Thursday, September 6, 2012

Voters on Bill Clinton's Speech: Former President Backs Obama with Aplomb






Yahoo! News asked voters to share their reactions to Bill
Clinton's address at the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday. In their
own words, here are perspectives from voters across the nation.


***


It's
hard to stay an undecided voter after hearing President Bill Clinton's
nominating speech. His message was clear -- the road to recovery is l-o-n-g.


The
best national economy in my lifetime was during Clinton's terms in office.
People were spending money and banks were actually lending it. People had jobs.
Homes were constructed and businesses started. We need that economy again --
not just for us, but for future generations of Americans as well.


I
want the country of shared opportunity and shared responsibility, the
"we're-all-in-this-together" society that Clinton spoke of tonight.
That's the kind of country I want for my child and future grandchildren.


--
Ronna
Ross Pennington


***


Few
doubt the power that Clinton has to fire up an audience. Clinton alternated
between charm and attack, but he offered very few details as to why voters
should choose to stay the course with Barack Obama and renew his contract --
other than to blame the current economic situation on the prior administration
and hatred and a lack of cooperation from Republicans.


I
like Clinton, but I disagree with him. Neither I nor the country is better off.
I was employed four years ago. It was claimed that 4.5 million jobs have been
created by Obama; FactCheck says only 300,000 new net jobs in four years, an
amount that's embarrassingly too little too late.


--
Lyn
Brooks


***


Bill
Clinton's remarks Wednesday at the Democratic National Convention were both
inspiring and heartfelt for this voter. I was a young child when Clinton was in
office, but I remember the feeling when he was in office. It was that same
feeling that urged me to vote for Barack Obama in 2008, and it was the feeling
I got again Wednesday night: hope.


The
former president's words hit especially hard, since under his administration,
poverty and unemployment
rates
were reduced, and the wealth gap for minorities closed.


As
a voter, I think the Democrats' platform will do more to lift people out of
poverty and save even more from ever having to get that far. My vote has thus
far been in favor of President Obama. Bill Clinton's speech only helped
solidify that.


--
Eric
Bauer


***


Clinton
reminded me and millions of other voters that President Obama stopped the
nation's descent into a full-blown depression and that he has added
4.5 million private-sector jobs
. The former president also pointed out it
was Obama who kept the American auto
industry
from collapse while Mitt Romney was
willing to let the chips fall where they may
.


Although
Clinton's speech wasn't as emotional as Michelle Obama's, it was just as
persuasive. Did it influence my vote? Probably not, but I feel that Clinton's
influence will have a positive effect on Obama's campaign.


--
LaWanda
Shields


***


Bill
Clinton arrived on the DNC floor with vigor and energy, and he renewed the
Democratic message, imploring Americans to decide what kind of country we want
to live in. Do we want a winner-takes-all society, one in which we're all on
our own? Then we should support the Republican ticket.


Or
as he put it: "If you want a country of shared opportunities and shared
responsibilities -- a we're-all-in-it-together society, you should vote for
Barack Obama and Joe Biden."


--
Georgia
Makitalo


***


I
sincerely doubt anyone could find fault with Bill Clinton and his presentation
at the Democratic National Convention. Charisma and excellent public-speaking
skills served him and the attendees in good stead. He covered issues from Medicare
to student loans. I appreciate his acknowledgment of the rise in housing prices
in some locations, an indication that the economy is indeed on the rebound.


He
stated that "in the real world, cooperation works better" and that it
is better than conflict.


Cooperation
is needed to repair the problems with our economy. The speech was good and the
statistics enough to sway me more toward the Obama-Biden ticket. The point
about arithmetic working in Washington and affordable education for our
children strikes close to this teacher's heart.


--
Lori
Gunn


***


He
reminded me of what was so fascinating and irritating about him in the 1990s.


That
thing was Clinton's total and relentless lack of shame. How else can one
explain his quoting Ronald Reagan, a man who favored cutting taxes and
increasing defense spending, to attack modern Republicans for wanting to carry
out the same policies?


Clinton's
apologia for Obama and his various failures was eloquent, enthusiastically
delivered, overly long at about 50 minutes, and divorced from objective
reality.


He
executed the speech with an air of astonishment, whether at the perfidy he was
accusing the Republicans of or at the fact that the people in the hall were
buying what he was selling. He was having the time of his life and it showed.


--
Mark
Whittington


***


I
must admit I was looking forward to hearing Clinton's speech. He has always
been a great speaker and has that twinkle in his eye that allows even the most
cynical person to fall into the "convinced" category after hearing
him talk.


His approach was exactly what I expected -- very well-spoken with a loose sense
of humor and the charm he has maintained since the early 1990s. All that said,
he did not "sell" me on voting for President Obama this November.
Neither did he "force my hand" on voting for Mitt Romney. It may be
time to look at a third option.


--
D.
Emile Delaney


***


Bill
Clinton, who you might say has a way with words, delivered the most powerful
speech at the Democratic National Convention so far. He is also arguably the
coolest president in American history.


-- David
Garrett Jr.


 



Source & Image : Yahoo

No comments:

Post a Comment