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July 25, 2008 8:45:18 AM CDT



The Hillary Endgame track this thread

Started by K Schwartz; Last updated May 8, 08 12:16 PM CDT by K Schwartz | View history

The Hillary Endgame

"It'll be over early June" -HRC campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe

Stories

Stories 81 - 100 of 234

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  • May 2008
    • Dems Furious Over Bush 'Appeasement' Zinger

      Dems Furious Over Bush 'Appeasement' Zinger

      Democrats stood shoulder-to-shoulder in fury yesterday to lash President Bush for indicating that Barack Obama is like a Nazi appeaser because he supports outreach to countries like Iran. Even Hillary Clinton leaped to her rival's defense, Reuters reports. "President Bush's comparison of any Democrat to Nazi appeasers is both offensive and outrageous," Clinton said. More »

    • Farewell to Hillary, and to Sexism

      Farewell to Hillary, and to Sexism

      Hillary Clinton will almost certainly not be the Democratic nominee for president, and the end of her campaign is a relief for Marie Cocco in the Washington Post —but not for political reasons. The end of the Democratic primary, she writes, will also put to rest the sexist rhetoric of Clinton's opponents and the media, who have called her a "she-devil," "whore," and worse. More »

    • Is Obama Playing It Too Safe? Is Clinton Really Finished?

      Is Obama Playing It Too Safe? Is Clinton Really Finished?

      John Edwards’ endorsement may have helped Obama turn the page on recent troubles, but pundits say he should face up to them—or he leaves an opening for Hillary to climb back in: Sure, it was a “rational, prudent decision” to skip West Virginia, David Broder allows, but it will keep Obama’s blue-collar question alive into the fall. He could have staged a JFK-style coup in the Mountain State—he certainly had the money and foot soldiers. More »

    • Win Can't Change Media's Mind

      Win Can't Change Media's Mind

      Hillary Clinton can crow all she wants about West Virginia, but the media won't hear. “This may be the first time in election history,” Roger Simon writes on Politico, “in which the press has withdrawn from a race before the candidate.” Barack Obama was off campaigning in Missouri—a state he already won—and the media agreed with him: The primaries are over. More »

    • Edwards Endorses Obama

      Edwards Endorses Obama

      John Edwards endorsed Barack Obama today, calling him the one person who can bring about the "one America" that will bridge the divide between rich and poor and rebuild the nation's "moral authority." Edwards, who dropped out of the race in January, joined Obama in Michigan for the announcement, the Wall Street Journal reports. His backing could help Obama with his weak spot—working-class white voters. More »

    • NARAL Endorses Obama; Clinton Camp 'Surprised'

      NARAL Endorses Obama; Clinton Camp 'Surprised'

      NARAL tapped Barack Obama today, an endorsement that a top Hillary Clinton aide called “surprising.” The abortion-rights group said Obama is the candidate “we believe will secure the Democratic nomination”—and said it hoped to start healing a rift between black voters and white female activists that the primary fight has opened, Talking Points Memo reports. More »

    • Three Former SEC Heads to Endorse Obama

      Three Former SEC Heads to Endorse Obama

      Three former heads of the Securities and Exchange Commission, including President Bush appointee William Donaldson, will endorse Barack Obama today, joining with former Fed chair Paul Volcker to say the candidate will take a “reasoned approach” to “balanced regulatory reform.” Donaldson said he was especially impressed by Obama’s recent comment that he would overhaul regulations for any business that borrows from government. More »

    • Does W. Va. Blowout Really Hurt Obama?

      Does W. Va. Blowout Really Hurt Obama?

      Barack Obama's West Virginia loss by a whopping 30 points probably won’t cost him the Democratic nomination, writes John Dickerson in Slate. But the loss does put a chink in Obama’s argument that he can unite disparate groups, since, apparently, these powers have failed him among at least one key voting block—the blue-collar whites that are Hillary Clinton's base. More »

    • Clintons Are Reliving Their Worst Ordeal: Impeachment

      Clintons Are Reliving Their Worst Ordeal: Impeachment

      For Bill and Hillary Clinton, 2008 is smacking of 1998, as the struggle to stay in the presidential race looks remarkably like the battle to survive impeachment, argues Michael Crowley in the New Republic . The former first couple is under siege again, and again is willing to “ride out any crisis”—wrapping themselves in the mantle of populism and indicting the press. More »

    • Obama Hamstrung by 'Nearly Nominee' Status

      Obama Hamstrung by 'Nearly Nominee' Status

      Barack Obama is feeling like a winner but unable to start campaigning like one, the New York Times reports. The almost-nominee can't go after John McCain the way he would if he had the nomination sewn up for fear of infuriating Hillary Clinton's supporters, aides say. He also is still unable to completely write off Clinton's challenge for the Democratic nomination. More »

