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Hillary Clinton to stay in presidential race

Associated Press

Issue date: 3/31/08 Section: News
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Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., takes questions at a town-hall style campaign event at Ben Davis High School in Indianapolis, Saturday.
Media Credit: Associated Press Photo
Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., takes questions at a town-hall style campaign event at Ben Davis High School in Indianapolis, Saturday.

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) - Barack Obama refused Saturday to go along with other Democrats who are calling for Hillary Rodham Clinton to step away from the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.

"My attitude is Senator Clinton can run as long as she wants," Obama said.

Obama told reporters he did not agree with one of his supporters, Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, when he said earlier this week that Clinton cannot win the nomination and should therefore drop out. "I hadn't talked to Pat about it," Obama said.

At stops throughout the day, Clinton raised the question of whether she should leave the race‚ eliciting loud jeers from supporters.

"There are some people who say we should just stop these elections. 'Enough people have already voted, what's a few million more?'" Clinton said in Louisville, Ky. "I don't know about you but I'm glad Kentucky is going to be voting and you'll be choosing because it's such an important election." The state holds its primary May 20.

Campaigning in Pennsylvania, her husband, Bill Clinton, said party insiders looking to resolve the contest should step back and allow the process to move forward.

"We just need to relax and let this happen. Nobody's talking about wrecking the party," the former president said. "Everywhere I go, all these working people say: 'Don't you dare let her drop out. Don't listen to those people in Washington, they don't represent us.'"

The campaign on Saturday released a fundraising e-mail, signed by Bill Clinton, asking supporters to challenge talk of his wife departing the race by sending a check to her campaign.

"There's no better way to tell Hillary that you support her staying in than to make a contribution to her campaign," he wrote.

Obama offered a bit of tough love to Pennsylvania voters, saying some industrial and manufacturing jobs may not return to this steel region, but others could take their place.

Clinton also stressed job creation at campaign stops in Indiana and Kentucky, vowing to help manufacturers transition to new industries like clean energy and ending tax breaks for American companies that ship jobs overseas.
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Beverly

posted 3/30/08 @ 11:43 PM CST

Why is Senator Clinton staying in a race she has clearly lost. Do you want this demeanor as President? Not knowing when to stop, not seeing things aren't working, playing games with numbers and people?

(5 replies)   Details   Reply to this comment

CarolTate2

posted 4/01/08 @ 5:09 AM CST

Oh isn't Obama just magnanimous (spell?) for letting Hillary stay.....when he's one of first (if not the first)to tell her she should drop out..cause he had more votes & she has no chance of winning, he'd love for her to drop out wouldn't he. (Continued…)

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