Posted on 04/03/2008 10:52:33 AM PDT by seanmerc
Hillary Clinton should hang in there and run a good race.
And she has vowed to do so.
Clinton has been under unprecedented pressure to bow out of the divisive Democratic primary and to clear the field for her opponent -- Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois.
Among those who want her to throw in the towel are, of course, Obamas supporters. But many other Democrats are trying to push her out of the contest on the ground that a contentious race can hurt the party and could help their Republican opponent, Sen. John McCain of Arizona.
Clinton also has been deserted by some fair-weather friends like New Mexicos Gov. Bill Richardson, who held two Cabinet appointments during her husbands presidency.
Howard Dean, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, has urged the two contenders to end their competition by July 1. But Clinton says she plans to go all the way to the Democratic National Convention Aug. 25-28.
Campaigning in Indiana last weekend, Clinton said: I know there are some people who want to shut this down -- and I think they are wrong. I have no intention of stopping until we finish what we started and until we resolve Florida and Michigan. And if we dont resolve it, well resolve it at the convention -- thats what credentials committees are for.
Her references to Florida and Michigan focus on the mess that the Democrats have made for themselves in those two states where state officials violated the national Democratic Partys timetable and moved their primary elections to January. The party has disqualified the convention delegates elected in those states -- a situation that will have to be settled before the August convention.
Clinton said she is committed to competing everywhere that there is an election.
Although Obama has racked up more delegates, neither candidate has nailed the 2,024 delegates needed to secure the nomination.
Obama has captivated the enthusiastic support of Americas youth and ignited their interest in presidential politics. His eloquent speeches are designed for the bully pulpit. But does a good speech make a good president?
Obama stresses he was against the invasion of Iraq, but he doesnt say he was not in the Senate when it was initiated. Since become a senator, he has twice voted to fund the war.
I am still trying to find the key that has made Obama a prime candidate for the presidency, and to understand what he has done for the country beyond his middle-of-the-road political moves to make his name known and to steer clear of hot-button issues.
The Rev. Martin Luther King had a dream too. But he acted on it. He went to jail, he marched, he led.
There is no question that the pundits and the news media have been harder on Clinton, perhaps because she has been longer in the public eye and there is more to pick on.
A Feb. 20-24 New York Times-CBS poll found that 48 percent of respondents said the news media were tougher on Clinton compared to 43 percent, who thought the media were tougher on Obama.
You dont need to be a rocket scientist to see that the major newspaper columnists are giving Obama a free ride, while trashing Clinton. Likeability undoubtedly goes a long way with them, and he has mesmerized the media.
Clinton, on the other hand, has left herself open to criticism for dubious involvement in foreign policy decisions in the Clinton years. But one cant deny that she was there and that her opinion was respected.
Obama can be forgiven for acting like a front runner, but not for his patronizing remarks such as: My attitude is that Senator Clinton can run as long as she wants.
Even Clinton has the audacity of hope -- and why not?
Helen Thomas can be reached at hthomas@hearstdc.com).
ahem.. you know, I’ve been a Swedish soccer fan all my life...
My Eyes! My Eyes!
Oh, they’re O.K. now.
Thank you. Whatever they’re sellin’...I’m buyin’.
Now even Helen has jumped on the Operation Chaos bandwagon...
lol...
Too late.
Thanks for that.
Oh, yeah, like the Clintons have never wiped their feet on hundreds of people...............
There is no question that the pundits and the news media have been harder on Clinton, perhaps because she has been longer in the public eye and there is more to pick on. A Feb. 20-24 New York Times-CBS poll found that 48 percent of respondents said the news media were tougher on Clinton compared to 43 percent, who thought the media were tougher on Obama. You dont need to be a rocket scientist to see that the major newspaper columnists are giving Obama a free ride, while trashing Clinton. Likeability undoubtedly goes a long way with them, and he has mesmerized the media.
Where were you, Helen, when the media was tougher on the right, and more lenient to the left...........where are you when it happens today?
You can't see the bias, Helen, because you are part of it...........just openly admit that you are an avowed leftist and stop trying to pretend otherwise..............just be honest for a while...........try it, it feels good............
wow wow and wow
the swedish football team
without a doubt the norweigan, danish ans swedish women are the best lookin g women in the world and when I was there happily posted there too I might add I was in love for the many postings there
Thank you for that picture, after seeing EEK helen thomas and the angry racist , michelle obama on here today then those swedish women are a sight for sore eyes
obama has the media cheerleading him for some time
brian kilmeade at fox and friends storming off the stage because they said negative things about obama
today brian kilmeade got his guest of the set early because the guest was pointing out the lies of obama
then there is chris matthews who should be embarrassed by his drooling of obama
he is clearly made himself look a complete fool during this election as has MSNBC
:}
Hey, I respect her opinion more than I respect Hussein’s, but that’s hardly saying anything.
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