It must be mentioned that one of the most frequently used rhetorical devices is the use of first-person plural widely used in pre-election speeches.
Political speeches, especially those delivered at party conventions or other collections of listeners who share the platform or party of the speaker, are generally delivered in the first-person plural, rather than singular, “Now, what can we do?We can turn around and say let’s have a health care program that establishes equality” /Mike Gravel “Presidential campaign”, March 2007.Late Modern English does not differentiate between the inclusive, “you and I,” and the exclusive, “me and someone else,” sense of the second-person in its pronouns; so a listener hearing “we” or “us” is free to interpret the usage as inclusive even if it is not,