Here's the latest for Wednesday August 19th: Democratic Party formally nominates Joe Biden; Bill Clinton, John Kerry, Colin Powell hammer President Trump; Australia to produce possible coronavirus vaccine; Wildfires in California. AP Domestic

WASHINGTON Democrats formally nominated Joe Biden for president during the second night of a virtual convention Tuesday that started with scathing criticism of President Donald Trumps administration and ended with personal reflections on the former vice presidents decades of service.

More than three decades after he first ran for president, Biden clinched the nomination following a virtual roll call featuring party luminaries from all 50 states and lesser-known Democrats who described Biden as ready to lead the nation through the twin crises of a pandemic and economic uncertainty.

We have shown that the heart of this nation still beats with kindness and courage, said Dr. Jill Biden, who delivered the evenings marquee address. We just need leadership worthy of our nation worthy of you.

The second night of the convention began with several high-profile Democrats slamming President Donald Trump. Former President Bill Clinton recited statistics about the number of infections and deaths from the pandemic, which he and others asserted could have been lowered if the Trump administration had acted differently or more quickly

Its was a preview of a tough message Biden and other Democrats are certain to reprise between now and the Nov. 3 election.

Did it have to be this way? No, Clinton argued.

America, Donald Trump has quit on you, claimed Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

We deserve a person with integrity and judgement, former President Jimmy Carter said in a video.

Despite the heavy line of attacks, the final minutes of the second night became far lighter as the party conveyed Biden as a man who had endured tremendous hardship in his own life and brokered friendships with those like the late Sen. John McCain on the other side of the aisle.

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Minutes after he clinched the nomination, Biden appeared briefly in a video with his grandchildren and family, promising to say more later. The former vice president reappeared to embrace his wife after her remarks, which became personal and emotional as she recalled how Biden handled the death of their son, Beau Biden, who died in 2015.

I wondered if I would ever smile or feel joy again, Jill Biden said.

But, she said, four days after Beaus funeral, she watched her husband put on a suit, take a deep breath and walk out into a world empty of our son.

He went back to work. Thats just who he is, she said. He and Kamala (Harris) will work as hard as you do every day to make this nation better.

Biden is set to formally accept the nomination Thursday.

John Fritze

Jill Biden spoke as a teacher, a mother and a wife when she addressed the Democratic National Convention on the night her husband was formally nominated to challenge President Donald Trump.

The former Second Lady described her husband as a man who has gone through the unimaginable while still managing to keep putting one front in front of the other.

He does it for you, she said of Joe Biden. His faith is in you, in us.

And she shared her own pain from the 2015 death of Beau Biden, the familys oldest child, drawing larger lessons to be applied to a broken nation.

How do you make a broken family whole? The same way you make a nation whole, she said. With love and understanding and with small acts of kindness. With bravery. With unwavering faith.

Biden spoke from Room 232 of the high school in Wilmington, Delaware, where she taught English when her husband served in the Senate.

A sign on the bulletin board read: Welcome back Dr. Jill Biden.

While she didn't mention Trump in her 10-minute speech,Biden used the backdrop of the school to address the pandemic, saying shes heartbroken by the magnitude of the nations loss of life and the failure to protect our communities. She said she feels the frustration of parents juggling work while supporting their childrens learning or fearful theyll get sick at school.

"Like so many of you," she said, "Im left asking: how do I keep my family safe?"

As shes done at past conventions, Biden on Tuesday told the story of Joe Biden losing his first wife and baby daughter in a 1972 car crash. His two sons, Beau and Hunter, were badly injured.

Dr. Jill Biden delivers a speech from a school in Wilmington, Delaware about COVID and closed schools for the Democratic National Convention. USA TODAY

I feel in love with a man and two littleboys standing in the wreckage of unthinkable loss, Biden said. We found that love holds a family together.

After Jill and Joe married in 1977, they had a daughter, Ashley.

Beau Biden, who introduced his father at the 2008 and 2012 conventions, died of brain cancer in 2015 at 46.

I wondered if I would ever smile or feel joy again, Jill Biden said Tuesday.

But, four days after Beaus funeral, she watched her husband put on a suit, take a deep breath and walk out into a world empty of our son.

He went back to work. Thats just who he is, she said. I know that if we entrust this nation to Joe, he will do for your family what he did for ours: bring us together and make us whole."

Maureen Groppe

Former GOP Secretary of State Colin Powell spoke in support of Joe Biden, saying he would bring the country together and not coddle dictators.

Today, we are a country divided, and we have a president doing everything in his power to make it that way and keep us that way, Powell said without mentioning Trump by name. What a difference it will make to have a president who unites us, who restores our strength and our soul.

Powells decision to address the virtual convention on behalf of Biden makes him one of the most prominent Republicans to play a part in the process of nominating the former vice president.

