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Home arrow Issues/Politics arrow Elections arrow Convention coverage arrow Michelle Obama's defining moment kicks off convention; Clinton, party tension in spotlight Tuesday
Michelle Obama's defining moment kicks off convention; Clinton, party tension in spotlight Tuesday Print E-mail
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Last Updated ( Monday, 08 September 2008 )

Whether Hillary Clinton's followers will support Barack Obama is the biggest question hanging over his campaign and the backdrop to her pivotal speech Tuesday. See the Kansas City Star story.  Opening the convention, Michelle Obama reintroduces herself and her husband as products of the American dream and hard work. See Washington Post story.

Click here for Tuesday's complete schedule from the DNC.

McCain calls Obama "honorable," jokes about his age and houses with Leno. See AP/Boston Globe story. 

Sen. Clinton is the headline prime-time speaker at Tuesday night's Democratic National Convention. Former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner will deliver the keynote address. Pay Equity leader Lilly Ledbetter will also address the convention.

A spat in the Illinois delegation is indicative of tension between Clinton and Obama supporters. One African-American delegate says another called her an Uncle Tom. See the Chicago Tribune story. 

Clinton was disappointed not to be seriously considered for vice president and has struggled to move forward since her campaign ended. See Washington Post story. 

Clinton supports Obama, but some of her supporters won't. A nurse who was a Clinton delegate was removed from the convention after making an ad for McCain. See McClatchy story in the Kansas City Star.

Come convention time, everybody loves to party, but when private money and politics converge, ethics questions are bound to pop up. See Christian Science Monitor story.

With firm voice, an ailing Ted Kennedy speaks Monday of the Democrat's future. His history and the party's have been intertwined for half a century. See AP story in the Kansas City Star.

 

 

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