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Why Are So Many Dem Leaders Afraid of Hillary? She Can't Admit She's

by traveler <Vallecito@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 8, 2008 at 03:54 AM

Analysis: Democrats quietly send word to Clinton it's over

May 7, 4:48 PM (ET)

By DAVID ESPO


WASHINGTON (AP) - Apart from George McGovern, a plainspoken man who
knows something about losing elections, not a single Democrat of
national stature publicly urged Hillary Rodham Clinton on Wednesday to
end her campaign for the White House.

They didn't have to.

There was no shortage of other ways to signal, suggest, insinuate or
instigate the same thing. And certainly no need to apply unseemly
pressure to a historic political figure, a woman who has run a
grueling race, won millions of votes and drawn uncounted numbers of
new Democratic voters to the polls.

Instead, many Democrats instead preferred to say softly what the
party's 1972 presidential nominee said for all to hear. Barack Obama
has won the nomination "by any practical test," McGovern said.


"Hillary, of course, will make the decision as to if and when she ends
her campaign," he added. "But I hope that she reaches that decision
soon so that we can concentrate on a unified party capable of winning
the White House next November."

Its campaign quarry finally cornered, the Obama high command gave it
space. The Illinois senator was on track to become the first black
presidential nominee of a major party and aides produced a small
trickle of superdelegate supporters. But there was nary a word about
hastening Clinton's departure.

"I think that it would be inappropriate and awkward and wrong for any
of us to tell Senator Clinton when it is time for the race to be
over," said Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill, speaking on a campaign-
sponsored conference call with reporters.

"This is her decision and it is only her decision. And we are
confident that she is going to do the right thing for the Democratic
nominee. We are confident she will help work hard to unite our party."

Sen. Chuck Schumer, a staunch supporter of his fellow New Yorker,
said, "It's her decision to make and I'll accept what decision she
makes." Asked about her chances of still capturing the Democratic
nomination, the normally loquacious Schumer fell silent.


Other Democrats preferred to speak more freely, but only on condition
of anonymity. They, too, said that Tuesday's primaries in North
Carolina and Indiana had effectively sealed the outcome.

They predicted an acceleration in the pace of superdelegates to his
side - he gained four during the day, to two for Clinton. And wondered
about her ability to raise sufficient campaign funds - she disclosed
having loaned herself another $6.4 million in recent weeks, despite an
earlier boast that 80,000 new donors came to her aid after she won the
Pennsylvania primary on April 22.

Clinton's arguments for staying in the race were disappearing.

Obama lengthened his overall lead in delegates in the two states that
held primaries on Tuesday, and by day's end, had drawn to within about
a dozen of the former first lady in superdelegate support. He had
1,846.5 in The Associated Press' count, to 1,696 for Clinton, out of
2,025 needed for the nomination.

Additionally, his 240,000-vote victory in North Carolina, coupled with
her narrow, 18,000-vote triumph in Indiana, all but assured Obama will
finish the primary season with a lead in the cumulative popular vote.

Five more states and Puerto Rico are yet to vote. But alone among
them, Oregon figures prominently in any Democratic plan to amass 270
electoral votes in the fall, the number required to win the White
House. Her persistent attempt to claim the unprovable, that she would
more easily win in the fall than Obama, faded for reasons beyond her
control.

For members of Congress, in this case Democrats, electability begins
and sometimes even ends at home.

Which is why it did not pass unnoticed last weekend - with Obama
trying to fend off controversy stemming from his former pastor - that
a sustained conservative attempt to derail a Democratic House
candidate in Louisiana by linking him to the presidential contender
had fizzled.

Democrat Don Cazayoux is "with Barack Obama for a big government
scheme" for health insurance, said a television advertisement run by
Freedom's Watch. "Their plan raises income taxes and raises taxes on
small business."

Cazayoux won anyway, and now holds a House seat in the Baton Rouge
area that had been in Republican hands for three decades.

A separate ad, aired by the North Carolina Republican Party, showed
Obama and his former preacher, as well as a brief video of the Rev.
Jeremiah Wright. "He's just too extreme for North Carolina," the
narrator says in the 30-second spot.

Because the commercial was aimed at both the Democrats in the state
gubernatorial primary, its impact was unclear.

Clinton vowed to press on, planting her flag in West Virginia, site of
new week's contest, and announcing plans to visit other upcoming
primary states on Thursday. She said controversies over the
delegations from Michigan and Florida must be resolved.

"I'm staying in this race until there's a nominee and obviously I am
going to work as hard as I can to become that nominee," she said.

That sounded fine to Rep. Mike Doyle of Pennsylvania, an uncommitted
superdelegate.

"I think most of us out of respect for her are content to wait a
little longer," he said.




 2 Posts in Topic:
Why Are So Many Dem Leaders Afraid of Hillary? She Can't Admit
traveler <Vallecito@[E  2008-05-08 03:54:59 
Re: Why Are So Many Dem Leaders Afraid of Hillary? She Can't Adm
Akneigh Wombuster <cli  2008-05-09 10:25:23 

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tan13V112 Fri May 16 23:30:55 CDT 2008.