With him we turn the page of the policies of the past

The real battle for the White House has begun at the foot of the Rocky Mountains. Forty-five years, to the day after the famous speech ("I have a dream") of Martin Luther King, delivered on August 28, 1963, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, Barack Obama chose, yesterday, the decor of the huge stage of the Broncos football team from Denver, in an attempt to resurrect the "American dream". Recognizing that sponsorship of the Kennedy family and the Clintons will not be enough to win the election of November 4, Barack Obama should clarify, last night, his agenda of reforms to meet the growing anxiety of the middle class against the threat of recession.

"What I want to make sure, is that voters understand that they have the choice between a candidate whose agenda is identical to that of George Bush for the past eight years and someone intends to fundamentally change this policy for the benefit of the American family average", had already given Barack Obama to "time" magazine To the approximately 75,000 people gathered yesterday in the forums for Invesco Field for the Broncos, he attempted to register in line with the "acceptance speech" John f. Kennedy in Los Angeles, in 1960, and Bill Clinton in 1992, while responding to criticisms of his "lack of substance" and the blur of its positioning.

In so doing, the Illinois Senator intends to capitalize on its advantage to the very controversial review of the Bush administration in the economic field. Grayed by the success of his July 24 speech in Berlin, before 200,000 people, he wanted himself move his "acceptance speech" in a place more extensive to address "the entire America." Even if supporters still criticize him neglecting the practical problems of the popular classes.

"Barack Obama transform the American economy by making alternative energy a national priority, which will promote the creation of 5 million new jobs and us free from the grip of foreign oil", assured the candidate to the Vice-Presidency, Joseph Biden, in Denver.

Support of Bill Clinton

One of the rising stars of the party, Kathleen Sebelius, Governor of Kansas, a time approached as a potential Vice President, is also in Barack Obama a true reformer. "With him, we turn the page of the policies of the past (...).". It will strengthen our system of social security, unlike John McCain, who wants to privatize the.

Even the former President, Bill Clinton, brought to Denver, its full guarantee the credibility of Barack Obama, ensuring that "its policies in matters of Economics, taxes, health and energy system are far superior to the Republican alternatives". A way to evacuate the persistent rumours about his disagreements with the team of the candidate. "The mission of the next President will be to rebuild the American dream and to restore America's position in the world", summarized Bill Clinton by drawing up a disastrous economic record of the Bush years, with public debt record and a worsening of poverty.

By promising to lower taxes by 80 of households, Americans (of 1,100 dollars per year on average, according to the Tax Policy Center), Barack Obama clearly presented as the candidate of the middle class, in the US "liberal" tradition. But in giving priority to public investment on the reduction of the deficit and criticizing the deregulation of the banking sector and telecommunications, also took his distances with the "clintonism" of the 1990s.