A look at Monday's speakers for the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver:
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MICHELLE OBAMA: The potential first lady addresses Democrats after a rocky summer as the target of conservative attacks. She was harshly criticized by Republicans for her comment that for the first time in her adult life she was proud of the United States, a comment her husband, Barack Obama, later said was merely an expression of her pride in high voter interest. The criticism of Michelle Obama led Obama earlier this year to call for opponents to "lay off my wife." In recent weeks, Michelle Obama has worked to soften her image, talking about raising two daughters in an interview in Ebony magazine and making a June appearance at an Ohio nursing home. Barack Obama's half-sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, and Michelle Obama's older brother, Craig Robinson, also will have roles in the convention.
HOUSE SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI: The nation's first female speaker of the House, Pelosi opens the convention. Pelosi has represented the San Francisco area in Congress since 1987. Since taking the gavel last year, Pelosi has steered a divided House through an economic stimulus package and opposition to many of President Bush's initiatives, including an override of Bush's veto of the 2008 farm bill. But so far she has failed to achieve a top goal since Democrats regained control of the House: halting U.S. combat missions in Iraq. The failure has led to criticism of Pelosi by liberal activists.
SEN. EDWARD M. KENNEDY: The Massachusetts senator is the subject of a five-minute recorded tribute. Diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor and recently completing radiation and chemotherapy, one of the nation's best-known Democrats has been keeping a low public profile. The video tribute will be introduced by his niece, Caroline Kennedy.
FORMER PRESIDENT JIMMY CARTER: The former president and Nobel Peace Prize winner from Georgia addresses Democrats on the convention's opening night. Some in the GOP see Carter's early support for Obama as an opening. Republican presidential candidate John McCain has said that if Democrats see a McCain presidency as a third term for Bush, then an Obama victory would be tantamount to a second term for Carter, who lost his 1980 re-election by a wide margin to Ronald Reagan.
SEN. CLAIRE McCASKILL: The Missouri Democrat was the first woman in the Senate to endorse Obama. She spent a week this summer on a bus tour of swing-state Missouri in support of Obama's candidacy. McCaskill endorsed Obama just after he lost New Hampshire's Democratic primary to Hillary Clinton, a politically risky move at the time.
SEN. AMY KLOBUCHAR: Klobuchar became a prominent female supporter of Obama shortly after he carried her home state of Minnesota by a wide margin in March. In 2006, she became the first woman elected to the Senate from Minnesota.
REP. JESSE JACKSON JR.: The son of the civil rights activist has represented the Chicago area since a special election in 1995 and is a national co-chairman of Obama's presidential campaign. In 2004, Jackson was an early supporter of Sen. John Kerry for his party's presidential nomination. Party leaders say Jackson's speech will "tell Barack Obama's life story."
FORMER REP. LEE HAMILTON: Now president of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Hamilton is a prominent Obama supporter from Indiana. After more than 30 years in Congress, Hamilton retired in 1999. He was a top Democrat on the Sept. 11 commission and co-chairman of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group. Hamilton's April endorsement of Obama helped the candidate's camp answer the question--"Who do you want to answer the phone at 3 a.m.?"--posed by the Clinton campaign.
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