Powell, who served in President George W. Bushs cabinet, said in 2016 he would vote for Hillary Clinton, partly because of Trumps leading role in the birther movement questioning the legitimacy of Barack Obamas citizenship.

Then in June, Powell, the first African-American secretary of state, said he planned to vote for Biden while chiding Trump for his behavior, notably the decision a few days before to clear Lafayette Square in Washington D.C. of mostly peaceful protestors so he could stage a photo op in front of St. Johns Episcopal Church with a bible.

On Tuesday, Powell said Biden will be a president we will all be proud to salute.

With Joe Biden in the White House, you will never doubt that he will stand with our friends and stand up to our adversariesnever the other way around, he said. He will trust our diplomats and our intelligence community, not the flattery of dictators and despots. He will make it his job to know when anyone dares to threaten us. He will stand up to our adversaries with strength and experience. They will know he means business.

Ledyard King

After video segments highlighting Bidens health care plan, progressive activist Ady Barkan delivered a speech on the importance of access to health care for all Americans, particularly during the coronavirus pandemic. Barkan was diagnosed with the degenerative neurological disease ALS in 2016 shortly after the birth of his son and has become a prominent voice for single-payer health care.

Biden has said he wants a Medicare-like option and to strengthen the Affordable Care Act.

We live in the richest country in history and yet we do not guarantee this most basic human right. Everyone living in America should get the health care they need regardless of their employment status or ability to pay, Barkan said.

Barkan made headlines in 2017 when he was filmed confronting former Republican Sen. Jeff Flake over a tax bill. Barkan initially supported Sen. Elizabeth Warren for president and then backed Sen. Bernie Sanders. Barkan and Biden disagree on Medicare for All, but Barkan has urged progressives not to sit out of the November election.

In July, Barkan announced his endorsement of Biden. The two discussed their differences in a video interview, and Barkan said he would take Biden up on an offer to help figure out whats enough on health care should Biden be elected.

Although he & I have different perspectives on the world, winning this election is essential, Barkan said at the time.

Barkan said Tuesday that with Biden as president, progressives can continue advocating for further action on health care.

We must elect Joe Biden. Each of us must be a hero for our communities, for our country, and then, with a compassionate and intelligent president, we must act together and put on his desk a bill that guarantees us all the health care we deserve, Barkan said.

Jeanine Santucci

Ady Barkan, who confronted Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake on the Trump tax cuts effect on health care, spoke at the Democratic National Convention. USA TODAY

John Kerry, the former secretary of state and 2004 Democratic nominee for president, slammed President Donald Trump for failing to confront Russia over interfering with the 2016 election or over bounties allegedly put on U.S. troops.

When this president goes overseas, it isnt a goodwill mission, its a blooper reel, Kerry said. Our troops cant get out of harms way by hiding in the White House bunker.

Republicans blasted Kerry for negotiating a deal aimed at hindering Irans nuclear program during the Obama administration and Trump withdrew from the deal. Trump has focused his foreign policy on securing the borders and renegotiating trade deals with Canada and Mexico, and with China.

Kerry served in the Senate from Massachusetts with the presumptive Democratic nominee to challenge Trump, Joe Biden of Delaware. Kerry said Biden, a former chairman of the Foreign Relations and Judiciary committees, for having the steely grit to deal with international crises such as genocide in the Balkans or apartheid in South Africa. Kerry also promoted the Obama administrations support of the Paris climate change agreement with 195 nations and stopped ebola before it became a pandemic.

Joes moral compass has always pointed in the right direction, Kerry said. Joe understands that none of the issues of this world not nuclear weapons, not the challenge of building back better after COVID, not terrorism and certainly not the climate crisis none can be resolved without bringing nations together.

Bart Jansen

Former Massachusetts senator and former Democratic presidential nominee in 2004, John Kerry addresses the Democratic National Convention. USA TODAY

Former Vice President Joe Biden on Tuesday formally secured enough Democratic delegates to become the party's nominee to challenge President Donald Trump, winning one of the highest prizes in U.S. politics more than three decades after he first campaigned for it.

Though presidential nominating conventions havent been contested for decades and Biden demonstrated he had enough support for the nomination months ago, the formal roll call is nevertheless a symbolic milestone and an expression of the partys support for their candidate.

During the state primaries and caucuses, Biden collected 2,687 delegates -- more than twice the 1,073 earned by his closest rival, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Biden will formally accept the nomination Thursday.

The nomination completes the chief and least suspenseful - objective of the convention: Choosing the candidate that will be on the November presidential ballot. But its also done with fanfare and celebration, a moment where party rivals who vied for the nomination united behind the nominee.

