romney has undergone an extreme makeover, and it ain't pretty."
Polls made the race for the White House a tight one, almost certain to be decided in a string of eight or 10 battleground states where neither the president nor Romney holds a clear advantage. There was ample evidence during the day of an underperforming economy, including a report that said manufacturing activity declined for a third straight month and an announcement from the Treasury that the government's debt exceeded $16 trillion at the close of the business day.
There was no end to the appeals for donations to Obama's re-election campaign, falling further behind Romney in cash on hand with each passing month. "If you think Barack's the right man for the job, please show your support with a donation of $5 or more today," the first lady emailed supporters a little more than 90 minutes before her speech.
She walked out to the crowd's cheers as the band played Stevie Wonder's "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours," the song he sang onstage at Obama's Denver convention ifour years ago.
The president was back home in the White House after a campaign appearance in Virginia as delegates cheered every mention of his name from the convention podium. He promised he'd be watching on television when his wife spoke.
"Believe it or not, when we were first married, our combined monthly student loan bills were actually higher than our mortgage," she told the convention. "We were so young, so in love and so in debt."
She confided that at family dinners in the White House with her and their daughters, the president joins in "strategizing about middle school friendships."
Mrs. Obama's poll numbers are better than her husband's, and her speech was aimed at building support for him, much as Ann Romney's remarks at last week's Republican National Convention were in service to her husband's presidential ambitions.
"When it comes to rebuilding our economy, Barack is thinking about folks like my dad — who worked at a municipal water plant — and his own grandmother, a bank secretary," the first lady said.
Referring to her own children as well as those of others, she said, "If we want to give them that sense of limitless possibility, that belief that here in America there is always something better out there if you are willing to work for it, then we must ... stand together for the man we can trust to keep moving this great country forward, my husband, our president, President Barack Obama."
The weak economy hung over the convention as it dominates the election.
Obama "knows better than anyone there's more hard work to do" to fix it said Castro. He said that after the deep recession, the nation is making progress "despite incredible odds and united Republican opposition."
He declared that 4.5 million jobs have been created since the president took office — though that number refers only to private sector employment gains over the past 29 months and leaves out state and local government jobs that continue to disappear each month.
Castro, the first Hispanic chosen to deliver a keynote address, was unsparing in criticizing Romney, suggesting the former Massachusetts governor might not even be the driving force on the Republican ticket this fall.
"First they called it 'trickle down, the supply side," he said of the economic proposals backed by Republicans. "Now it's Romney/Ryan. Or is it Ryan/Romney?"
"Either way, their theory has been tested. It failed. ...Mitt Romney just doesn't get it," Castro said. Romney's running mate is Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan.
The divide over taxes goes to the core of the campaign.
Romney and the Republicans favor extension of all of the existing Bush-era tax cuts due to expire on Dec. 31, and also want to cut tax rates 20 percent across the board.
Obama, too, wants to keep the existing tax cuts in place — except for people with earnings of $250,000 a year or more.
Democrats criticized Romney last week for failing to offer a detailed plan to fix the economy. But nowhere in their own convention's first evening of speechmaking did anyone present proposals for reining in deficits that now exceed $1 trillion annually.
Delegates in the convention hall cheered whenever Obama's image showed on the huge screen behind the speaker's podium, and roared when the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was shown mocking Romney in their 1994 Senate race.
"On the issue of choice, I am pro-choice, my opponent is multiple choice," the late senator said as cheers grew louder.
Romney supported abortion rights while serving as governor; he opposes them now.
Democrats unspooled insult after insult as they took their turn the week after the Republicans had their convention in Tampa, Fla.
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn said that Republicans had omitted mention of Romney's term as Massachusetts governor at their gathering.
"We already knew this extremely conservative man takes some pretty liberal deductions. Evidently that includes writing off all four years he served as governor," Quinn declared.
Said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, speaking of Romney: "Never in modern American history has a presidential candidate tried so hard to hide himself from the people he hopes to serve."
"When you look at the one tax return he has released, it's obvious why there's been only one. We learned that he pays a lower tax rate than middle-class families. We learned he chose Swiss bank accounts and Cayman Island tax shelters over American institutions."
Obama, by contrast, was lauded for helping win approval of health care legislation and for supporting abortion rights and gay marriage.
In his campaign trip to Virginia earlier in the day, Obama told an audience at Norfolk State University that the economy will get worse if Romney wins the White House this fall and that Election Day apathy was his enemy — and theirs.
Republicans are "counting on you, maybe not to vote for Romney, but they're counting on you to feel discouraged," he said. "And they figure if you don't vote, then big oil will write our energy future, and insurance companies will write our health care plans, and politicians will dictate what a woman can or can't do when it comes to her own health."
On the final stop of a pre-convention campaign circuit of several battleground states, the president also dropped off a case of White House-brewed beer at a local fire station.
