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Clinton presses on, urges supporters to ignore calls to quit

AP
Posted: 2008-05-08 21:42:20
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) - Her voice raspy, her tone determined, Hillary Rodham Clinton urged her supporters Thursday to ignore the political pundits who have declared her toast.

The former first lady raced into a long West Virginia-to-the-West Coast campaign day, declaring she would move forward with her presidential effort and insisting anew that she, not Barack Obama, would be the stronger Democratic candidate to face Republican John McCain in November.

But her fresh comments about race dogged her as she pressed forward with her struggling candidacy.

In an interview with USA Today published Thursday, Clinton said, "I have a much broader base to build a winning coalition on." She cited an Associated Press article "that found how Senator Obama's support among working, hardworking Americans, white Americans, is weakening again, and how whites in both states who had not completed college were supporting me."

"There's a pattern emerging here," she said.

Obama's campaign did not respond to the comments, which generated buzz in the liberal blogosphere.

Working-class whites overwhelmingly favor Clinton over Obama, and their view of the Illinois senator has grown increasingly negative since late last year, according to Associated Press-Yahoo News polling. In an AP-Yahoo survey a month ago, more than half - or 53 percent - of whites who have not finished college had negative impressions of Obama, up a 12 points since November.

Data from exit polls also show that Obama's problem with working-class whites persists. About six in 10 of them voted for Clinton in primaries on Super Tuesday (Feb. 5) and earlier, and they have leaned toward her slightly more since then. On Tuesday, Clinton was supported by 65 percent of whites who have not finished college in Indiana and 71 percent of them in North Carolina.

With virtually no chance of catching Obama in the popular vote or among pledged delegates, Clinton and her strategists have pinned their hope on persuading superdelegates - elected officials and party activists - that she would be the stronger Democrat to run against McCain.

Harold Ickes, who heads the Clinton campaign's outreach to superdelegates, has acknowledged discussing Obama's controversial former pastor, Jeremiah Wright, with superdelegates, saying Wright's incendiary anti-American sermons and other comments could alienate voters in the fall.

At a rally under the dome of the West Virginia Capitol, Clinton dismissed calls for her to drop out as "deja vu all over again." She said she had faced similar pressure before going on to win primaries in New Hampshire, Ohio, Texas and Pennsylvania.

She made her case for pressing on, and thanked her supporters for doing the same.

"A lot of you have stuck with me. You've been through all the ups and downs in this campaign, the biggest victories and toughest moments," Clinton said. "I think it is because you understand that you've got to have a president who gets up every day and fights for you, who never gives up on you."

Her fading chances didn't diminish the loyalty of Evelyn Smith, 78, one of hundreds of supporters who jammed into the Capitol and waited nearly two hours to hear Clinton speak.

"It's going to take a miracle for her to get the nomination, which I could sit down and cry about because I think she really deserves to be president and the first lady president," Smith said.

Smith said Clinton should stay in the race until the final contests June 3. "I'm a lot like she is, and I would go to the finish line even if I came in last and took a fall. I'd make it to the finish line, and I think she should, too," she said.

Jim Duffield, 64, agreed.

"Of course she should keep going until we get a winner," he said.

Said Clinton as her audience cheered: "I'm running to be president of all 50 states. I think we ought to keep this going so the people of West Virginia's voices are heard."

In contrast to her confrontational comments in speeches leading up to recent primaries, Clinton's only mention of Obama on Thursday was to say next Tuesday's primary in West Virginia would be a test for both of them. She did highlight her strengths with various voting blocs through the primaries, an implicit comparison with her Democratic foe. She said the states she has won and the voters she has attracted are essential if the party is to reclaim the White House.

"We need to bring back hardworking people to the Democratic Party," the New York senator said. "I'm winning Catholic voters and Hispanic voters, blue-collar workers and seniors. People Senator McCain will need in the general election."

She added, "Some call you swing voters. I call you Americans."

At a rally at an airport hangar in Sioux Falls, Clinton said, "There are some folks arguing we should stop voting," Clinton said, eliciting boos. South Dakota and Montana cast the last primary votes June 3.

In Sioux Falls, Gabriella Collignon said there was no way Clinton should drop out.

"I think it shows a lot about her personality that she's going to keep going," Collignon said.

West Virginia's demographic makeup of white, older voters favors Clinton. During her appearance Thursday, she offered the same populist pitch she began making in the closing days before Indiana and North Carolina voted.

