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Ann Romney, the candidate's wife, leads the Republican effort in a speech early next week designed to paint a softer picture of her sometimes aloof husband and reassure women that he offers them more. In doing so, she reprises a role she played in during the brutal GOP primaries in which she rose to her husband's defense against the Democratic charge that Republicans are waging a "war on women." Democrats have long recognized Ann Romney's effectiveness, notably refusing to back up a then-little known consultant named Hilary Rosen who suggested that Ann Romney knows little about women's struggles because the would-be first lady had "never worked a day in her life." Rosen later apologized. In Charlotte, Obama and his Democratic allies are countering with a full slate of female speakers, made public Tuesday at the height of the public shoving match between Akin and Republican leaders. Leading their lineup are Michelle Obama and Sandra Fluke, the Georgetown University student called a "slut" by conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh for supporting the provision in the president's health care law that requires insurance coverage of contraception. Fluke, who has campaigned for Obama, provided a preview of her speech in an email released by the president's re-election campaign. Romney and Ryan, Fluke wrote, tried to distance themselves from Akin's comments about rape. "But the fact is they're in lockstep with Akin on the major women's health issues of our time," Fluke wrote in the email to supporters. "There is a clear choice for women in this election." The Republican and Democratic slates of speakers suggest the parties want to fire up partisans and court minority voters. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio is speaking just before Romney on the closing day of the GOP convention in a nod to increasingly influential Hispanic voters and the freshman senator's own rising status in the party. Also on the GOP slate is New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez, the first female Hispanic governor, and Artur Davis, a former Democratic congressman who is black. In Charlotte, San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro will be the first Latino keynote speaker at a Democratic convention.
[Associated
Press;
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