Michelle, Biden appeal working women voters with family relief plan
www.chinaview.cn 2008-08-27 09:01:27   Print

Special Report: U.S. presidential election 2008

Backgrounder: U.S. Democratic National Convention

    DENVER, the United States, Aug. 26 (Xinhua) -- U.S. presumptive presidential nominee Barack Obama's campaign wooed women voters on Tuesday by promising economic relief policies for working women as Vice President candidate Joe Biden made his public debut at the national convention.

Michelle Obama, wife of U.S. Senator Barack Obama, waves as she arrives at the podium to speak at the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver Aug. 25, 2008. U.S. Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) is expected to accept the Democratic presidential nomination at the convention on Aug. 28.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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    "Working women are struggling," Michelle Obama told the roundtable meeting with working women across the country. "They are asked to shoulder an enormous burden, but they are not given enough resources."

    Citing Obama's mum, who had to give up college to raise children alone, and Biden, who had been taking care of his two sons for five years after his ex-wife was killed in a car accident, Michelle underscored that the two candidates understand challenges facing the U.S. working women.

    "As President and Vice President, Barack and Joe will change Washington, so that instead of just talking about family values, we actually have policies that value families," she said.

    Michelle referred to the "Obama-Biden Plan to Support Working Women and Families," a program released on Tuesday that outlines practical ways "to lighten the load that working women carry everyday."

    As the expansion of the current Family and Medical Leave Act, the 12-page plan is aimed at assuring working women with time off to care for a baby or elder parents and requiring employers to provide workers with paid on sick days, among others.

    Biden accused President George W. Bush's government of giving working women and their families eight tough years and promised to fix the damages if Obama is elected the next president.

U.S. Democratic vice presidential candidate Joe Biden (D-DE) reacts as he arrives in the convention hall at the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado Aug. 25, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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    "We will also stand with women and help working families on every issue from jobs and wages to health care and retirement savings," he said.

    With a little more than two months to go before the November election day, Obama is still struggling to win over the blue-collar and women voters who used to be the supporter base for his formal rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton.

    Recent polls showed that about 27 percent of Clinton's supporters said they would vote for Republican presidential candidate John McCain in November, and about 20 percent others remained undecided.

    The four-day Democratic National Convention began on Monday through Thursday in Denver, Colorado, where Obama and Biden will accept their nominations.

Michelle's convention speech hails Clinton

    DENVER, the United States, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) -- Hillary Rodham Clinton's name was mentioned in the headline speech Michelle Obama delivered to the Democratic National Convention on Monday night.

    "People like Hillary Clinton, who put those 18 million cracks in the glass ceiling, so that our daughters and sons can dream a little bigger and aim a little higher," said the wife of the presumptive presidential candidate, Barack Obama, followed by applause. Full story

Democrats rally behind Obama as national convention kicks off

    DENVER, the United States, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) -- Democratic current and former officials, lawmakers, prominent figures and voters vowed their support for Barack Obama's bid for the White House as the Democratic National Convention kicked off on Monday in Denver, Colorado.

    About 5,000 Democratic officials, delegates from 50 states and the District of Columbia as well as U.S. territories, and foreign guests gathered here to witness the Illinois Senator's moment to accept the presidential nomination on Aug. 28, the last day of thefour-day convention. 

Obama to observe one-China policy if elected

    DENVER, United States, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) -- Barack Obama has no intention to transform and challenge the one-China policy should he be elected as the U.S. president, his senior foreign policy advisors said Monday.

    Gregory B. Craig, a long-term advisor of Obama on foreign affairs, told a press conference that the Democratic presidential nominee to be would observe the one-China policy stipulated in a set of institution of understanding between China and the U.S.

Editor: Du
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