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Obamas give full-throated endorsement of Harris, slam Trump in DNC speeches

Obamas give full-throated endorsement of Harris, slam Trump in DNC speeches

Former U.S. president Barack Obama gave an emphatic endorsement of Kamala Harris while slamming his successor, Donald Trump, during a speech at the Democratic National Convention on Tuesday evening.

During the address, Obama depicted Harris as a tough prosecutor and hard-working politician, a champion of working and underprivileged people, while painting Trump as a childish, power-driven chaos mongerer who wedged the country apart to enrich his own interests.

Obama also stressed his longtime friendship with President Joe Biden, who served as his vice-president for eight years, weeks after Obama allegedly played a pivotal role in Biden’s exit from the 2024 presidential race and endorsed Harris as the nominee. 

Taking the stage to a roar from the crowd (though one not nearly as ferocious as the reception for his wife, Michelle, 20 minutes earlier), Obama made reference to a speech he delivered at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, the 16 minutes that propelled his rise to political stardom.

“I’m feeling hopeful because this convention has always been pretty good to kids with funny names who believe in a country where anything is possible,” he said. 

“We have the chance to elect someone who’s spent her whole life trying to give people the same chances America gave her. Someone who sees you and hears you and will get up every single day and fight for you. The next president of the United States of America, Kamala Harris.”

Former U.S. President Barack Obama departs after speaking on stage during the second day of the Democratic National Convention Tuesday night in Chicago. ( Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Referring to his choice of his former Senate colleague Joe Biden to serve as his vice-president, Obama said, “my first big decision as your nominee turned out to be my best,” — echoing a line that Biden delivered about Harris on Monday night during a convention speech.

Amid media speculation that there was lingering bad blood between the two, Obama stressed Biden’s record on COVID-19 recovery and the economy, and as a defender of democracy.

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But he also referred several times to their close personal relationship: “I am proud to call him my president, but even prouder to call him my friend,” Obama said.

Neither Biden, who is on vacation in California, nor Harris, who led a rally in Milwaukee earlier in the day, were present for the speech. 

‘The sequel is usually worse,’ Obama says of Trump

The former president then turned his attention to Trump, whom he described as a “78-year-old billionaire who has not stopped whining about his problems since he rode down his golden escalator nine years ago.”

“It has been a constant stream of gripes and grievances,” Obama said.

He mixed strong criticism of Trump’s record on taxes, immigration and reproductive rights with lighthearted jabs that played well with an audience of Democrats. 

WATCH | Obama disses Trump during DNC speech: 

Obama praises Harris, takes jabs at Trump in DNC speech

8 hours ago

Duration 1:10

Speaking at the Democratic National Convention on Tuesday, Barack Obama painted fellow former U.S. president Donald Trump as someone who ‘has not stopped whining about his problems,’ while praising Vice-President Kamala Harris for standing up for everyday Americans.

He earned thunderous applause and laughter when he referenced Trump’s “weird obsession with crowd sizes” while subtly gesturing with his hands, suggesting that obsession was really about Trump’s insecurity about his manhood.

“We do not need four more years of bluster and bumbling and chaos,” he told the crowd. “We have seen that movie before, and we all know that the sequel is usually worse.”

He said Harris would be a president who focuses on voters’ problems, not her own. “As president, she won’t just cater to her own voters and punish those who refuse to bend the knee. She’ll work on behalf of every American.”

He positioned a Harris-Walz administration as a “new chapter” and drew subtle parallels between Harris’s candidacy and his own.

U.S. media has compared the fervour and excitement around Harris to the frenzy that propelled Obama to the presidency in 2008 and then to re-election in 2012. 

In the most stark callback to his own campaign, Obama quipped, “yes, she can,” which the audience chanted back at him — and he revisited the message of hope that permeated his first campaign.

“We’ll elect leaders up and down the ballot who will fight for the hopeful, forward-looking America we believe in. And together, we too will build a country that is more secure and more just, more equal and more free,” he said.

And he wasn’t the only one: during a similar moment in Michelle Obama’s speech, the former first lady informed the audience that “hope is making a comeback” and talked about “the contagious power of hope.”

Michelle Obama takes digs at Trump’s privilege

Michelle Obama also got several rounds of thunderous applause when contrasting Harris’s upbringing with Trump’s and taking thinly veiled digs at his privilege.

“She understands that most of us will never be afforded the grace of failing forward,” she said of Harris. “We will never benefit from the affirmative action of generational wealth. We don’t get to change the rules so we always win.”

She turned some of Trump’s insults against Harris on their head, referring to “the steel of her spine, the steadiness of her upbringing and, yes, the joy of her laughter and her light.”

