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Chelsea Clinton took the stage of the Democratic National Convention on Thursday to portray her mother Hillary Clinton as a loving, smart and playful woman qualified to be elected president of the United States.
In a 12-minute introduction received warmly in a packed Philadelphia arena, Chelsea countered criticism that her mother is an untrustworthy politician who struggles to show compassion in front of American voters.
“She’s a woman driven by compassion, by faith, by a fierce sense of justice and a heart full of love,” the only child of presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton and former US President Bill Clinton told the crowd.
Hillary took the stage minutes later to become the first woman to accept the presidential nomination of a major US party.
Chelsea, a 36-year-old mother of two, was the last in a series of speakers at the four-day gathering who sought to cast Hillary in a familial light ahead of the 8 November election against Republican Donald Trump.
She called her mother a “wonderful, thoughtful, hilarious” person who made time during her childhood to attend dance and piano recitals, and to gaze at the sky with her to find “shapes in the clouds”.
Chelsea, who has been in the public eye since her childhood in the White House, took a low profile after her father left office in 2001. She married investment banker Marc Mezvinsky and served as vice chair of the Clinton Foundation charity.
After her mother’s presidential bid, she re-entered public life to hit the campaign trail, endearing herself to supporters with stories of Clinton as a mother and grandmother to her children, Charlotte, aged 2 come September, and Aidan, born in June.
See more of The Quint’s US Elections 2016 coverage.
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