Obama-Bill Clinton relationship unthinkable four years ago - CNN

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  • President Clinton will speak Wednesday during the Democratic National Convention
  • Clinton recently has drifted off the Obama campaign's message
  • The level of trust between them seemed unthinkable four years ago
  • "Nobody has a better grasp and understanding of the issues than this man," Obama says


Charlotte, North Carolina (CNN) -- Another week, another convention plagued by weather woes. Another prime-time address by an iconic American figure who, hours before his speech, hadn't yet submitted a finished draft to organizers for suggestions and edits.
Unlike Clint Eastwood, President Bill Clinton has had plenty of practice on this sort of stage. Tonight will be his seventh speech in as many conventions.
Still, over the past few months, he's provided the Obama campaign with some accidental aggravations, displaying a unsettling tendency to drift off-message and derail narratives. He's used language that seemed to put some daylight between his and Obama's positions on tax cuts while the spotlight was on the president's policy, and he praised Mitt Romney's business record while it served as a central line of attack.
Obama revealed: The man, the president
Yet the day before the speech, an official for a campaign that hadn't laid eyes on a single word of it insisted they had no concerns.
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"We've been in close contact with him, and he is working on his remarks," said Jen Psaki, the Obama campaign's deputy communications director. "And I'm sure, when he's done, we'll see them. We have absolute confidence about what he's going to say."
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First lady Michelle Obama wraps up day one of the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Tuesday, September 4. President Barack Obama will speak and accept the party's nomination inside the Time Warner Cable Arena on Thursday, the final day of the convention.

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A sea of signs welcomes the first lady onto the stage Tuesday at the Time Warner Cable Arena.

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Delegates listen to Michelle Obama's speech Tuesday. The first lady offered a personal perspective on why her husband should be re-elected.

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Texas Rep. Joaquin Castro and his brother, San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, wave to the audience Tuesday.

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Julian Castro gives the keynote address Tuesday night. "Mitt Romney, quite simply, doesn't get it," he declared.

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Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick speaks during day one of the Democratic National Convention at Time Warner Cable Arena on Tuesday.

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Lilly Ledbetter, whose fight for equal pay resulted in the Fair Pay Act, takes the stage on Tuesday.

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First lady Michelle Obama's brother, Craig Robinson, and President Barack Obama's half-sister, Dr. Maya Kassandra Soetoro-Ng, speak on Tuesday.

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People hold signs Tuesday that read "Forward" and "Not Back."

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Actor-producer Kal Penn speaks on Tuesday.

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People listen to Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel on Tuesday.

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Rahm Emanuel, who served as President Barack Obama's first chief of staff, addresses the crowd Tuesday.

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Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius walks onstage Tuesday.

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Former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland takes the podium on Tuesday.

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Robert Rios from the Virgin Islands waves a state flag on Tuesday.

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Stacey Lihn of Arizona speaks on Tuesday as her husband, Caleb, holds her crying daughter, Emmy, and other daughter, Zoe Madison.

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A detail of the prosthetic legs of Tammy Duckworth, an Iraq war veteran who is running for the U.S. House from Illinois, is shown at the podium on Tuesday.

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President of NARAL Pro-Choice America Nancy Keenan speaks on Tuesday.

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Audience members wave American flags Tuesday.

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Maria Ciano, who grew up a conservative Republican, addresses the DNC crowd Tuesday

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Former Rep. Patrick Kennedy holds his child as he speaks to the media Tuesday. He is a son of the late Sen. Ted Kennedy.

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U.S. House candidate Joe Kennedy III of Massachusetts takes the stage Tuesday.

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Joe Kennedy III speaks Tuesday during the Democratic National Convention.

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A video tribute to the late Sen. Ted Kennedy is displayed Tuesday in Charlotte.

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House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi speaks onstage with other female members of Congress on Tuesday.

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Pelosi and other female members of Congress applaud on Tuesday.

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Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar sports a cowboy hat while taking the stage Tuesday.

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Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada speaks to an applauding crowd on Tuesday.

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DNC delegates cheer during Tuesday's program.

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Former President Jimmy Carter addresses the convention in a videotaped message.

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Former Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine speaks to the convention.

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A man from the Texas delegation stands under a campaign sign.

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A baby sleeps during Tuesday's speeches.

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North Carolina Gov. Bev Perdue welcomes the convention to her state.

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The Rev. Jesse Jackson attends the convention.

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Newark Mayor Cory Booker points to the crowd during his speech on Tuesday.

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A woman cheers during Tuesday's program.