    • Exit Polls Show Big Divisions Among Democrats

      Exit Polls Show Big Divisions Among Democrats

      Early exit polls in West Virginia suggest that Democrats have much healing to do when the primary season ends, CNN reports. Only 25% of Hillary Clinton supporters said they would be satisfied if Barack Obama won the nomination, and only 38% of Obama supporters said they'd be satisfied with Clinton as the nominee. More telling, 36% of Clinton supporters said they would vote for Obama if he's the nominee, but 35% said they'd jump ship for John McCain. The economy was voters' No. 1 issue. More »

    • Clinton Wins Big in W. Virginia

      Clinton Wins Big in W. Virginia

      Hillary Clinton won a decisive—and expected—victory tonight in West Virginia, the Charleston Gazette reports. With 95% of returns in, Clinton led 67% to 26%, and her camp hopes a big margin of victory will raise new doubts in superdelegates' minds about Barack Obama's ability to win over white voters. The state is nearly all white and has a high percentage of the working-class voters that have eluded Obama during the primary season. More »

    • Reid Not Passing Reins to Clinton

      Reid Not Passing Reins to Clinton

      Harry Reid brushed aside yesterday suggestions Hillary Clinton, fresh from a primary defeat to Barack Obama, might ascend to the top Senate job. “Keep in mind,” he told the Huffington Post, “a senator coming back who’s run for president is not a very unique one. Sen. John Kerry ran, he’s back. Chris Dodd ran, he’s back. Joe Biden ran, he’s back.” More »

    • Knowing the Candidates: The Proof Is in the Penmanship

      Knowing the Candidates: The Proof Is in the Penmanship

      Abraham Lincoln’s modesty and Ronald Reagan’s warmth were evident in their handwriting. Now, the Los Angeles Times wants to know what analysts think of the strokes of Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and John McCain: Obama's writing is described as “fluid, graceful”; intelligent but also emotive. His words end in lines that reach out, a sign of flexibility—though a certain illegibility can be seen as subtly guarded. More »

    • Obama Pockets 5 More Delegates

      Obama Pockets 5 More Delegates

      Barack Obama won the support of five more delegates today, putting him within 145 total of clinching the nomination, by Huffington Post’s count. Obama's new backers include New Orleans' mayor, a former Democratic National Committee chair and the chairperson of DC’s Democrats. Obama also gained the support of an elected Hillary Clinton delegate from Maryland, a markedly rare switch of a pledged nominator. More »

    • What to Watch Out for Tonight in W. Va.

      What to Watch Out for Tonight in W. Va.

      Some analysts see today’s West Virginia primary as a final chance for Hillary Clinton to raise questions about Barack Obama’s weaknesses. Here’s what to watch, via Kenneth Vogel on Politico: How will Mason County go? The 30,000-strong district has been a remarkably reliable indicator of statewide results in the past. More »

    • McGovern: Save the Party, Campaign Together

      McGovern: Save the Party, Campaign Together

      Divisions among Democrats have killed the party’s presidential chances on more than one occasion, and it must not happen this time, writes George McGovern in the New York Times . The 1972 Democratic nominee—who recently switched his endorsement to Barack Obama—offers a plan to unite the party: Obama and Hillary Clinton should campaign side-by-side in the remaining states, outlining their plans for the country without attacking each other. More »

    • Clintonites Soldier On in W. Va.

      Clintonites Soldier On in W. Va.

      Hillary Clinton and her supporters are canvassing heavily in West Virginia despite a 20-point lead and little competition, the Baltimore Sun reports. “We are all pretty inspired,” said one Clintonite on the eve of the state's primary. But Clinton and her family were the only politicos stumping across the Mountain State today: Barack Obama was MIA. More »

    • A Closer Look at the Math Problem Edwards Averted

      A Closer Look at the Math Problem Edwards Averted

      The long-tern effect of John Edwards’ early exit is that Barack Obama will wrap up the nomination by early June, a grateful Steve Kornacki writes in the New York Observer . A  slower withdrawal would have spelled trouble for the Democrats, who are having enough trouble making up their minds. "Imagine the comparative mess Democrats might be in if Edwards had opted to stick around," says Kornacki, who dissects the numbers. More »

    • 6 Routes Off Into the Sunset

      6 Routes Off Into the Sunset

      With Hillary Clinton’s chances of beating her rival all but shot, Ben Smith, on Politico, runs down the graceful and non-graceful ways to exit: Never say die: If Clinton can stomach shrinking coffers and departing supporters, she can bide time until the convention, ensuring that lightning hasn’t struck Barack Obama before she concedes. More »

Stories 81 - 100 of 234

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Guerra-Mondragon had become "concerned about the tone of the race," an Obama aide said.   (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
One of Hillary Clinton's top fundraisers is leaving her campaign to join Barack Obama's fundraising team.   (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., right, addresses to her supporters as her daughter Chelsea and her husband former President Bill Clinton watch during her Indiana Primary...   (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)
Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., speaks at a fundraiser in Washington, Wednesday, May 7, 2008.   (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)
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