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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (20664)1/27/2008 12:51:33 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224749
 
If Mr. Obama doesn’t fight, no one else will. Few national Democratic leaders have the courage to stand up to the Clintons. Even in defeat, Mr. Obama may at least help wake up a party slipping into denial. Any Democrat who seriously thinks that Bill will fade away if Hillary wins the nomination — let alone that the Clintons will escape being fully vetted — is a Democrat who, as the man said, believes in fairy tales. nytimes.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (20664)1/27/2008 1:41:22 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 224749
 
The Clinton camp tried to blunt that surge. A wave of automated phone calls yesterday reminded voters of Edwards's vote for permanent trade relations with China and accused him of making a fortune working for a Wall Street investment fund "that's been profiting on foreclosing on the homes of families."

Edwards campaign chairman David Bonior called the charges made in the calls "outrageous."

"We've been moving up, and they obviously don't want to place second," Bonior said of the Clinton campaign this afternoon.

Edwards's failure in South Carolina will almost certainly increase the pressure on him from Democratic Party officials to drop out and endorse either Obama or Clinton. The Clinton campaign also intends to ratchet up its efforts to knock Edwards out and lay claim to white, working-class Democrats.

"Both Obama and Clinton are now talking more and more about fighting special interests and championing the cause of the middle class. So, it's really decision making time," said Donna Brazile, who managed Al Gore's 2000 campaign. "My guess: When the money stops, he will call it quits."

Jennifer Palmieri, a longtime Edwards family confidante, said his third-place finish in South Carolina "isn't going to change anything." Edwards, who has raised $3 million over the Internet since Jan. 1, has enough money to stay in the race, perhaps all the way to the nominating convention in August, she said.

"Now the three of us move on to February 5th," Edwards told his supporters in Charleston, S.C., last night as he conceded defeat. "We will be there with you every step of the way."

Deputy campaign manager Jonathan Prince said Edwards will travel to Georgia today and to Tennessee tomorrow. "This race is just getting going, and we're going the distance," Prince said.

Bonior cited Texas as a state where he thinks Edwards will do well, noting that the former senator earned 20 percent of the vote in the Lone Star State's 2004 Democratic primary two weeks after he dropped out of that race.

In the worst-case scenario, one aide said, Edwards will keep running and collecting delegates, as Obama and Clinton run neck and neck. Then Edwards goes to the Democratic Party convention in Denver as a potential kingmaker.

"In the cold, somber gray of defeat, who knows? Anything can happen," the aide cautioned. "But that's not what the strategy is. It's hard to convince somebody running as long as he has that he should drop out with so long to go."

Washingtonpost.com staff writers Chris Cillizza in Washington and Ed O'Keefe in South Carolina contributed to this report.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (20664)1/27/2008 3:25:44 PM
From: Ann Corrigan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 224749
 
Bill Clinton's Lost Legacy>Inflammatory Remarks Tarnish Ex-President's Reputation

Jan. 26, 2008

(CBS) This analysis was written by CBSNews.com senior political editor Vaughn Ververs.

The man crowned as America's first black president for his unprecedented personal connection to the African-American community has abdicated the throne.

By injecting himself into the Democratic primary campaign with a series of inflammatory and negative statements, Bill Clinton may have helped his wife's presidential hopes in the long term but at the cost of his reputation with a group of voters that have long been one of his strongest bases of political support.

Illinois Senator Barack Obama won an overwhelming victory in South Carolina with the support of African American voters who made up 53 percent of the vote, according to CBS News exit polls. Eighty percent of those voters chose Obama.

The rout came after weeks of racial polarization, much of it involving the former president, who thrust himself into the fray in a manner more reminiscent of backwoods Arkansas politicking than conduct befitting a former commander in chief.

Bill Clinton was once seen as a big asset for his wife's campaign, especially among Democrats. After the thrashing Hillary Clinton took in South Carolina, the former president may find himself in the doghouse, if not the bullpen.

It was one phrase that began the racial ball rolling. When Bill Clinton referred to Obama's claims of consistent opposition to the war in Iraq as "the biggest fairy tale that I have ever seen," many blacks heard more than policy criticism. They heard a dismissive attack on the first black with a real chance of winning the White House. They heard echoes of racial battles of the past. And they heard it from someone who was supposed to be on their side.

Bill Clinton has not been the only campaign surrogate to stoke the racial fires. References by at least two Clinton supporters about Obama's past drug use, including a comment from one of the wealthiest African-American businessmen in the country.

E-mails have surfaced, some traced to Clinton campaign volunteers in Iowa, claiming that Obama is a Muslim. Former Senator Bob Kerrey, on the day he announced his support for Clinton, made sure to make a point about how wonderful he thought it was that Obama's middle name is Hussein. A radio ad in South Carolina sought to portray Obama as a fan of Republican policies in the 1990s.

The candidate herself contributed to the furor when she intimated that while Martin Luther King Jr. was a wonderful leader, it took President Johnson to make the Civil Rights Act a reality.

But it has been Bill Clinton who carried the campaign's attacks in the wake of his wife's Iowa loss. The "fairy tale" comment was followed by the claim that he had personally witnessed attempts at suppressing votes (a topic that touches blacks on a personal level) in Nevada by Obama supporters. It was Bill Clinton left to carry the ball in South Carolina for most of last week, while the candidate was in Super Tuesday battlegrounds like California.

When confronted with the rhetoric, Clinton lashed out at the media - and his wife's opponents. "I never heard a word of public complaint when Mr. Obama said Hillary is not truthful about character," he told reporters last week. "When he put out a hit job on me at the same time he called Hillary the senator from Punjab. I never said a word."

South Carolina Rep. Jim Clyburn, the highest ranking African American in Congress, publicly told Bill Clinton to "chill a little bit." Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, speaking with the former president just feet away, rebuked his language, insisting, "this is reality, not fantasy or fairy tales." The shots came from all corners. Writing on his own blog, Clinton's former Labor Secretary, Robert Reich accused Clinton of spearheading a "smear campaign against Obama."