"Hope is coming back. Let's do something." Michelle Obama shouted like a warrior



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"Do something." "She can."

On the 20th (local time), the second day of the Democratic National Convention, some 20,000 party members who filled the Chicago United Center shouted so much that the venue was left with Democratic "warrior" former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. Their voices were filled with a sense of urgency to prevent a "Trump sequel."


"We are here to decide who can fight for me, for my child, for our future," former President Obama said in a supporting speech. "What is certain is that Trump is not the one to stay up all night over this." "Trump's purpose means nothing more than power," he said. "We've already seen his movie, and we know the sequel is worse."


"Our mission is to persuade people that democracy can be realized," Obama said. "We need to win the hearts of voters who are not ready to support our candidate yet." He shouted "Yes, she can." When he recalled his campaign slogan "Yes, We Can" during the 2008 presidential election, which was the first African-American presidential election, party members chanted "Yes, We Can" for nearly a minute in unison.

It was Michelle Obama. She was the Democratic Party's "warrior" herself. She wore a blue one-piece dress for Hillary Clinton's speech in 2016, and she chose a black pantsuit with no sleeves as her combat uniform, which was harsh.

Michelle criticized Trump for reducing health insurance benefits, trying to take away women's right to control their own bodies and infertility procedures, and abolishing the Ministry of Education. Trump's policies and remarks "only make us small, and never the answer," she said. "It's rather pathetic, unhealthy, and frankly, not like the president."


She recalled the 2016 presidential election, in which she was optimistic about Clinton's chances of winning the election but ultimately lost, saying, "It will be a tough fight" and "Do something." She also said, "Hope is making a comeback." To a series of questions from Michelle, party members said, "Let's do something," and the enthusiasm at the venue reached its peak.

Michelle also released an upgraded version of "When they go low, we go high" in her support speech during the 2016 presidential election.

At the event, people who withdrew their support for Trump drew attention as they took the podium. The strategy is to break away from moderate Republican supporters by letting them know Trump's true nature.

"I wasn't just a Trump supporter, I was a believer, and the Trump family was also my family," said Stephanie Grisham, who served as White House press secretary during the Trump administration. "When I visited the intensive care unit one day, he was angry that the camera didn't focus on him. He is a person who does not have the ability to empathize, but also morality and integrity."

John Giles, the incumbent mayor of Mesa, Arizona, one of the competing states, criticized, "I'm a lifelong Republican, but I feel more comfortable in this position than the Republican Party right now," adding, "Trump, who is far-right, is leading the Republican Party the wrong way." In particular, he pointed out, referring to the late Senator John McCain, a conservative leader from Arizona, that "there is no Republican left who thinks of the country before the party that McCain said."

Team Kamala Harris and Tim Walz held a campaign rally in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where the Republican National Convention was held last month. The venue was the Five-Sub Forum, where Trump's coronation took place, and the stadium filled 15,000 spectators. Analysts say that it is a stepping stone to stimulate Trump and sway the votes of Republican supporters, who are feeling a growing sense of crisis.

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