Later, Michelle earned some laughs by taking digs at some iconic Trump moments, such as the infamous escalator ride in Trump Tower on New York’s Fifth Avenue that preceded his 2015 announcement of his first presidential run.

“If we see a mountain ahead of us, we don’t expect there to be an escalator to the top,” she said. “In America, we do something.”

She also called back to Trump’s confused reference to “Black jobs” in his June debate with Biden.

“Whose going to tell him that the job he’s currently seeking might just be one of those Black jobs?” she quipped.

Ultimately, Michelle Obama returned to highlighting Harris’s superior experience and commitment to public service.

“It couldn’t be more obvious, of the two major candidates in this race, only Kamala Harris truly understands the unseen labour and unwavering commitment that has always made America great.”

WATCH | Michelle Obama needles Trump with talk of ‘failing forward’:

Michelle Obama’s full speech to the Democratic National Convention

18 hours ago

Duration 20:18

In a fiery speech to the Democratic National Convention, former first lady Michelle Obama urged delegates to support Kamala Harris. She told voters not to rest on the excitement of the moment, but to go out and ‘do something.’

Call for unity

The former president positioned Harris and Walz as envoys of that message, and ran through Harris’s record as a prosecutor and her tenure as California attorney general, speaking of how she pressed Obama’s administration to provide mortgage relief to homeowners.

He made the case for Harris as a champion of young and working people who would make it easier to own a home, limit drug costs, and make college education more accessible.

But he also called for unity and criticized political polarization — referencing the discord within his own party, even during a moment where Democrats have mostly fallen in line for Harris.

“Our politics has become so polarized these days that all of us, across the political spectrum, seem quick to assume the worst in others unless they agree with us on every single issue,” he said.

As an elder statesman of the Democratic Party, aides say Obama still wields enormous influence over party politics while maintaining popularity and cultural cachet with voters. 

But his record was frequently cited as a mark on Biden during the 2020 presidential election, with candidates criticizing the Obama-Biden administration’s record on trade, immigration and health care during a blistering primary debate.

Before Obama took the stage Tuesday night in Chicago, Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, held a rally in Milwaukee, on the same stage where Republican rival Donald Trump accepted his party’s presidential nomination last month.

WATCH | A reminder on how to pronounce Kamala Harris’s name: 

This is your last ‘Kamala’ pronouncer check

22 hours ago

Duration 1:02

Kuh-MAHL-uh? CAM-el-uh? No, that’s not right. Here’s how you pronounce Kamala Harris’s name — and why some political figures might intentionally mispronounce it.

‘The living legacy of our party’

The Harris campaign has in some ways sought to model itself after Obama’s formula. 

Kenny Nguyen, a 29-year-old delegate attending the DNC, voted for Obama that year, the first time he’d voted in a presidential election.

Today, he’s a city councillor in Broomfield, Colo.

“I think Barack Obama is the living legacy of our party,” he told CBC News. “He was the first African-American president. He’s everything that our party and country should strive to be.”

Kenny Nguyen, 29, a DNC delegate and city councillor from Broomfield, Colo., is one of the many young people who were inspired to enter politics by Obama. (Jenna Benchetrit/CBC)

Nguyen likened the energy around Harris’s campaign to that of Obama’s when he first ran in 2008. 

“He was the man who inspired me to run for office. Because of him, I started my career in politics,” he said.

Harris campaign taps Obama staffers

Harris is looking to tap into some of that energizing power of the Obama legacy. She has recently rounded out her campaign team with several high-profile senior strategists from the Obama era, including his former campaign manager and senior aide David Plouffe, who joined the Harris campaign as a senior adviser on strategy.

She’s also leaned into pop cultural and internet references to reach younger voters. Shepard Fairey, the artist who designed the iconic “Hope” poster art that became a symbol of Obama’s campaign in 2008, has created a similar one of Harris, with the word “Forward.” 

Former U.S. president Barack Obama talks with Vice-President Kamala Harris in the White House in April 2022. Harris was an early supporter of Obama, backing the then junior senator’s presidential run in 2008 when most of the party establishment backed Hillary Clinton. (Carolyn Kaster/The Associated Press)

Obama was in his political hometown of Chicago to deliver the address. Though they didn’t immediately endorse her, the former president and former first lady Michelle Obama gave Harris their blessing a few days after she announced her run. 

“We look forward to watching her unite our party and our country around a vision for a brighter, fairer, more prosperous future,” the statement said, noting that the Obamas have known Harris for over 20 years. 

Harris, after all, risked her own political capital when she backed then junior senator Obama in his bid for the presidency in 2008 when most of the party establishment backed Hillary Clinton.

“She was an early supporter of his, and he was an early admirer of hers, without question,” David Axelrod, a longtime Obama adviser, told Reuters.

