President Barack Obama shakes the hands of supporters during a rally at Norfolk State University in Norfolk, Va., Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012. ( AP Photo/Steve Helber)
President Barack Obama shakes the hands of supporters during a rally at Norfolk State University in Norfolk, Va., Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012. ( AP Photo/Steve Helber)
President Barack Obama holds up a bottle of beer as he delivers a case of White House brewed beer to the fire fighters at Fire Station No. 14, during an unscheduled stop, Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012, in Norfolk, Va. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
Delegate Gus Mansour, of Lynnwood, Wash. holds a poster of President Barack Obama at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
Vice President Joe Biden and wife Jill Biden are greeted by Brig. Gen. Tony E. McMillan, Commander, 145th Airlift Wing, left, at the North Carolina Air National Guard, as they arrive in Charlotte, N.C., Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012, to attend the Democratic National Convention. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) ? Convention Watch shows you the 2012 political conventions through the eyes of Associated Press journalists. Follow them on Twitter where available with the handles listed after each item.
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PAGING BETTY WHITE
With all respect to Clint Eastwood, some Democrats want Betty White to make their day.
Some Democrats are leading an effort to bring in the actress to speak at this week's Democratic National Convention ? essentially to serve as a counter to the role that Clint Eastwood played last week in helping to introduce Mitt Romney at the Republican convention.
A petition at the website change.org says that Eastwood "gave a bad name to older Americans everywhere with his absurd and awkward-to-watch introduction of Governor Romney."
"Governor Romney can have Clint Eastwood and his improvisational skills because President Obama has the one and only Betty White!" the petition said.
Supporters of the effort are encouraged to go to a Facebook page entitled "Bring Betty White to the DNC." More than 33,000 people have liked the page so far.
White told The Associated Press in May that she normally stays away from politics because she doesn't want to alienate fans, but this year she wants to see Obama re-elected. There's no indication yet that the efforts to recruit White will bear fruit.
? Kevin Freking ? Twitter http://twitter.com/APkfreking
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PRIDE ACROSS THE POND
Stephanie Stewart flies the red, white and blue ? on both sides of the pond. A delegate for the Democrats Abroad contingent at the convention in Charlotte, N.C., the Londoner holds dual citizenship. She has family in Delaware but votes in New York, since that's the last place she lived stateside.
The convention caps a big year for her ? first Queen Elizabeth's Diamond Jubilee, then the London Olympics, now this.
"I got out my Union Jack and was waving it around" during the Summer Games, she said after staking out her seat in the arena Tuesday afternoon.
Stewart's group points to swing states and tight races such as the 2008 elections of Alaska Sen. Mark Begich and Minnesota Sen. Al Franken as places where Americans overseas can make a difference.
"There are over 160 countries where we know there are Democrats living," she says, "so we try to keep them voting."
? Joe Danborn
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RYAN'S RIVALS
The Paul Ryan opposition is in full force at the Democratic National Convention.
Vice President Joe Biden arrived Tuesday. Rob Zerban, who hopes to beat Ryan in a race for Congress, is in Charlotte, too.
Wisconsin law permits Ryan, a seven-term Republican congressman, to run for vice president and re-election simultaneously.
Zerban, a Wisconsin delegate, is getting hugs and handshakes as he meets fellow Democrats. He's been invited to participate in panel discussions, but unlike Biden he won't appear on the convention main stage. Still, Zerban said it's a prime chance to connect with movers and shakers in the party.
"I feel like I'm in good company," Zerban tells The Associated Press. "I'm the other guy running against Paul Ryan, just like Barack Obama and Joe Biden."
? Brian Bakst ? Twitter http://twitter.com/Stowydad
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JOBS, JOBS AND JOBS
Campaign 2012 is all about jobs.
The next unemployment report from the Labor Department comes out Friday morning, but President Barack Obama typically gets a peek the night before.
So will the president be privy to that closely watched data when he addresses the Democratic National Convention on Thursday night?
White House and campaign aides say they don't know.
Here's what to expect either way: Economists believe the report will show job gains of around 135,000 or so, but they expect the unemployment rate to hang at 8.3 percent. Anything under 100,000 new jobs would raise concerns that hiring is slowing as the economy sputters. Or the president could get a post-speech bounce if the figure tops 175,000.
There will be two more jobs reports before the election: Oct. 5 and Nov. 2.
? Christopher S. Rugaber ? Twitter http://twitter.com/ChrisRugaber
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BEER POLITICS
Vote for Barack Obama. You might get a beer.
The president of the United States stopped at a fire and rescue station in Norfolk, Va., on Tuesday as his convention began in Charlotte, N.C. Obama presented White House-brewed beer to the battalion chief and four firefighters.
"I want you to test it out," he said. "It's a whole case. I am going to call you up and see if we have the right recipe."
Though the beer didn't have a label, the White House says it was a mix of bottles of honey ale, regular ale and dark ale. The Obama White House has been dabbling in homebrews of late, and it released a recipe over the weekend.
One of the firefighters at Norfolk Fire Rescue Station 14, presumably on duty, asked Obama: "Should we wait until tomorrow to drink it?"