She renewed her call for a summertime holiday for the federal gasoline tax, with oil companies making up the difference, a proposal that many economists - and Obama - have dismissed as a meaningless pander.

The West Virginia rally was the first event on Clinton's exceptionally busy campaign schedule Thursday. She also planned an appearance in Oregon.

She is favored to win West Virginia's primary but has fallen further behind Obama in delegates won in primaries and caucuses. Her hopes for the Democratic nomination rest on strong showings in the remaining six contests to convince more than 200 party elders and other "superdelegates" to support her.

Obama met in Washington with superdelegate members of Congress, telling them it was now time to declare for him. He picked up support from at least two superdelegates: Reps. Brad Miller of North Carolina, where Obama handily won the primary this week, and Rick Larsen of Washington state.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
05/08/08 21:41 EDT
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Recent Comments

1 - 10 of 174
174 comments

ddsmith43081 02:02:56 PM May 10 2008

My how things change! A month ago the Hillary supporters were expecting the majority of the superdelegates to vote for her as a better candidate for the party even though Obama was clearly ahead in delegates and popular votes.. Now that the majority of the superdelegates has swung to Obama the superdelegates get blasted as being foolish by these same Hillary supporters. You can't have it both ways Hillary! NO VEEP FOR HILLARY!

There will be enough Obama Republicans crossing over to make up for the traitors that cross over to John McCain.

www.stophillary.com
www.againsthillary.com

mqueenshani 07:56:20 PM May 09 2008

I'm sorry but most of you people who would not vote for Obama are racist, there is nothing else about it. I am a white female and have been a democrat for all of my life. Yes and I was one of the people rooting for Hilary, but she has lost guys, get over it. Your making this into something deep and really it's not that deep. If ur a REAL DEMOCRAT you would support either. You know if Obama was white and was accused of being a racist you'd still vote for him, but now the tables are turned and your all acting like children. Get over yourselves. If you want another Bush then go for it, but I'm a democrat no matter what.
And I read someones ridiculous comment about that would vote for satan over Obama. Thats your retarded a$$ going to hell over your stupidity.

catmix151 07:01:02 PM May 09 2008

My question is:
If Obama is all about the change of the same ole politics in Washington and he wants to revolutionize the government, Why is he depending on Ted Kennedy to help him? That Kennedy has been running this country and swaying votes for decades....So Much for CHANGE, OBAMA!!!!!!!! YOU MAKE ME SICK with your slick words and the power of money. Goodbye America!!!!!!!

rbadman46 06:54:54 PM May 09 2008

Obama should beware of Hillary's flying monkey squads. Maybe we would be better off if someone poured a bucket of water over her so she could melt and vanish in a cloud of green smoke.

rbadman46 06:53:31 PM May 09 2008

I think she should stay in until the bitter end. Her flying monkey squads are no doubt very busy and will be maybe after she fails. Maybe someone should throw a bucket of water on her and watch her melt and vanish in a green cloud.

cdbasher 06:45:04 PM May 09 2008

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIlIpOkRh2A

Obamas international socialist connection..

randyrfd 06:41:58 PM May 09 2008

Queenie she won NY by some 60%

queenie314 06:37:14 PM May 09 2008

i heard some ahem pundit say hillbilly should drop out she's a young woman and can become governor of NY hahaha what a joke she won'r even keep her senate seat after her disgusting performnace and race tinged remarks in this campaign she barely made it as senator but no more

randyrfd 06:34:55 PM May 09 2008

They can't just dismiss millions who support her. They (media) are so worried about their precious Obama and getting hurt. Well, His choices in life is what is going to hurt him in the end. They are losing the fact that they are dienfranchising the millions who believe she will be a great President for all Americans. This is going to hurt him in the long run. YOu can't just dismiss 50% of the democratic electoriate.
Hillary Delegate 2008

randyrfd 06:32:58 PM May 09 2008

The suppoters of Hillary and Barack have been passionate. Tototally disregard of the supporters of Hillary is a big mistake. She needs to go to the convention and get her supporters to go to Barack. This is Democracy. Pushing her out and stealing her delegates doesn't make me inclined to go to Barack.I stand with Hillary until she says so. This is how it is suppose to work. Stop the back room deals with Kennedy and Kerry the so called leaders of change.
Vote Hillary don't be bamboozeled by the media and Barack and the agents of change Kennedy Kerry Dodd.
WEST VIRGINIA, KENTUCKY, OREGON, MONTANA, PUERTO RICO don't be manipulated by the media.

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