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Bill Clinton delivers emphatic endorsement of Obama, saying America is better off

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Charlotte, N.C. –  Former President Bill Clinton, employing his charisma and eloquence  and command of history to its fullest extent, set out to make the economic case  for a second President Obama term Wednesday night — suggesting the country is  on the cusp of a ’90s-style jobs boom so long as Obama can finish the job he  started.

“If you renew the president’s contract, you will feel it,”  Clinton said.

The former president, who presided over that boom,  emphatically answered the “are you better off” question Mitt Romney posed at  last week’s Republican convention.

“Are we where we want to be today? No. Is the President  satisfied? Of course not. But are we better off than we were when he took  office?” Clinton asked.

After a resounding “yes” from the crowd, Clinton echoed:  “The answer is yes.”

The endorsement was a vital one for Obama, with Clinton  still occupying a place in the public’s mind as a moderate and economically  prudent Democratic figure — in partisan and economically trying times. Despite  Obama’s rocky history with the former president, the speech was unequivocal in  its support for the current White House occupant.

The audience at the national convention in Charlotte  erupted in applause as Obama joined Clinton onstage at the end of the address,  after which the party formally nominated Obama for a second term on the  job.

Clinton, speaking off-the-cuff at times, meticulously  crafted an argument that Republicans have pushed a false narrative about Obama  and that with a little more time and perhaps cooperation from those in Congress,  the economy will spring into action. No doubt recognizing that millions of  jobless Americans pine for the prosperity of the ’90s, Clinton pointed to a  pickup in lending and home prices to hint that the economy was showing the same  signs of life he saw two decades ago.

“I had the same thing happen in 1994 and early 1995,”  Clinton said.

The ex-president said the only difference this time is in  the “circumstances,” and the severity of the problem.

“No president — not me, not any of my predecessors, no one  could have repaired all the damage that he found in just four years,” Clinton  said. “But he has laid the foundation for a new, modern successful  economy.”

He urged Americans to “keep President Obama on the  job.”

Clinton, through much of his speech, argued that the  alternative would be much worse. He echoed the Obama stump-speech message that  Republicans want to go back to the policies that “got us in trouble in the first  place.” He slammed the Medicare overhaul and tax-cut plans of Mitt Romney and  Paul Ryan, claiming Republicans want to “double-down on trickle down.”
Clinton even invoked his predecessor, Ronald Reagan, saying: “As another  president once said, there they go again.”

Clinton also rejected GOP claims that Obama has moved to  gut the welfare reform he signed into law, arguing that recent changes made by  the Obama administration would strengthen work requirements, and not weaken them  as Republicans say.

“In Tampa … the Republican argument against the  president’s re-election was actually pretty simple, pretty snappy. It went  something like this — we left him a total mess, he hasn’t cleaned it up fast  enough, so fire him, put us back in,” Clinton said. “I like the argument for  President Obama’s re-election a lot better. … He inherited a deeply damaged  economy, he put a floor under the crash, he began the long hard road to  recovery, and laid the foundation for a modern, more well-balanced  economy.”

The Romney campaign, which claims Obama has failed in his  task of restoring the economy, chose not to quibble with the details of  Clinton’s speech Wednesday. Instead, spokesman Ryan Williams said it only served  to underscore the gap between his leadership and Obama’s.

“President Clinton drew a stark contrast between himself  and President Obama tonight. Bill Clinton worked with Republicans, balanced the  budget, and after four years he could say you were better off. Barack Obama  hasn’t worked across the aisle – he’s barely worked with other Democrats — and  has the worst economic record of any president in modern history. President  Clinton’s speech brought the disappointment and failure of President Obama’s  time in office clearly into focus,” Williams said.

The crowd in Charlotte, though, ate it up as Clinton once  again flexed his reputation as among the best in the business.

“It was one of his best speeches,” said Wisconsin delegate  Gary Hawley.

Pennsylvania delegate Rosemary Bolland told FoxNews.com she  was “thrilled” with the speech, saying the ex-president “has the ability as a  communicator to get the facts out and tell the story in a way the American  people will listen.”

The lengthy speech Wednesday night marked Clinton’s seventh  at a Democratic national convention in the past 25 years.

Just four years ago, Clinton’s wife, Hillary Clinton, was  battling Obama for the party nomination, and the former president was among  Obama’s toughest critics.

Now, Hillary Clinton is Obama’s secretary of state, and  Obama Democrats need the former president’s star power and fundraising prowess  as much as Clinton, who clearly still enjoys the spotlight, needs the  party.

Bill Clinton on Wednesday pointed to his wife’s current  position as proof of Obama’s spirit of cooperation in Washington — as he argued  Republicans have not approached him with the same attitude.

“Heck, he even appointed Hillary!” Clinton said.

Ahead of the address, Clinton sent out a fundraising email  on Obama’s behalf — saying it’s “absolutely urgent” that the president stay in  office.

“We can win this,” he wrote.

Obama will formally accept the nomination on Thursday in  his late-night address.

That speech, convention organizers announced Wednesday  morning, has been moved from the Bank of America Stadium to the indoor Time  Warner Cable Arena due to what Democratic officials said were weather concerns.  The arena, where the rest of the convention program was being held, is a  considerably smaller venue and the decision to hold the president’s address  there means thousands of Obama supporters who had been planning to attend will  be left out.

FoxNews.com’s Judson Berger and  Cristina Corbin contributed to this report.

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