PALM BAY, Fla. (AP) — Republican Mitt Romney has millionaire backers, a huge staff and years of campaign experience, which may be enough to win the White House. President Barack Obama has one asset Romney can't match, however: Bill Clinton.
There's nothing secret about this campaign weapon. If it's a competitive state, Clinton is there — and there and there — picking apart Romney's proposals in the folksy yet detailed style he unleashed at the Democratic convention in Charlotte, N.C. Many party activists left there wondering why Obama can't make his own case as compellingly.
Friday
was typical for Clinton. He made five stops in Florida, stretching from
Palm Beach in the southeast to Fort Myers on the Gulf Coast to
Tallahassee in the panhandle.
Clinton, his raspy voice hoarser than usual, mixed nostalgia with lawyerly dissections when criticizing Romney's tax-cut plans in Palm Bay, the day's second stop, south of Cape Canaveral.
"I don't understand how people like me could sleep at night taking another tax cut, and taking it away from you," he said to cheers from several hundred people, who clearly did not resent his post-presidential wealth.
After shucking his suit jacket and loosening his orange tie under a brilliant midday sun, Clinton rattled off statistics about recent slowdowns in the growth of health care costs, and benefits of Obama's health law. "That is what Mr. Romney wants to repeal," he said.
"Bring it home, Bill" a woman shouted.
At every stop, Clinton praises Obama effusively, but he also reminds voters of his own days in office.
"I am the only living former president that ever gave you a budget surplus," he said in Palm Bay. Obama's policies, he adds, are much more in line with his than are Romney's.
Obama
amplifies Clinton's boasts, knowing they give credence to the
endorsements. In one Ohio stop Friday, Obama named Clinton four times.
"For
eight years we had a president who shared our beliefs, and his name was
Bill Clinton," Obama said. "His economic plan asked the wealthiest
Americans to pay a little more so we could reduce our deficit and invest
in the skills and ideas of our people." Romney opposed that plan, Obama
said, and his math "was just as bad back then as it was today."
Clinton still runs late, even at morning events. Former Vice President Walter Mondale had to spin political yarns to kill time this week as voters waited in Minneapolis.
But the man who once headlined nine events in one day for his wife in the 2008 North Carolina primary — when Hillary Rodham Clinton was battling Obama — still feeds off crowds' energy and affection.
In
Green Bay, Wis., Clinton gave a 57-minute dissertation on why the
economy is better than many think. The only reason the Obama-Romney race
is close, he said, "is because Americans are impatient on things not
made before yesterday, and they don't understand why the economy is not
totally hunky-dory again."
He will join Obama on Saturday for a rally in Virginia and on Sunday morning for an event in New Hampshire. Clinton also will campaign Sunday in North Carolina and Minnesota. And on Monday, the Obama camp hopes Clinton will snuff out any possible Romney eruption in Pennsylvania, scheduling stops for him in Pittsburgh and Scranton, plus two in Philadelphia.
No
state underscores Clinton's value more than Florida, where the
Republican Bush family looms large. While Obama makes every possible use
of his party's most recent president, Romney can hardly mention George W. Bush, who left office amid an economic collapse and an unpopular war in Iraq.
Much has been made of Clinton's once-frosty relationship with Obama. Clinton, among other things, in 2008 called Obama's history of opposing the Iraq war a "fairy tale."
The two men may never be chums. But Clinton's endorsements now seem full-throated. It delights Democratic loyalists.
"The
Republicans have nothing to match the personal appeal and persuasive
power of President Clinton," said Doug Hattaway, a consultant with close
ties to the Clintons. "He can energize Democrats and close the deal
with moderate swing voters."
"I think it's backing up what Obama may not have been able to get across," Marvin said.
