U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton
said on Thursday the challenges facing Americans demand steady
leadership and a collective spirit, contrasting her character with what
she described as a “dangerous and volatile Donald Trump“.
In the biggest speech of her more than
25-year-old career in the public eye, Clinton accepted the Democratic
presidential nomination for the November 8 election with a promise to
make the U.S. a country that worked for everyone.
“We are clear-eyed about what our country is up against. But we are not afraid,” she said.
She presented a sharply more upbeat view
of the country than her rival Trump did when he was formally nominated
for president at last week’s Republican convention, and even turned one
of Republican hero Ronald Reagan’s signature phrases against the real
estate developer.
“He’s taken the Republican Party a long way, from ‘Morning in America’ to ‘Midnight in America,'” Clinton said.
“He wants to divide us – from the rest of the world, and from each other.”
She portrayed Trump as volatile, saying “a man you can bait with a tweet is not a man we can trust with nuclear weapons”.
Clinton spoke authoritatively and with
self-assurance in her pitch to the American public. She acknowledged
some people still do not know her well.
“I get it that some people just don’t
know what to make of me. So let me tell you. The family I’m from, well
no one had their name on big buildings,” Clinton said in a reference to
Trump.
She said her family were builders of a better life and a better
future for their children, using whatever tools they had and “whatever
God gave them.”
Clinton said it would be her “primary
mission” to create more opportunities and more good jobs with rising
wages, and to confront stark choices in battling determined enemies and
“threats and turbulence” around the world and at home.
“America is once again at a moment of
reckoning. Powerful forces are threatening to pull us apart,” said
Clinton, a former secretary of state.
“No wonder people are anxious and looking for reassurance – looking for steady leadership.”
Clinton, who is vying to be the first woman elected U.S. president, called her nomination “a milestone.”
“When any barrier falls in America, for
anyone, it clears the way for everyone. That’s why when there are no
ceilings, the sky’s the limit,” the 68-year-old Clinton said in a speech
that capped the four-day convention.
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