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Clinton
lends herself $6.4M as Obama's lead Grows
'Pakistan Times' Federal Bureau
WASHINGTON (US): A campaign aide says Hillary
Rodham Clinton lent herself $6.4 million in the past month.
Politically wounded and financially strapped, Clinton plunged back into the
presidential campaign Wednesday even as Barack Obama declared that Tuesday's
primary results left him with a "clear path to victory."
Obama beat Clinton soundly in North Carolina and fell just short in an
Indiana cliffhanger, a rebound for the Illinois senator that presented
Clinton with fast-dwindling chances to deny him the Democratic presidential
nomination.
The loan more than doubles Clinton's personal investment in her bid for the
Democratic nomination. She gave her campaign $5 million earlier this year.
Clinton has been struggling financially behind the record fundraising of her
Democratic rival, Barack Obama.
Obama has routinely outspent her in primary after primary. Clinton's
campaign reported raising $10 million online after her victory April 22 in
Pennsylvania. But Obama has shown little difficulty tapping his vast network
of donors. He spent more than $7 million on advertising head of Tuesday's
primaries in North Carolina and Indiana to her nearly $4 million.
But even as Obama planned to take the day off from the campaign trail
Wednesday, Clinton showed no public signs of easing her pace. The campaign
added a noon Wednesday appearance in Shepherdstown, W. Va., to her schedule.
On Thursday, she planned to campaign in West Virginia, South Dakota and
Oregon.
Clinton backers appeared on early morning television programs to stress that
she was still in the race and to urge party leaders and elected officials
known as superdelegates not to flee to Obama.
"This candidacy and this campaign continues on," Clinton communications
director Howard Wolfson said Wednesday on CNN.
Obama was 184.5 delegates shy of the 2,025 needed to secure the Democratic
nomination, his campaign finally steadying after missteps fiercely exploited
by the never-say-die Clinton.
His campaign dropped broad hints it was time for the 270 remaining unaligned
superdelegates to get off the fence and settle the nomination.
In a counter to Wolfson, Obama communications director Robert Gibbs said:
"The delegate math gets exceptionally harder for Senator Clinton every day"
In a memorandum to superdelegates, Obama campaign manager David Plouffe
reminded them of the delegate math necessary to secure the nomination. He
said Clinton would need to win 68 percent of the remaining delegates to win
— an extremely unlikely scenario, made harder by her poor performance
Tuesday.
"With the Clinton path to the nomination getting even narrower, we expect
new and wildly creative scenarios to emerge in the coming days," Plouffe
wrote. "While those scenarios may be entertaining, they are not legitimate
and will not be considered legitimate by this campaign or millions of
supporters, volunteers and donors."
It was in the superdelegate arena — even more than in the scattered
primaries left — that the Democratic hyperdrama was bound to play out.
Clinton vowed to compete tenaciously for West Virginia next week and
Kentucky and Oregon after that, and to press "full speed on to the White
House."
But she risked running on fumes without an infusion of cash, and made a
direct fundraising pitch from the stage in Indianapolis. "I need your help
to continue our journey," she said.
And she pledged anew that she would support the Democratic nominee "no
matter what happens," a vow also made by her competitor.
But her campaign schedule belied any immediate reconciliation. West Virginia
holds its primary on Tuesday. Kentucky and Oregon hold their contests a week
a later. Puerto Rico is scheduled for June 1 followed promptly by Montana
and South Dakota on June 3.
Her campaign is making the case that those contests are crucial to her and
will press Democratic party officials to resolve disputed contests in
Michigan and Florida, which she won but whose results the party voided
because the primaries were held ahead of the schedule set by Democratic
Party rules.
Obama, addressing supporters in North Carolina Tuesday night, pivoted away
from his contest with Clinton and made a general election appeal that
singled out his biography and his call for a new brand of politics. Still,
his message also had a partisan pitch.
"This primary season may not be over, but when it is, we will have to
remember who we are as Democrats ... because we all agree that at this
defining moment in history — a moment when we're facing two wars, an economy
in turmoil, a planet in peril — we can't afford to give John McCain the
chance to serve out George Bush's third term," he said.
McCain, the certain Republican nominee, has been running a general election
campaign for weeks. He has reached out to independent voters and sought to
secure his conservative base, as he did Tuesday with a speech on his vision
of the judiciary. He was scheduled to deliver a speech Wednesday on curbing
the international exploitation of children.
The Obama-Clinton contest has been polarizing, protracted and often bitter,
hardening divisions in the party, according to exit polls from the two
states.
A solid majority of each candidate's supporters said they would not be
satisfied if the other candidate wins the nomination.
Fully one-third of Clinton's supporters in Indiana and North Carolina went
beyond mere dissatisfaction to say they would vote for McCain instead of
Obama if that's the choice in the fall.
Obama scored a convincing victory of about 14 points in North Carolina,
where he'd been favored. Clinton squeezed out a narrow margin in Indiana
after a long night of counting.
Racial divisions were stark.
In both states, Clinton won six in 10 white votes while Obama got nine in 10
black votes, exit polls indicated.
It was a slightly better performance than usual by Clinton among whites,
while Obama's backing from blacks was one of his highest winning percentages
yet with that group.
Clinton fell short of the Indiana blowout and the North Carolina upset that
might have jarred superdelegates into her camp in a big way.
They have continued trickling toward Obama despite the fallout over his
former pastor's racially divisive remarks and Clinton's win in Pennsylvania
two weeks ago.
The impact of a long-running controversy over the Illinois senator's former
pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, was difficult to measure.
In North Carolina, six in 10 voters who said Wright's remarks affected their
votes sided with Clinton. A somewhat larger percentage of voters who said
the pastor's remarks did not matter supported Obama.
Obama and Clinton both planned to campaign in the next primary states
starting Thursday, after a day in Washington. Obama headed to Chicago after
his Raleigh speech before coming to the capital.● |
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