The Republican challenger was in Vermont as the Democratic convention began, preparing for three fall debates with Obama almost certain to be critical to the outcome of the election.
There was no shortage of political calculation behind the program of the convention's first night — or for any other.
Democratic delegates bestow their nomination on Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on Wednesday, the same night former President Bill Clinton delivers a prime-time speech aimed at voters disappointed with the results of the past four years yet undecided how to cast their ballots.
White men favor Romney over Obama in public and private polls, but a Gallup survey taken in July showed that 12 years after leaving office, Clinton was viewed favorably by 63 percent of the same group and unfavorably by only 32 percent.
Obama's acceptance speech caps the convention on Thursday night at the 74,000-seat Bank of America football stadium. Aides kept a wary eye on the weather in a city that has been hit in recent days with strong afternoon rains.
Republicans did their best to rain on Obama's convention, whatever the weather.
Vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan spoke in Westlake, Ohio, standing behind a lectern bearing a sign that read "Are you better off?"
Republicans released a web video that interspersed images of Obama and the economy's weak performance with slightly out-of-focus video clips of former President Jimmy Carter discussing the nation's economic woes when sat in the Oval Office more than 30 years ago.
___
Matthew Daly reported from Norfolk, Va. Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Ohio, Kasie Hunt in Vermont, Jack Gillum and Tom Raum in Washington, Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, and Ken Thomas and Matt Michaels in Charlotte contributed.
Here are the supporters of mitt.........
Goldman Sachs          $676,080
JPMorgan Chase & Co    $520,299
Morgan Stanley           $513,647
Bank of America          $510,728
Credit Suisse Group      $427,560
Citigroup Inc             $363,015
Barclays                 $349,400
Wells Fargo              $320,025
Kirkland & Ellis           $309,042
Deloitte LLP Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â $286,110
PricewaterhouseCoopers$266,650
UBS AG Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â $259,200
HIG Capital              $220,495
Blackstone Group        $219,525
Bain Capital             $172,500 this week
Elliott Management       $172,475
General Electric          $158,800
Ernst & Young           $156,425
Marriott International     $154,837
Bain & Co              $145,800 this week....
Again Follow the money it shows where the loyalty is at and who they Really work for..
Â
Hey where do the American people fit in here??
Oh Wait they don't now you see who really matters in his plan for his america...
Not you and me that's for sure.....
Cough cough, sneeze sneese. I am sorry folks I have allergies when it comes to BS.
A man we can trust to destroy America.
"""""First Lady says husband 'a man we can trust' """"
A man doesn't earn trust by saying BarryCare was NOT a tax over and over and over  and then his own legal team argued in court that is was.
This reminds me of the news interview of the mother of a convicted criminal ... "but he's really a good boy" ... riiiight.
OBAMA / BIDENÂ Â 2012
@cptmac11Â Â Â """OBAMA / BIDENÂ Â 2012"""
Â
Exactly what does Biden bring to the table other than being the only VP in history to make Dan Quayle sound smart.......
 @kramr Someone to tell Sarah palyin ...got your nose ....
Thanks for your support.....Â
He is a liar, but you can trust him (ha-ha). I would not trust anything that he says! If you can't believe anything he says, how could you trust his actions? The simple fact is liars can't be trusted!
Maria del Rosario Castro is a member of LaRaza who has made public statements that the defenders of the Alamo were a bunch of drunks, crooks and slaveholding imperialists who conquered land that did not belong to them.....Santa Anna showed no mercy to Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie and others at the Alamo. We as American citizens should show no mercy to those that are still trying to destroy us. This war has been going on since 1843 after the treaty of Guadalupe-Hildago....mexicans cannot read treaties.....
First Lady says husband 'a man we can trust' Yeah right! We can trust oblahblah just about as far as we can throw him. Would you buy a car from him? A bridge?
 @theobserver OBAMA / BIDEN  2012
 @cptmac11 You have proven once again that there are idiots amongst us.
Obama had the country in the palm of his hands when he was elected. He could have done great things. He came in as the great uniter. He said he'd have a transparent administration. Instead, he's divided us along socio-economic, racial, and even religious lines. He's a committed marxist and despises business people, who actually pay the taxes to run the country. He's probably taken us over the cliff already with his overspending. But if he hasn't yet, he will if he's re-elected. He'll consider that another mandate from the people to turn us into a welfare nanny state
paul ryan ....
Voted NO on campaign finance reform banning soft-money contributions. (Feb 2002
Because the rich OWN this country...
Ryan Hates American voters....
Voted YES on restricting independent grassroots political committees. (Apr 2006)
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 @swimmer ..looks like you failed to watch swimmer.
So lying ryan???
How did mitt take this???
Voted YES on requiring lobbyist disclosure of bundled donations. (May 2007)
ryan...
Voted YES on implementing CAFTA, Central America Free Trade. (Jul 2005)
paul ryan voted for?????
Voted NO on military border patrols to battle drugs & terrorism, and illegal crossings
paul ryan??? voted to allow murder of gays???
