The US Democrat Party launch a star-studded party to rally around Barack Obama's historic White House bid today, with Hillary Clinton set for a symbolic gesture of unity after their tense primary showdown. Mr Obama, 47, who will become the first black presidential nominee, said yesterday he will try to convince voters he is just a normal middle class American despite his exotic upbringing and Republican claims he is an elitist.
"You'll find out, 'he's pretty much like us,'" Mr Obama told supporters referring to himself, days after criticising his Republican rival John McCain for being unable to say how many homes he owns with his multi-millionaire wife. Though the Democratic National Convention is Mr Obama's moment in the spotlight, his former foe Hillary Clinton will be watched almost as closely, under intense pressure to unify Democrats after their bitter nominating clash.
As Republicans picked at the wounds of their marathon battle, a Democratic official said on condition of anonymity that Mrs Clinton was expected to release her haul of delegates, leaving them free to vote for Mr Obama in Wednesday's symbolic roll-call vote. The former first lady will host a reception for her delegates piled up in a countrywide string of primaries and caucuses in the first six months of this year, a day after addressing the convention on Tuesday night.
Republicans however are attempting to play on the anger of Mrs Clinton supporters who feel their heroine was deprived of her rightful spot as the nominee, or even a vice presidential nod, partly through sexism. A hard-hitting Mr McCain political ad said Mrs Clinton had been passed over for "speaking the truth" about Mr Obama's political agenda during their acrimonious battle. "The truth hurt, and Obama didn't like it," said the ad, issued a day after the presumptive Democratic nominee chose veteran senator and foreign policy expert Joseph Biden as his number two.
Former New York mayor Rudolph Giuliani meanwhile suggested Mr Obama, who Republicans say is woefully inexperienced, had been too weak to put a formidable figure like Mrs Clinton on the ticket. A recent USA Today/Gallup survey today suggested the general election was still up for grabs, with voters harbouring misgivings about each candidate. Half of those polled said Mr Obama "may be too closely aligned with people who hold radical political views," and 57 per cent said they were concerned he lacked the experience to be an effective president.
But four in 10 said they are worried Mr McCain, who turns 72 next Friday, is too old for the presidency, and 67 per cent said they're concerned he'll pursue policies too similar to those of President George W Bush. On the eve of the convention, anticipation was building over a rumoured appearance by cancer-stricken Senator Edward Kennedy, in what could be an emotional farewell from a liberal icon who held previous conventions in thrall.
Another highlight on Monday will be a speech by Mr Obama's wife Michelle, who will attempt to portray her husband as a father and family man, despite finding herself a target during the campaign of attacks by conservatives. The Democratic convention, followed next week by the Republican gathering in St. Paul, Minnesota, comes after McCain cut Mr Obama's opinion poll lead and wrenched the race into a statistical tie, ahead of November's election. * AP