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Success in Ohio and Texas keeps Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign alive



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Published Date: 05 March 2008
HILLARY Clinton pledged to "make history" today as she revived her ailing campaign in Texas and Ohio in the race for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination.
Mrs Clinton's victories over Barack Obama come as many observers were writing off her chances of staying in the race following a string of 11 consecutive wins for the young Illinois senator since Super Tuesday.

But Mr Obama remains in a strong position in terms of support from the party's delegates, who will select their nominee at the national convention this summer, and the race is now far from over.

In the Republican contest, John McCain swept Texas, Ohio, Vermont and Rhode Island, giving the battle-scarred former Vietnam prisoner of war enough delegates to officially secure the party's nomination.

Mike Huckabee, Mr McCain's closest rival in the Republican presidential campaign, pulled out of the race on Tuesday night after disapppointing showings in all four states.
Remaining US primaries and caucuses: MARCH
  • March 8: Wyoming (Democratic only)
  • March 11: Mississippi
APRIL
  • April 22: Pennsylvania
MAY
  • May 6: Indiana, North Carolina
  • May 13: Nebraska, West Virginia
  • May 16-18: Hawaii Republican Party state convention; delegates selected during a week-long process.
  • May 20: Kentucky, Oregon
  • May 27: Idaho (Republican only)
JUNE
  • June 3: Montana, New Mexico (Republican only), South Dakota
AUGUST
  • Aug. 25-28: Democratic National Convention in Denver
SEPTEMBER
  • Sept. 1-4: Republican National Convention in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota
NOVEMBER
  • Nov. 4: Election Day


Kissing his wife on her cheek, Mr McCain thanked his family and friends for their support and praised Mr Huckabee as a "great and fine and decent" American.

Mr Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor, said it had been a "journey of a lifetime", that he had fought a good fight, and "kept the faith", but that it was now time to turn his attention towards a united party, "a party that indeed comes together on those principles that have brought many of us, not just to this race, but to politics in general".

Wearing bright red at her campaign headquarters in Columbus, Ohio, Mrs Clinton said: "For everyone here in Ohio and across America who's ever been counted out but refused to be knocked out; for everyone who has stumbled but stood right back up; and for everyone who works hard but never gives up; this one is for you."

To loud cheers of "Hillary, Hillary, Hillary", she said: "You know what they say, 'As Ohio goes, so goes the nation'.

"Well, this nation's coming back and so is this campaign.

"The people of Ohio have said loudly and clearly, 'We're going on, we're going strong and we're going all the way'."

She highlighted some of the differences between her policies and those of Mr Obama and, referring to his rhetoric and inspirational speeches, she said when there was an emergency in the world there was "no time for speeches and on-the-job training".

It was the same message she had aired in a political attack advertisement in the run-up to the contests – one of a series of attacks which many observers believe led to Mrs Clinton's successes in Texas and Ohio.

She said she was looking forward to continuing her dialogue with Mr Obama "on the issues that matter most to our country" and said she would "make history" in America.

Referring to her campaign and the American people, she said: "Together we will turn promises into action, words into solutions and hope into reality.

"Together we will seize this moment, lift this nation, and heal and lead this world."

Mr Obama congratulated Mrs Clinton for running a "hard fought race", but focused his speech on November's general election and the Republicans.

Speaking in San Antonio, Texas, before that state's results were known, he said: "No matter what happens tonight, we have nearly the same delegate lead as we did this morning and we are on our way to winning this nomination."

Turning to the general election and Mr McCain, he said: "Now in the weeks to come we will begin a great debate about the future of this country with a man who has served it bravely and loved it dearly."

He said Mr McCain may claim "a long history of straight-talk and independent thinking" but in this campaign "he has fallen in line with the very same policies that have ill-served America".

"He has seen where George Bush has taken this country and he promises to keep us on the very same course," Mr Obama said to a chorus of boos.

He said this was the same course that continued to "divide and isolate" America by substituting "bluster and bullying" for diplomacy as Mr Obama referred to criticism of his plans to sit down for talks with the leaders of Iran and Cuba as president.

"Strong countries and strong leaders aren't afraid to tell hard truths to petty dictators," he said.

He used his speech to answer his critics in both parties as he said: "John McCain and Hillary Clinton have echoed each other, dismissing this call for change as eloquent but empty, speeches not solutions.

But he said his call for change did not begin with his words, but with Americans across the nation calling for change.
Mr Obama said he was calling for a change which would allow young Americans to go abroad and hold their head high when people ask where they came from.

"You can call it many things, but you can't call it empty," he said.
Referring to this week's political attacks he said: "If I am the nominee of this party, I will not allow us to be distracted by the same politics that seeks to divide us with false charges and meaningless labels."

He said he would not stand for the kind of politics that "used religion as a wedge and patriotism as a bludgeon".

"The world is watching what we do here," Mr Obama said.

"The world is paying attention to how we conduct ourselves, what we say, and how we treat one another."

Exit polls in Ohio showed Mrs Clinton won the support of blue-collar voters (56% to Mr Obama's 43%) and voters over 60 (67% to 31%).

In Texas, Hispanics, who make up around 40% of the Democratic electorate, also backed Mrs Clinton, 64% to 35%.

But African Americans, who make up about a fifth of voters in the state, backed Mr Obama 83% to 16%.

While Mrs Clinton won the Texas primary, Ohio and Rhode Island, Mr Obama took Vermont.

But Texas uses a complex system, known as the "Texas two-step", to allocate delegates to candidates and results from its caucuses, which will decide the final third of the state's delegates, are not yet known.