Few moments have underscored the unusual nature of the Democrats' virtual convention as the roll call Tuesday that is expected to lead to Joe Biden's nomination.

All 57 states and territories are participating in the Roll Call Across America, which included video montages from each area when their turn came to announce their delegate allocations. The various party activists announcing those delegate pledges weren't just governors, senators and congressmen but also parents, teachers, and small business owners.

That meant local delegates could make their announcements with symbols of the states beauty or important landmarks, such as a fire station in Connecticut, the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama or the Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington, D.C.

Marisol Garcia, a high school parent and a union organizer for the National Education Association, announced Arizonas votes with cacti in the background.

Arizona casts 29 votes for Bernie Sanders and 51 for our next president Joe Biden, she said with cacti in the background.

The display marked a major departure from past years and underscored the challenges convention planners have endured because of the coronavirus pandemic.

In normal election years, delegates gather on the floor of the hall and formally announce -- state by state -- how their delegation will vote. Though the results are almost always preordained, the roll call gives a member of a state's party a chance to offer a short speech espousing the soon-to-be-nominee and promote their areas while building a sense of drama until the candidate formally crosses the threshold of delegates needed to seize the nomination.

John Fritze and Ledyard King

National conventions usually feature politicians and party stars but not always.

I could tell he really saw me, Jacquelyn Brittany, a security guard at the New York Times who operated the elevator during a Biden visit there last year, said during the convention.

Nominating someone like that to be in the White House is a good place to start, she said.

Jacquelyn has declined to publicize her last name. Brittanyis her middle name, according to the Washington Post.

Brittany was one of several people who seconded Bidens nomination before the formal roll call of delegates.

John Fritze

The primaries are here! How does one get elected in the first place and what is in store for the Democratic National Convention in 2020? We explain. USA TODAY

New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, one of the most outspoken progressives in Congress, delivered a nomination speech for Sen. Bernie Sanders ahead of the official roll call that will nominate Joe Biden as the partys candidate.

Sanders, Bidens last standing opponent in the primary race, suspended his run for the Democratic nomination in April and has supported Biden. Ocasio-Cortezs roughly 90-second speech didnt mention Biden but established the ideals of the progressive wing of the party.

The progressive movement is striving to recognize and repair the wounds of racial injustice, colonization, misogyny and homophobia, Ocasio-Cortez said, adding that it realizes the unsustainable brutality of an economy that rewards explosive inequalities of wealth for the few at the expense of long term stability for the many.

When the length of her speech was first reported atone minute, some viewed it as a snub to progressives, noting that some Republicans were given more time to speak. Others saw her inclusion as a sign Democrats are hoping to unify progressives and centrists against Trump.

Ocasio-Cortez was a prominent backer and surrogate for Sanders campaign and has since said she will vote for Biden but hopes to influence his platform to the left.She co-chaired the climate task force to advise Biden on policy.

Sanders, who spoke on the first night of the Democratic Convention, has asked his supporters to back Biden despite their differences in ideology. He said during his speech Monday that the country cannot withstand another Trump term.

The future of our democracy is at stake, Sanders said. The price of failure is just too great to imagine.

Bob King, former president of the United Auto Workers, also delivered a symbolic nominating speech for Sanders on Tuesday.

-Jeanine Santucci

Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez emphasized progressive causes as she seconded the presidential nomination of Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders during the Democratic National Convention Tuesday night. The party formally nominated Joe Biden. (Aug. 19) AP Domestic

The buck never stops. Clinton hits Trump on COVID-19

Former President Bill Clinton sought to recapture some of his explainer in chief mojo during remarks Tuesday that were highly critical of President Donald Trumps response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Did it have to be this way? No, Clinton said of coronavirus infection rates and deaths, after relating several of those statistics. COVID hit us much harder than it had to.

Clinton blamed Trump for ignoring the advice of scientists and spending too much time on social media blaming others for the crisis: The buck never stops there, he said.

The 42nd president has ridden peaks of popularity between troughs of disfavor since leaving the White House in 2001. His 48-minute speech at the 2012 convention was viewed by some Democrats as a more cogent argument for President Barack Obamas second term than anything Obama had offered himself at that point in the campaign, and it earned Clinton the nickname explainer in chief.

But while Clinton has remained popular among the Democratic establishment, the controversies of his presidency and allegations of sexual assault and harassment have come into harsher light during a MeToo movement that has exposed similar, systemic problems in the workplace.

And so while Clinton played an extensive role on stage at the 2016 convention when former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was the nominee, his speaking time was limited to just a few minutes Tuesday and his slot fell in the 9 p.m. hour before major networks began carrying the convention in its entirety.

Clinton has addressed every Democratic convention since 1980.

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Joe Biden secures Democratic presidential nomination during night of attacks on Trump and messages of unity - USA TODAY

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