ashington, Sep 7 (IANS) Four years after his historic win on a slogan of hope and change, President Barack Obama has sought a fresh mandate with a passionate defence of his record to kickstart a still struggling economy.
"As citizens, we understand that America is not about what can be done for us," said the first African American president in a forceful speech reminding one of John F. Kennedy's words on the final day of the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, Thursday night.
"It's about what can be done by
us, together, through the hard and frustrating but necessary work of
self-government," he said to a raucously cheering crowd waving signs
with his campaign slogan "Forward".
"That's what we believe," said
Obama as he framed the November election as a clear choice "between two
different paths for America", in his 38-minute speech accepting the Democratic Party's nomination for a second White House run.
"On every issue, the choice you
face won't be just between two candidates or two parties," said Obama
dressed in a dark blue suit with a striped blue tie, the Democratic
colour, amid chants of "USA, USA" and "We love you".
"It will be a choice between two
different paths for America. A choice between two fundamentally
different visions for the future," he said.
Slowly but surely warming up to
his theme Obama declared while "hope has been tested- by the cost of
war; by one of the worst economic crises in history; and by political
gridlock" more time was needed to fix the nation's problems.
But the reaction from his Republican opponents was swift with his challenger Mitt Romney's campaign assailing Obama as having failed to create enough jobs, cut the deficit in half or increase incomes.
"This is a time not for him to
start restating new promises, but to report on the promises he made,"
Romney said in the taped statement released even before the speech was
delivered. "I think he wants a promises reset. We want a report on the
promises he made."
Media pundits generally agreed it
was a solid speech calling it typical of Obama's strong oratorial
skills. MSNBC's Chris Matthews said he "did it again" and delivered "a
home run speech", while Al Sharpton called the address as "epic".
But on CNN former President
George Bush's press secretary Ari Fleischer dubbed it the "same old...
same speech" with "many of the promises" from four years ago.
Back at the convention arena, as
Obama finished with confetti guns shooting into the air and the video
screens displaying images of fireworks, Democrats already energised by
former president Bill Clinton's speech Wednesday evening appeared fired
up to face what appears to be a close race with renewed confidence.
But whether that would translate into votes come November is yet to be seen
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