President Barack Obama smiles as supporters applaud during a rally at Norfolk State University in Norfolk, Va., Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012. ( AP Photo/Steve Helber)
President Barack Obama smiles as supporters applaud during a rally at Norfolk State University in Norfolk, Va., Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012. ( AP Photo/Steve Helber)
California delegates Harpreet Sandhu from Richmond, right, Kulbir Kaur Bainiwal from Stockton arrive at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., on Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) ? Remembered for soaring speeches at the last two Democratic conventions, President Barack Obama faces much tougher constraints Thursday when he accepts his party's nomination for a second time.
Now he has a four-year record and must convince Americans to stick with the status quo in a climate of high unemployment, fallen home values and wide income disparity.
Given the tough environment, less lofty oratory is almost certain. And Obama has little choice but to walk a careful line as he unspools his vision for America's future while picking apart Republican Mitt Romney's plans for taxes, Medicare and the environment.
Overtly ambitious or novel proposals could invite an obvious rebuke: If it's such a great idea, what hasn't the president already done it?
"Obama is definitely in a presidential pickle," said McGill University presidential scholar Gil Troy. "The candidate of hope and change now has reality to contend with, including disappointments and messes."
The best re-nomination speeches ? Ronald Reagan's 1984 "morning in America" and Bill Clinton's 1992 "bridge to the 21st century" ? included "a heroic narrative of renewal," Troy said. Obama must give a flavor of that Thursday, he said, despite a serious handicap: The economy lacks the obvious upward trend that boosted Reagan's campaign.
"Obama has not gotten that statistical gift," Troy said, "so he has to compensate with oratorical gifts."
Great oratory has a mixed record in presidential campaigns.
Dwight Eisenhower and George W. Bush are among those who won two terms with lackluster speaking styles.
Obama excelled in big forums from the start. He rocketed to national fame at the 2004 Democratic convention, where his "one America" speech largely overshadowed the nominee, John Kerry.
"There's not a liberal America and a conservative America," Obama told the adoring crowd in Boston. "There's the United States of America. There's not a black America and white America and Latino America and Asian America; there's the United States of America."
When he accepted the nomination four years later in a huge outdoor stadium in Denver, Obama deplored "the broken politics in Washington."
"America, we are better than these last eight years," he said. "We are a better country than this."
Now, of course, Obama is the incumbent under the microscope. Unemployment is higher, Washington's politics are more bitterly partisan than before and the notion of no liberal-conservative divide seems naive at best.
Reagan's "morning in America" optimism might be ridiculed in today's climate. And rhetorical flourishes by Obama could add fuel to Republican jibes that he is much better at talking than leading.
But Obama can hardly afford to assume the dour demeanor of Jimmy Carter.
A presidential challenger can use big speeches to criticize the incumbent in detail while offering less-specific, even gauzy, alternatives. That's what Romney did last week in Tampa, Fla., say Democrats, who repeatedly cite his lack of detailed explanations for claims that he can cut taxes, increase military spending and reduce the deficit.
Obama doesn't enjoy that leeway. He's constrained in looking both backward and forward.
He must defend his four-year record, of course. But fierce resistance from tea party-influenced Republicans has thwarted some of his key proposals, including jobs bills. His biggest legislative achievement, the 2010 health care overhaul, sharply divided the country and gave Republicans a new battle cry: "Repeal Obamacare."
The same partisan dynamics could crimp Obama's ability to offer a second-term agenda. With Republicans likely to retain control of the House along with filibuster powers ? if not an outright majority ? in the Senate, bold new Democratic proposals might seem implausible.
Still, a range of scholars and operatives urge Obama to err on the side of ambition and specificity.
"We think the country is desperate to know where the president wants to take the country ? his vision and plan in the face of weak recovery but more important, the long-term problems facing the country," veteran Democratic consultants James Carville and Stan Greenberg said in a memo released Tuesday. "The more robust and serious his plans are for American energy production and independence, for infrastructure and America's modernization, for advancing education and innovation, for getting health care costs down," they wrote, "the more the Republicans will look irrelevant."
Carville and Greenberg urged Obama to hammer at Romney's plans to preserve income tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans while also cutting taxes on investment income that applies mainly to the rich.
Voters "are rightfully angry and increasingly populist," the two men said.
Troy agreed that Obama should risk being labeled too liberal if that's what it takes to defend his stimulus plan and auto industry bailout. Both initiatives generally got higher marks from economists than from average Americans.
The president can talk about the bailout "as a reflection of a government that is good, a government that works," Troy said.
He said the president should use Thursday's speech to "invite Americans back into the Obama narrative. He has to sell Brand Obama."
The president might skip many of the flourishes that wowed the crowd in Boston eight years ago. Instead, expect him to try to use the speech ? one of the last remaining prime-time, heavily watched events of the campaign ? to put the best possible face on a grim economy, and to convince voters that Romney would make it worse.
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EDITOR'S NOTE ? Charles Babington covers national politics for The Associated Press.
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