Bill Clinton hints at end to wife's campaign
- added June 2, 2008
- 3 responses
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- clarity_kat
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WASHINGTON (AFP) - Former president Bill Clinton dropped a hint Monday that the end might be nigh for his wife Hillary's dogged campaign for the Democratic White House nomination, according to reports.
"I want to say also that this may be the last day I'm ever involved in a campaign of this kind," the former president told Clinton supporters in South Dakota, ABC and NBC reported on their news websites.
"I thought I was out of politics, till Hillary decided to run. But it has been one of the greatest honors of my life to go around and campaign for her for president," he added at the start of his stump speech.
Other reports suggested that in the face of her rival Barack Obama's overwhelming lead, the New York senator is taking stock of whether to fight on beyond Tuesday's final primaries.
The former first lady's campaign announced that she would hold an election night "celebration" in her home state of New York, not in the final voting states of Montana or South Dakota.
The Politico website reported that far-flung members of Clinton's travelling staff had been summoned back to New York for Tuesday evening and told their roles on the campaign are ending.
"The move is a sign that the campaign is beginning to shed -- at least -- some of its staff," the report said.
According to New York newspaper Newsday, Clinton is to huddle with advisers and her husband at her home in Chappaqua to monitor the final results and decide whether and how to end her campaign.
"The only real counsel to Hillary is Bill; it's not a wide circle, so we're not sure what they'll do," Newsday quoted one of Clinton's top supporters in New York as saying.
Senior Clinton advisor Harold Ickes said her camp was still making a case to "superdelegates," the top party officials who have a free vote at August's nominating convention, that she was the best potential president.
"We do not believe that by midnight tomorrow that either candidate will have the new magic number," he told MSNBC.
"We're continuing to press Hillary Clinton's case to the uncommitted," he said, shrugging off Bill Clinton's reported remarks.
Obama's campaign says he needs 43 more delegates to reach the nomination winning line of 2,118. The number was raised following a compromise reached Saturday on the status of renegade primaries in Michigan and Florida.
"I want to say also that this may be the last day I'm ever involved in a campaign of this kind," the former president told Clinton supporters in South Dakota, ABC and NBC reported on their news websites.
"I thought I was out of politics, till Hillary decided to run. But it has been one of the greatest honors of my life to go around and campaign for her for president," he added at the start of his stump speech.
Other reports suggested that in the face of her rival Barack Obama's overwhelming lead, the New York senator is taking stock of whether to fight on beyond Tuesday's final primaries.
The former first lady's campaign announced that she would hold an election night "celebration" in her home state of New York, not in the final voting states of Montana or South Dakota.
The Politico website reported that far-flung members of Clinton's travelling staff had been summoned back to New York for Tuesday evening and told their roles on the campaign are ending.
"The move is a sign that the campaign is beginning to shed -- at least -- some of its staff," the report said.
According to New York newspaper Newsday, Clinton is to huddle with advisers and her husband at her home in Chappaqua to monitor the final results and decide whether and how to end her campaign.
"The only real counsel to Hillary is Bill; it's not a wide circle, so we're not sure what they'll do," Newsday quoted one of Clinton's top supporters in New York as saying.
Senior Clinton advisor Harold Ickes said her camp was still making a case to "superdelegates," the top party officials who have a free vote at August's nominating convention, that she was the best potential president.
"We do not believe that by midnight tomorrow that either candidate will have the new magic number," he told MSNBC.
"We're continuing to press Hillary Clinton's case to the uncommitted," he said, shrugging off Bill Clinton's reported remarks.
Obama's campaign says he needs 43 more delegates to reach the nomination winning line of 2,118. The number was raised following a compromise reached Saturday on the status of renegade primaries in Michigan and Florida.
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- clarity_kat
- 3 months ago
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She gave everything she had.
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- keithponder
- 3 months ago
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Senator Obama has used dis-honest methods of winning. He found a technicality which made all the votes in Florida and Michigan plus he's a Socialist. Harsh as this may sound it's true because he wants to raise Capital Gains taxes to 28%! Plus a nice-sounding bill called the “Global Poverty Act,” sponsored by Democratic presidential candidate and Senator Barack Obama, is up for a Senate vote on Thursday and could result in the imposition of a global tax on the United States. The bill, which has the support of many liberal religious groups, makes levels of U.S. foreign aid spending subservient to the dictates of the United Nations.Senator Joe Biden, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has not endorsed either Senator Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton in the presidential race. But on Thursday, February 14, he is trying to rush Obama’s “Global Poverty Act” (S.2433) through his committee. The legislation would commit the U.S. to spending 0.7 percent of gross national product on foreign aid, which amounts to a phenomenal 13-year total of $845 billion over and above what the U.S. already spends.
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- sammunster
- 3 months ago
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sammunster, This bill can not be passed, And I can not see Senator Hillary Clinton giving in to this RBC rules. I can only see her fighting to the convention. Or changing to Indepeent and then being placed on the ballot. tHAT WAY SHE WILL WIN THE GENERAL ELECTION and can pick Senator Byah as a running mate.
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- maltesetitan
- 3 months ago
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