Democratic National Convention: Michelle Obama steals show
<span id="_oneup">CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Michelle Obama's message: President Barack Obama is just like you.</span>
<span id="_oneup">"Barack knows the American Dream because he's lived it," the first lady told the Democratic National Convention on Tuesday in an address intended to reassure voters that her husband shares their values - hard work, perseverance and optimism - while also drawing a contrast between him and Mitt Romney.</span>
<span id="_oneup">Mrs. Obama never mentioned the president's Republican challenger, who grew up in a world of privilege and wealth.</span>
<span id="_oneup">But the point was clear as she wove a tapestry of their early years together, when money was tight and times were tough, when they were "so in love, and so in debt." She reminisced about the man who now occupies the Oval Office pulling his favorite coffee table out of the trash and wearing dress shoes that were half a size too small. And she told stories about a president who still takes time to eat dinner with his daughters nearly every night, answering their questions about the news and strategizing about middle-school friendships.</span>
<span id="_oneup">With a mix of personal anecdotes and policy talk, Mrs. Obama's speech was her most political yet.</span>
<span id="_oneup">"Today, after so many struggles and triumphs and moments that have tested my husband in ways I never could have imagined, I have seen firsthand that being president doesn't change who you are - it reveals who you are," she said.</span>
<span id="_oneup">To that end, the first lady painted a portrait of a leader who knows the struggles of everyday Americans, who listens to them as president and who pushes an agenda with their interests in mind.</span>
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<span id="_oneup">"That's the man I see in those quiet moments late at night, hunched over his desk, poring over the letters people have sent him," she said. "I see the concern in his eyes ... and I hear the determination in his voice as he tells me, 'You won't believe what these folks are going through, Michelle. . It's not right. We've got to keep working to fix this. We've got so much more to do."</span>
<span id="_oneup">She added: "I see how that's what drives Barack Obama every single day."</span>
<span id="_oneup">With such stories, the first lady sought to counter Republicans trying to paint Obama as something other than a typical American, and implied that it was Romney who couldn't relate to people trying to get by in tough economic times.</span>
<span id="_oneup">To be sure, neither Romney nor Obama fits the bill of the average, working-class American struggling with credit card debt and mortgage payments. Both are millionaires who live a privileged life few Americans will ever experience.</span>
<span id="_oneup">But each candidate is trying to convince Americans that they're best suited to run an economy hampered by sluggish growth and high unemployment. Polls show Romney leading on who voters say would best to manage the economy; but Obama has the advantage on who voters believe understands their economic challenges better.</span>
<span id="_oneup">As she stood in the center of the convention's blue-carpeted stage, Mrs. Obama's words went straight to the core of the contrast Democrats are trying to draw between Obama and Romney. They say the president is pushing policies to boost the middle class, while Romney wants to protect the wealthy and hope their success trickles down.</span>
<span id="_oneup">Once a reluctant political spouse, Mrs. Obama delved more deeply into the details of her husband's policies than she has in her previous speeches. She promoted his health care overhaul, push for tax cuts for middle income earners and the auto bailout. And she took on the economy, her husband's biggest political liability, arguing that he "brought our economy back from the brink of collapse to creating jobs again."</span>
<span id="_oneup">"In the end, for Barack, these issues aren't political. They're personal," she said.</span>
<span id="_oneup">The first lady, wearing a bright pink dress, drew thunderous applause from the crowd and chants of "four more years" that are more often reserved for the president.</span>
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