"I don't want to get you into trouble with the chief," the president responded
AP White House Correspondent Ben Feller put it this way Saturday: "As a political symbol, beer is not just about beer. It is about the likable, accessible, regular guy who relates to life in the real world and enjoys popping a cold one. Sure, taste counts, but so do votes."
? Matthew Daly ? Twitter http://twitter.com/MatthewDalyWDC
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MAKING THE GRADE
Grading metaphors were all the rage on Day 1 of the Democratic National Convention, which also happens to be the first day of school for a lot of kids.
It all began after President Barack Obama gave himself an "incomplete" when an interviewer asked him to do a self-assessment of his performance on the economy.
Republicans were quick to pounce.
"If President Obama can't even give himself a passing grade, why would the American people give him another four years?" asked the Romney campaign's Amanda Henneberg.
Obama adviser Robert Gibbs, appearing on MSNBC, said an incomplete makes sense because the nation still has "a long way to go to get back to the type of economic security that middle class families expect in this country."
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, appearing on Fox, gave Obama an "A for effort. I give him an A for making sure Americans are better off today than they were four years ago."
Obama campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki said "an incomplete and a desire to do more is far better than a failing grade."
She awarded Republicans a "failing grade" ? and faulted them for "bad study habits" and "rotten ideas," too.
? Nancy Benac ? Twitter http://twitter.com/nbenac
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AND FOR THOSE AT HOME ...
When he speaks Thursday at the Democratic National Convention, President Barack Obama wants supporters who didn't trek to Charlotte to feel like they're part of the action.
His campaign blasted out invitations Tuesday to neighborhood watch parties that promote the gatherings as a chance to "tune in to the big night and be part of the discussion about the next steps for getting out the vote in your hometown."
If that's not enticing enough, the Obama campaign says the watch parties will include an online, pre-speech show hosted by actor Kal Penn that features exclusive interviews with first lady Michelle Obama and Vice President Joe Biden.
? Brian Bakst ? Twitter http://twitter.com/Stowydad
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'BE CLEARER'
"He has got to continue to be clearer on what has happened for the good." ? Democratic delegate Charles Sweetman, a retired school superintendent from Langrove, Vt., on how Obama needs to speak proudly about his accomplishments.
? Josh Lederman ? Twitter http://twitter.com/JoshLedermanAP
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BRACKETOLOGY DEBT
President Barack Obama campaigned at Norfolk State in Virginia on Tuesday, and he told a friendly crowd there that they owe him for lousing up his predictions in the NCAA brackets last spring.
"I had Missouri going pretty deep," Obama said. "But I want you to know I've got no hard feelings. Let's just say you owe me one."
What would be a fitting payback? How about, say, delivering Virginia for the Democrats in November?
Norfolk State was a No. 15 seed in the tournament, and beat second-seeded Missouri 86-84 in the second round.
? Nancy Benac ? Twitter http://twitter.com/nbenac
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THE ICK FACTOR
President Barack Obama has been using some vivid imagery lately to discuss the national political dynamic.
He's talked about breaking the fever of partisan sniping in Washington. And he's speculated that his re-election might help end the political stalemate in Washington, much like "popping a blister."
About that latter description ... Even deputy Obama campaign manager Stephanie Cutter called it "disgusting." She spoke during a panel discussion with ABC News and Yahoo! News
? Nancy Benac ? Twitter http://twitter.com/nbenac
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BY THE NUMBERS
Some numbers to ponder as the Democratic National Convention begins in Charlotte, N.C.:
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?The Democratic National Committee says there are 10,000 volunteers, 6,000 convention delegates and 15,000 members of the media expected in Charlotte this week.
?Barack Obama will need votes from 2,777 delegates to win the nomination (the 5,963 total delegates includes alternates).
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? Julie Pace and Stephen Ohlemacher ? Twitter http://twitter.com/jpaceDC and http://twitter.com/stephenatap
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WATCH THE TRACTOR
Even the contender for the highest office in the land sometimes has to wait.
Mitt Romney's motorcade, en route to the home of former Massachusetts Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey in West Windsor, Vt., on Tuesday morning, got briefly waylaid ? by a tractor.
Romney's motorcade was winding its way through the mountains, driving past red barns and horse farms and leaving the highways behind in favor of gravel roads that often carried the cars far out of range of any cell phone signal. At one point, the motorcade came upon the tractor, slowing it to a stop before the tractor got out of the way.
Healey's home is outside of any actual town. Woodstock, Vt., where reporters traveling with him will be staying, is about 8 miles away.
? Kasie Hunt ? Twitter http://twitter.com/kasie
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WEATHER WATCH
Republicans had a hurricane to contend with during their national convention last week in Florida.
Now it's the Democrats' turn to fret about the weather.
They're keeping a close eye on the forecast in Charlotte, where President Barack Obama is scheduled to accept his party's nomination Thursday night at an outdoor football stadium with 74,000 seats.
Obama campaign manager Jim Messina says the president's convention speech Thursday will go on "rain or shine" at the outdoor Bank of America Stadium ? but there's still some wiggle room.
That could change if the weather conditions would put people at risk, Messina said during a panel discussion with ABC News and Yahoo! News.
? Nancy Benac ? Twitter http://twitter.com/nbenac
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