WATCH | Harris paints herself as the future, Trump as past:

Kamala Harris tells DNC, ‘We are moving forward’

2 days ago

Duration 2:00

U.S. Vice-President and Democratic party presidential nominee Kamala Harris made a surprise appearance on the first night of the party convention in Chicago, thanking President Joe Biden and telling the crowd, ‘We are moving forward.’

Published at Tue, 20 Aug 2024 20:50:48 +0000

Diving team finds 5 bodies in Sicily yacht search

Five bodies were found on Wednesday aboard the sunken wreck of a yacht belonging to the wife of British tech magnate Mike Lynch, with one still missing.

The identities of the victims were not immediately given by the authorities.

Rescue crews brought four body bags ashore into port at Porticello. Salvatore Cocina, head of the Sicily civil protection agency, said a fifth body had been located. Divers at the scene said they would try to recover it on Thursday while continuing the search for the final missing person.

Rescue officials have been looking for six missing people, including Lynch, his 18-year-old daughter and Jonathan Bloomer, a non-executive chair of Morgan Stanley International.

The British-flagged Bayesian, a 56-metre-long superyacht, was carrying 22 people, and was anchored off the Sicilian port of Porticello, near Palermo, when it capsized during a fierce storm on Monday.

Lynch, 59, was one of the U.K.’s best-known tech entrepreneurs and had invited friends to join him on the yacht to celebrate his recent acquittal in a U.S. fraud trial.

Specialist rescuers have been searching inside the hull of the sunken yacht for the past two days. The victims were believed to have been trapped in cabins, which have proved extremely hard to get to, with divers only able to stay in the vessel for eight to 10 minutes before having to re-surface.

Separately, the coast guard deployed a remotely operated vehicle that can operate up to 300 metres deep, to scan the seabed and take underwater pictures and videos that it said may provide “useful and timely elements” for both the search and the investigation into the cause of the sinking.

Fifteen people survived, while the body of the onboard chef, Canadian Antiguan national Recaldo Thomas, was found near the wreck hours after the disaster. A report in Antiguan media said Thomas, 58, had lived in Antigua for about three decades after growing up in the Calgary area.

The coast guard has been questioning survivors, including the captain of the Bayesian, and passengers on the yacht that was moored next to it who witnessed the ship going down, judicial sources said.

No one is under investigation at the moment, sources added.

WATCH l Explaining the challenges the scuba divers face:

Sicily superyacht rescue: What divers are up against | About That

22 hours ago

Duration 5:47

Rescue efforts are underway in Sicily, after a luxury superyacht carrying 22 people was hit by a violent storm, causing it to suddenly capsize. Lauren Bird explains the challenges that divers face in finding the six missing passengers, and breaks down why time isn’t on their side.

Nearby yacht unaffected by storm event

Lynch built the U.K.’s largest software firm, Autonomy, which was sold to HP in 2011, after which the deal spectacularly collapsed, with the U.S. tech giant accusing Lynch of fraud, resulting in a lengthy trial. Lynch was acquitted on all charges by a jury in San Francisco in June.

The other missing passengers were Bloomer’s wife, Judy, Clifford Chance lawyer Chris Morvillo and his wife, Neda Morvillo. Morvillo represented Lynch in the San Francisco trial, while Bloomer was a character witness on his behalf.

Rescue personnel are seen Wednesday as they search for missing people from the yacht. Six people were missing after the ship sank before dawn on Monday. (Louiza Vradi/Reuters)

Experts have been at a loss to explain how a large luxury vessel, presumed to have top-class fittings and safety features, could have sunk within minutes, as recounted by witnesses. The yacht anchored next to it was unharmed by the tempest.

The Bayesian, which was owned by Lynch’s wife, was built by Italian shipbuilder Perini in 2008 and last refitted in 2020. It had the world’s tallest aluminum mast, measuring 72 metres, according to its makers.

The captain, James Cutfield, a 51-year-old New Zealander who survived the shipwreck, was a “very good sailor” and “very well respected” in the Mediterranean, his brother Mark told The New Zealand Herald.

Matthew Schanck, chair of the Maritime Search and Rescue Council, a U.K.-based non-profit organization that trains sea rescuers, said the Bayesian was the victim of a “high-impact” weather-related incident.

“If it was a water spout, which it appears to be, it’s what I would class as like a ‘black swan’ event,” he told Reuters, referring to a rare and unpredictable phenomenon.

He said he was confident the authorities would “get to the bottom” of what caused the shipwreck, thanks to the accounts of survivors, witnesses and examination of the sunken hull, which did not show any apparent signs of damage.

Published at Mon, 19 Aug 2024 20:26:22 +0000

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