PHILADELPHIA—US Democrats converge on the City of Brotherly Love to elevate Hillary Clinton this coming week as the party’s nominee who will battle Republican Donald Trump in 2016’s presidential election.
The Democratic National Convention gavels in on Monday in Philadelphia with the party more unified than the Republicans, whose fissures were laid bare this week as they confirmed brash billionaire Trump as their flagbearer.
But frustrations are nevertheless swirling as delegates bicker over the Democratic nominating process and new hiccups over Clinton camp emails.
Clinton is perhaps the most predictable person to launch a campaign in decades, so she will need to cast herself as the race’s energetic optimist who can push the country forward.
“Next week in Philadelphia we will offer a very different vision for our country,” she pledged. “One that is about building bridges, not walls, embracing the diversity that makes our country great.”
Her quest received a boost Saturday when she introduced Tim Kaine of Virginia as her running mate, a savvy Spanish-speaking US senator with a bright smile but “a backbone of steel,” according to Clinton.
Kaine “is everything Donald Trump and (Republican running mate) Mike Pence are not,” she said.
The 58-year-old Kaine, from a crucial battleground state, delivered a rousing speech in Miami, Florida, laying out sharp contrasts between Clinton and the Republican nominee.
“She doesn’t insult people, she listens to them,” he told the Miami crowd. “She doesn’t trash our allies, she respects them. And she’ll always have our backs.”
The convention gavels in at 4:00 pm (2000 GMT) Monday in Philadelphia’s Wells Fargo Center, with First Lady Michelle Obama and Clinton’s former rival in the primaries, Senator Bernie Sanders, scheduled as the headliners.
Former president Bill Clinton is the star on Tuesday, while President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden take the stage Wednesday.
There is considerably more firepower than at the Republican confab in Cleveland, where the former Bush presidents steered clear, as did former Republican presidential nominees John McCain (2008) and Mitt Romney (2012).
Even as the party basked in the seeming lovefest at the first Clinton-Kaine rally, a whiff of scandal likely to rattle party unity emerged.
A cache of leaked emails from Democratic Party leaders’ accounts includes at least two messages suggesting an insider effort to hobble the upstart Sanders campaign — including by seeking to present him as an atheist to undermine him in religious states.
Trump pounced on the leaks.
“Leaked e-mails of DNC show plans to destroy Bernie Sanders. Mock his heritage and much more. On-line from Wikileakes (sic), really vicious. RIGGED,” the bombastic real estate developer tweeted Saturday.
Sanders campaign manager Jeff Weaver demanded answers.
“Someone does have to be held accountable,” Weaver told ABC News.
The Democratic Party seemed to have “its fingers on the scale” for Clinton, Weaver added.
Complicating matters, Sanders delegates fumed when their efforts to end the party’s use of superdelegates — grandees who are free to vote for whomever they choose at the convention — mostly failed during a series of rules committee votes on Saturday, according to The Washington Post.
But Sanders delegates won a compromise victory when the committee agreed to form a commission tasked with reducing the number of super delegates in the nomination process, something Sanders has long demanded.
Meanwhile, delegates and activists descended Saturday on Philadelphia, where police were intensifying security operations.
“We shouldn’t be fearful, we’re Americans,” delegate Patti Norkiewicz of Florida told AFP, two days after Trump offered a dark vision of a nation besieged by chaos and violence.
“We should be proud, united, and we’re allowed to disagree,” she said.