Voted NO on enforcing against anti-gay hate crimes. (Apr 2009)
paul ryan voted NO (Hell NO ) to .. letting shareholders vote on executive compensation. (Jul 2009
He thought we should give them a blank check.
Gee where is his loyalty at??
Now we know...
@cptmac11  So Cmac,  why are all your posts about Ryan when the article at hand is about the honestly of B HO............  Even a liberal such as yourself can't defend B HO on being truthful ???
@kramr I have be honest, Iâm surprised you even read his/her posts. I was wondering why many of my recent posts were directed more at the conservative commenterâs, Iâve concluded that it is because I ignore most of cptmacâs posts. That leaves me little else to comment on.
Liberalism is a mental disorder.
 @Finally So republican stupidity is you're cure???
Sad just sad......
 @kramr OBAMA / BIDEN  2012
 @kramr Ok then...
Here are the supporters of Obama ....
University of California     $491,868
Microsoft Corp             $443,748
Google Inc                $357,382
DLA Piper                 $331,715
Harvard University         $317,516
US Government           $299,923
Deloitte LLP Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â $283,606
Sidley Austin LLP Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â $283,269
Stanford University         $238,803
Comcast Corp             $234,037
Time Warner              $230,088
Kaiser Permanente        $197,087
Columbia University        $195,574
Skadden, Arps et al         $191,828
US Dept of State           $175,672
Wells Fargo               $170,448
University of Chicago       $168,238
National Amusements Inc   $167,342
Sounds to me like it's the people who built success and the middle and upper middle class.
Are supporting Obama..
Â
@cptmac11Â Â """"OBAMA / BIDENÂ Â 2012""""
Â
So you can't even defend B HO as being honest......
"President Osama will begin a three-state bus tour. I believe the three states are confusion, delusion, and desperation."  ---Â
 @MrAchilles You mean all 57 states don't you?
 @MrAchilles So just the republican states???
Thanks now I know for sure....
Mr. & Mrs. POTUS = lie, lie, lie, pander, pander, pander.
Â
They should of kept attending the white hating church they spent 20 years in, then we would not be here.
The only thing we can trust Obama to do is continue lying, blaming Bush for everything, and giving away the country to illegals.Â
This comment has been deleted
 @wahoo  @Servalowner .. how convenient  for you to ignore the fact Bush had a democratic congress...that's where your blame lies...
 @theobserver OK thank you.....
 @Motorhead79  @KHEB  @wahoo  @Servalowner Oh ya that democratic controlled house and senate those first two years really were obstructionist knowing Obama's policies were bad for our nation. Glad you where paying attention...
@Motorhead79  How pathetic must B HO be that you have to blame the R's ....... when the reality is is that B HO had unstoppable majorities for the first two years of his administration.  B HO can not blame his failure on anyone but himself and his failed policies.
 @cptmac11 You can thank your buds Pelosi and Reid and the rest of the democraptic congress for about 95% of the mess.
@KHEB @wahoo @Servalowner How convenient for you to ignore the fact that President Obama has had to deal with the most obstructionist congress in the history of the nation, and a GOP segment of that congress that stated that their first and only goal was to make the president a one term president.
@KHEB @wahoo @Servalowner And yet he Still screwed the country good right??
 @wahoo  @Servalowner Denial ain't just a river in Egypt.
@TimBurr @wahoo @Servalowner So you're saying Bush had no involvement in the economic collapse and it was in fact President Obama's fault even though he wasn't in office at the time? You sound a lot like Paul Ryan claiming that President Obama closed a GM plant 3 months before he took office.
I so like this man...this statement pretty much caps the speeches give so far...
INSTANT ANALYSIS: âCharles Krauthammer Doesnât Want to Hear âOne More Story About People Walking 8 Miles in the Snow Without Shoes, Uphill, Both Waysâ...â
I also want to point out how enthused the demos apparently are⦠they could not fill a Venue of 74,000, they could only dredge up 20,000, which were liberals who can be counted on the cheer their little hearts out.
Short by 54,000 bodies they had to bus in to fill the empty seatsâ¦oh my, how embarrassingâ¦wonder if they also provided them with room and board and if so did the Obama campaign pay for all that or did he figure a way to stick the tax payers with the billâ¦.Michelle did not close the deal last night...
Â
@KHEB I thought Charles Krauthammer was one of the evil doers he sure looks the part was he the early baty bot from the pictures..???
 @cptmac11  @KHEB ... shows how much you know...gees....
pual ryan ????
Voted NO on regulating the subprime mortgage industry.
Well we see where his support is....
paul ryan on jobs....
Voted NO on $60B stimulus package for jobs in 2008.
America does Not need jobs  (paul ryan).
 just like we don't need him.....
Paul ryan...
Voted NO on modifying bankruptcy rules to avoid mortgage foreclosures.
So mitt could buy them up and rent them out to you.....