The full article contains 1137 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 05 March 2008 11:46 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: US elections
 
1

Ross Fyffe,

Scotland 05/03/2008 03:35:01
Barrack HUSSEIN Obama, will be finished by a great war hero,
2

Ross Fyffe,

Scotland 05/03/2008 03:54:42
And Hilary RODAM Clintan takes Ohio!!!!!
3

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 05/03/2008 06:54:11
I'm pleased Mrs Clinton is back in the race. There are more women than blacks in the US so I suggest it's time they had a President. Maybe a black next time?
4

Axel Heidsmann,

05/03/2008 07:26:23
I wonder if this is the first time neuromarketing research techniques (functional magnetic resonance imaging and electroencephalography) have been used by the support groups of would-be presidential candidates to determine which issues, policies, arguments, sound-bites, images, gestures, emotions, clothes, etc. get the most positive responses from different demographic groups? While neuropolitics has the potential to give the electorate the political products that they want, will it give them the sincere politicians that they need? (And why is it that the word 'sincere' looks so uncomfortable when placed beside 'politicians'?)
5

Colin Midlem,

Belmont USA 05/03/2008 09:37:06
As a Permanent Resident of the USA this election will have an important effect on my life. My leanings are toward a Democrat in the White House. However Hillary Clinton is scary. I believe strongly in gender equality but just shiver when I see and hear her. Barack Obama is an attractive candidate who seems to transcend racial prejudices - long needed in the "Country of the Free."

Que Sera?
6

George.,

05/03/2008 09:46:24
Hillary’s Math Problem
Forget tonight. She could win 16 straight and still lose.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/118240
7

George.,

05/03/2008 09:49:40
The Clinton Chronicles
Discover the story behind Bill and Hillary Clinton and the Mena, Arkansas cocaine smuggling operation they ran, while Bill was governor, prior to the presidency.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6470450895164255089&hl=en
8

George.,

05/03/2008 09:52:54
Clintons to face fraud trial
Judge setting date, testimony to include ex-president, senator
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=56868
9

Harry "Dingy" Reid,

Las Vegas 05/03/2008 12:42:10
Hillary needs to send Rush Limbaugh a thank you card, afterall he was supporting her for the last week on his radio show so the republicans would vote for her to keep the battle up between the 2 Dems.
10

BMCG,

05/03/2008 13:18:23
Rush Limbaugh??? Oh please.....
11

The Federalist (the poster formerly know as NAUON),

05/03/2008 13:59:01
#6 A lot of assumptions - and the biggest is that Michigan and Florida won't seat delegates. There is now a good chance Florida will sit delegates after the state governor Charlie Christ said that the state legislature (not the Democratic Party) would pay for a re-run in Florida.

Moreover with the Rezko trial now started there will be more digging in to Obama's links to him. Big rumour is that Obama could be called as a witness in the trial - now that could be dynamite if it happens.
12

Sandi,

San Diego 05/03/2008 15:36:48
Hillary may have a math problem, but Obama has exactly the same problem. Neither of them will reach the number of delegates needed to become the Party's nominee. The only way Obama could reach it was by bullying Hillary into dropping out. That is not going to happen. They will end up in a virtual tie, and while Obama may end up with a few more delegates, less than a hundred, he certainly is not the overwhelming favorite of Democratic voters. It will be very interesting to see how this all plays out.
13

Dáithí,

San Jose 05/03/2008 15:59:35
#9 - HDR

>"Hillary needs to send Rush Limbaugh a thank you card, after all he was supporting her for the last week on his radio show so the republicans would vote for her to keep the battle up between the 2 Dems."

Exactly right! Texas has an 'open' primary, republicans can cross party lines and cast a vote for the Democrats. Republicans, knowing that McCain was a 'lock', were urged to 'Vote Hillary' for 2 reasons:

1. It would keep the Democrats attacking each other thru the summer

2. Hillary as the Dem nominee would galvanize opposition against her, something that would help McCain easily portray himself as 'the lesser of two evils'
14

,

05/03/2008 18:25:53
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
15

Sandi,

San Diego 05/03/2008 20:07:22
#9, #13

And yet Obama has bragged repeatedly about how many Republicans cross over to vote for him.
16

American,

05/03/2008 21:02:04
#5-colin-It makes no difference to you that barack was on a committee for (arab) plo sympathizers? or that his wife (future first lady) has never been proud of this country, or that barack (possible commander-in-chief) chose to fold his hands in front of him while the singing of the national anthem --hillary at least had the sense to put her hand to her heart. Makes no difference to you that he wants to hand illegal immigrants drivers licenses (along with welfare benefits). Do you have any idea about his voting policies or political views??? Anyone can claim "it's time for change"--I agree it's time for change--but not change for the worse. I dont like any of the candidates, but I surely would not trust national security issues to a plo sympathizer.
17

Carolyn 1,

05/03/2008 23:38:02
You forgot the committee on NATO which he is head of but never called a meeting for it because he's too busy, but he has time to complain that NATO is doing a lousy job.
18

henrymanchester,

UK 05/03/2008 23:52:56
She is one ugly little redneck in my opinion.
19

CaliforniaBhoy,

06/03/2008 01:01:16
#15-Sandi.

When Obama brags about Republicans voting for him that's because they really are crossing over.

Rush Limbaugh was up to some mischief making. He was encouraging Republicans who have no intention of voting for a Democrat in November to vote for Hillary in Ohio and Texas as a way to keep the Democrats battling with each other and with the hope to see blood resulting from those battles.

All this to aid McCain!
20

American,

06/03/2008 17:56:59
#19-sandi-What makes you think rush did that to aid mccain? Considering rush is no mccain fan (really not too many republicans mccain fans) it could have just been done for good political talk radio programming.

 

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