Obama passes the torch to Clinton 
http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/07/politics/obama-hillary-clinton-election-2016/index.html

 
 
 
http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/07/politics/obama-hillary-clinton-election-2016/index.html
 
 
 Obama passes the torch to Clinton 
http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/07/politics/obama-hillary-clinton-election-2016/index.html
 Hillary Clinton -- joined by her husband, Bill, and their daughter, Chelsea -- 
campaigned a final time with President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle ...
 
 
 
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 Obama passes the torch to Clinton 
http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/07/politics/obama-hillary-clinton-election-2016/index.html
 

 By MJ Lee http://www.cnn.com/profiles/mj-lee, CNN National Politics Reporter
 
 Updated 11:00 PM ET, Mon November 7, 2016
 

 

 Philadelphia (CNN)Hillary Clinton -- joined by her husband, Bill, and their 
daughter, Chelsea -- campaigned a final time with President Barack Obama and 
first lady Michelle Obama Monday night, in front of tens of thousands of 
supporters before the historic Independence Hall in Philadelphia.

 The group celebrated the history Obama made eight years ago, as the first 
African-American to win the White House, and expressed optimism that the next 
day Clinton will make a different kind of history as the first woman to be 
elected to the highest office.
 Still hours away from Tuesday morning when polls would open on the East Coast, 
Obama issued an urgent warning in what would be one of his final and most 
importance speeches as president.
 Live election coverage 
http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/07/politics/live-election-results-coverage/index.html
 
 "The choice you face when you step into that voting booth could not be more 
clear or could not be more serious," Obama said, moments before the Liberty 
Bell rang out to mark a new hour.
 "If you share my faith, then I ask you to vote," the President said. "If you 
want a president who shares our faith in America, who's lived that faith in 
America, who will finally shatter a glass ceiling and be a president for each 
and ever one of us, then I'm asking you to work as hard as you can this one 
last day."
 Calling his former opponent a fighter, a stateswoman, a mother, a grandmother 
and a patriot, Obama introduced his former secretary of state to the stage as 
"our next president of the United States of America."
 After a long embrace, Clinton thanked both the President and the first lady 
for serving the country for eight years with "grace, strength, brilliance and a 
whole lot of cool."
 She said the best way for Americans to express gratitude to the Obamas would 
be to elect the only presidential candidate committed to preserving Obama's 
legacy.
 "I'm pretty sure as they said tonight, that the best way to thank them is to 
do something really important tomorrow -- to vote," Clinton said. "As the 
President just pointed out, there is a clear choice in this election. A choice 
between division or unity."
 Echoing a message she has taken across the country through the general 
election, Clinton vowed to be "a president for all Americans" -- not just those 
who support her in this election.
 "I believe we all have a role to play in building a better, stronger fairer 
America; building on the progress that we have enjoyed under President Barack 
Obama over the last eight years," she said. "I am not going to let anybody rip 
away the progress we've made and turn the clock back, sending us back in time 
where people are free to question the foundation of our country."
 Clinton, Trump make final pitch in battleground states 
http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/07/politics/2016-election-last-day/index.html
 Monday marked eight years and three days since then-Sen. Obama became the 
first African-American elected president, after a contentious primary battle 
against Clinton.
 As the Obamas have neared the end of their two terms in the White House, the 
first couple has emerged two of Clinton's most powerful surrogates 
http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/02/politics/obama-hillary-clinton-election/index.html
 as the Democratic nominee has confronted an extraordinary opponent -- 
Republican nominee Donald Trump -- in an extraordinary election.
 First lady Michelle Obama, who has been out on the campaign trail the past few 
weeks vouching for Clinton, struck a nostalgic tone.
 "This is truly an emotional moment for me for so many reasons. We are one day 
away from once again making history," Obama said. "I am also emotional because 
in many ways, speaking here tonight is perhaps the last and most important 
thing that I can do as the country's first lady."
 The president, too, reflected on the past eight years, and thanked his 
supporters for electing a little-known "skinny guy with a funny name."
 
 "Eight years ago, I asked all of you to join me on an unlikely journey," Obama 
said. "We turned 'yes we can' into 'yes we did.' "
 

 

 

 

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