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Security personnel looks out at the crowd as U.S. Rep. Steny Hoyer speaks on Tuesday.

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Hoyer gives a thumbs up.

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U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the Democratic National Committee chairperson, opens Tuesday's program.

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The third-grade class from W.R. O'Dell Elementary School in Concord, North Carolina, recites the Pledge of Allegiance.

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Dr. Lorrie Rickman Jones of Chicago cries as she watches Tuesday's speakers.

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Law enforcement officers prepare to face off with protesters during a march outside the Charlotte Convention Center on Tuesday.

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People in the Wisconsin delegation area sit in front of a digital image of the Lincoln Memorial hours before the start of the convention on Tuesday.

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Newark Mayor Cory Booker, left, laughs with stage manager David Cove during a walk-through on Tuesday.

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A worker checks the stage hours before the start of the convention on Tuesday.

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First lady Michelle Obama is interviewed before the start of the convention on Monday, September 3.

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Michelle Obama and actor and former Obama administration aide Kal Penn bump fists after a rehearsal for her speech on Monday.

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A man prays during a public prayer service at the Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre on Sunday, September 2, ahead of the convention.


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Photos: Best of the DNC


It's a level of trust between the two men that would have been unthinkable four years ago, when Clinton's convention speech backing Obama came while primary season wounds were still raw. But over the past year, a new relationship has taken shape.
A year ago, the Obama team approached some of Clinton's top advisers in an effort to bring the former president on board in earnest, according to New Yorker correspondent and CNN contributor Ryan Lizza. A rapprochement that Lizza says began in earnest with a late summer round of golf has evolved into a relationship few would have predicted in the wake of the bitter Democratic primary fight of 2008, when now Secretary of State Hillary Clinton challenged Obama for the party's nomination. President Clinton has weighed in on the race, offering the Obama team strategic advice. He's also appeared at fundraisers, an even more tangible brand of support.
Obama has delivered fresh praise for Clinton's economic record, looking to ride a wave of mid-90s nostalgia.
"Nobody has a better grasp and understanding of the issues than this man," Obama said at a June fundraiser. And as the driving force behind 1996's welfare reform law, Clinton has been in a prime position to rebut what the Romney campaign has called its most effective attack -- the false claim that Obama has gutted the work requirement at the heart of the legislation.
One of the Romney welfare spots aimed squarely at the middle class featured images of a smiling Clinton signing welfare reform into law, with the Republican nominee implicitly aligning himself with the 42nd president -- positioning himself the true heir of the Clinton legacy.
It's the special brand of affection engendered by any figure sporting a 66% approval rating in a CNN/ORC International poll earlier this summer -- the highest of any living president
That ad was countered a few days before the Republican National Convention by an Obama economic spot featuring a direct endorsement from Clinton.
"President Obama has a plan to rebuild America from the ground up, investing in innovation, education and job training," Clinton says in the ad. "It only works if there is a strong middle class. That's what happened when I was president. We need to keep going with his plan."
What we learned from the DNC
Some high-profile Democrats, including former Democratic National Committee Chairman Ed Rendell, have said the Romney welfare spots have been resonating, doing measurable damage to Obama's re-election effort. So Wednesday's speech isn't just some symbolic appearance.Nervous Democrats hope Clinton can stage a repeat of the magic he worked on the white, working-class voters who played a key part in his winning coalitions in two presidential elections.
"There isn't anybody on the planet who has a greater perspective on not just the last four years, but the last two decades, than Bill Clinton," Obama campaign senior adviser David Axelrod told the New York Times this summer, when Clinton's speech was first announced. "He can really articulate the choice that is before people."
Clinton's involvement hasn't just been for public display. Last year, the Obama campaign bounced between two separate and opposing anti-Romney narratives. One painted the former Massachusetts governor as a hypocritical flip-flopper, a political weakling without a core. The other tarred him as a right-wing ideologue, catering to the most conservative wing of his party.
Contradictory messaging isn't necessarily a deal-breaker in politics, but each storyline undermined the other, with an extended period of indecision prolonging the damage.
Then, as the New Hampshire primary neared, Clinton weighed in.
During a visit by senior Obama advisers to Clinton's offices in New York, Lizza said, Clinton said the second argument would be their best bet -- it would resonate with liberal donors and help keep swing voters from basing their vote on the wager a President Romney would return to the center.
The role of strategic sage is one Clinton filled on his wife Hillary Clinton's campaign last cycle. It's a role he might be able to reprise if she makes another run four years from now. But on Wednesday, he will make the case instead for the man who denied her the nomination.
Obama praised, Romney pilloried at convention

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