TAMPA, FLA. - A resurgent GOP determined to reclaim the White House nominated Mitt Romney for president on Thursday and reintroduced millions of Americans to the man who shoulders their hopes for defeating President Obama.
"Now is the moment when we can stand up and say, 'I'm an American. I make my destiny. And we deserve better! My children deserve better! My family deserves better! My country deserves better,'" Romney said to roaring applause.
Romney, who has spent a year methodically dispensing with rivals and grooming himself for this run, faces an enormous challenge in unifying a party uneasy about his conservative bona fides. But he appeared to make inroads on Thursday night, including among the divided Minnesota delegation.
"He's come alive," said Janet Beihoffer, a Republican Party committeewoman from Lakeville. "He's speaking from the heart ... He's finally letting it out. It's the best thing that's happened to us in a long time."
Amid a sea of Romney shirts and signs, the nominee said the cure for America's economic ills "is jobs, lots of jobs" and pledged to create 12 million of them. "Now is the time to restore the promise of America," he said.
Romney steered clear of sharp attacks on the president, but he said that under Obama, "promises gave way to disappointment and division."
Romney, 65, used the night to enshrine his personal narrative in front of his largest audience ever, showcasing his history as a successful business executive, loving family man, the savior of the 2002 Winter Olympics and a leader who governed Massachusetts by conservative principles.
The speech served as the high point of meticulous preparations to reintroduce Romney to Americans after his failed presidential run four years ago. His campaign has been preparing to fight back against a Democratic portrait of Romney as an uncaring multimillionaire who molds his ideology to catch the political winds of the moment.