Hillary Clinton and running mate Tim Kaine hit the road yesterday on a bus tour of battleground states hours after she accepted nomination as the Democratic Party’s presidential candidate.
She said during a kickoff rally in Philadelphia that the tour through critical Pennsylvania and Ohio will stop at “places that make things.” And she took a dig at her GOP rival, saying Donald Trump “doesn’t make anything in America except bankruptcies.”
Clinton pledged that her first 100 days in office would see the biggest investment in new jobs since World War II. She said it would focus on infrastructure, technology, clean energy and advanced manufacturing.
Speaking on the final night of the party’s convention in Philadelphia, the first US woman nominated by a major party described the November election as a ‘moment of reckoning’.
She spoke of huge challenges ahead, saying:”Powerful forces are threatening to pull us apart.”
Mrs Clinton accused her Republican opponent in November’s election, Donald Trump, of sowing discord.
“He wants to divide us – from the rest of the world, and from each other.”
But Mr Trump tweeted that the speech had failed to address the threat posed by radical Islam, making the former secretary of state unfit to lead the country.
Before taking the stage, Mrs Clinton’s daughter Chelsea shared personal memories of her mother.
“My wonderful, thoughtful, hilarious mother,” the 36-year-old said, adding: “She was always there for me.”
Mrs Clinton had to present herself to the nation as the newly crowned Democratic Party nominee. She had to address doubts some Americans have expressed about her character.
And she had to follow up on a Wednesday night that was full of rhetorical all-stars – including Vice-President Joe Biden and, most notably, President Barack Obama.
Sometimes making the case for oneself is significantly harder than singing the praises of another.
In an acceptance speech that occasionally soared and sometimes trudged along, she did her best to frame the upcoming general election race in her favour.
She harkened to the days of the nation’s founding – a proven rhetorical tactic that Mr Trump neglected in his acceptance speech last week.
The US, she asserted, was founded on compromise and embraced “the enduring truth that we are stronger together” – wrapping her campaign slogan in revolutionary-era regalia.
After embracing her daughter, the former secretary of state delivered a speech which featured a stark admission about the threats to national unity.
“Bonds of trust and respect are fraying. And just as with our founders there are no guarantees. It truly is up to us. We have to decide whether we’re going to work together so we can all rise together.”
She added: “We are not afraid. We will rise to the challenge, just as we always have.”
The risk to American prosperity included inequality, limited social mobility, political gridlock, “threats at home and abroad” and frustration over wage stagnation, she said.
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