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Hillary Clinton keeps White House hopes alive with key victory



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Published Date: 23 April 2008
HILLARY Clinton has pulled off the victory she needed in Pennsylvania to keep her presidential aspirations alive.
But the former first lady's ten-point win over front-runner Barack Obama in the Keystone State left the race for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination largely unchanged.

Mrs Clinton – who had been widely tipped to win yesterday's primary
– took 55 per cent of the votes to Mr Obama's 45 per cent.

It was not the 15-point victory many pundits predicted would have dented Mr Obama's national lead, but it was enough to keep Mrs Clinton in contention, and stave off calls from senior Democrats for her to quit the race.

Political analysts will now wait to see whether any superdelegates – the 800 powerful party figures whose votes will be crucial in deciding the eventual nominee – declare their support for either candidate in the next few days.

Speaking in Philadelphia with her husband, former President Bill Clinton, and daughter Chelsea at her side, Mrs Clinton told supporters: "You made your voices heard and because of you the tide is turning. Some people counted me out and said to drop out, but the American people don't quit and they deserve a president who doesn't quit either."

The race now moves to Indiana, which goes to the polls along with North Carolina on May 6.

Speaking in Evansville, Indiana, Mr Obama urged America to make the election about making the nation "a beacon of all that is good and of all that is possible for all of mankind".

He said his campaign's task was not simply to win the nomination, or the general election, but to "keep this country's promise alive in the 21st century".

Mrs Clinton caused controversy yesterday when she said in a TV interview that the US "would be able to totally obliterate" Iran in any attack. Mr Obama criticised her choice of words and said he was not interested in "sabre-rattling".

He trailed in opinion polls in Pennsylvania all along, but had made up ground in the last few weeks.

Mrs Clinton was seen as having an advantage because the state has a large number of older and working class voters – the kind who have voted for her in other states. If she had lost, it would have ended her campaign.

Exit polls showed Mrs Clinton won the support of working-class voters, women and white people, in an election where the economy was the dominant concern. Mr Obama was favoured by African-Americans, the affluent and voters who recently switched to the Democrats.

Despite Mrs Clinton's victory, Mr Obama remains the frontrunner. With only nine contests left, Mrs Clinton now has few opportunities to narrow his lead with delegates who will choose the party's nominee at the Democratic National Convention in August.





The full article contains 474 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 23 April 2008 1:18 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Barack Obama , US elections
 
1

Voice of reason,

EDINBURGH 23/04/2008 13:22:55
Now if G Bush wanted " to obliterate Iran " imagine the outcry from certain quarters who are very silent on her remarks . Wonder why ??
2

My opinions count for more than yours,

because I'm special 23/04/2008 13:50:43
Well tell us then, o sagacious poster.
3

Mensa George,

Washington, DC 23/04/2008 14:49:18
Her statement is likely wrong as well as poorly phrased for the public. Shock & Awe five years ago failed to obliterate even its main target. No, as we have seen, it takes years of occupation, diplomacy and nation-building to obliterate a country in that area.
4

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

, Newington 23/04/2008 16:50:37
#3: Clinton was referring to using nukes. I don't doubt the US has enough Physics Is Fun packages to obliterate pretty much anywhere it likes.

A 10% win in Pennsylvania amounts to even honours. Obama couldn't win and managed to keep the number of extra delegates Clinton gained to just over a dozen. He'll claw most of that back in North Carolina and it's looking like close to a draw in Indiana.

What it amounts to is that unless Hillary can chisel or sue the Michigan and Florida delegates back into the Convention, she'll have to get the superdelegates to break close to 60-40 in her favour.

Unless Obama makes a serious mistake between now and the convention, I think she'll see him just run out the clock for her.

Prior to that, the Democratic Party bigwigs may well quietyly offer her some powerful post if she drops out. Senate Majority Leader perhaps.
5

Agent 99,

23/04/2008 17:51:34
Clinton: "...but the American people don't quit..."

Aye, so we'd noticed. Knowing when to quit, lassie, is a Realpolitik virtue that not only you, but many of your compatriots could benefit from. Iraq being the case in point.
6

57Nomad,

california 24/04/2008 02:05:33
#5 agent

Iraq is a case in point, but not in the sense you mean it to be. If the reality and not the perception is examined you will see that by sticking it out we will accomplish all of our goals in Iraq. In fact most of them have already been met. The only problem in Iraq today is caused by Al-Sadr who now lives in, and is a puppet of, the Iranians.

Realpolitik is just a fig leaf for cowardice and the abandonment of honor. We don't want any part of it. We'll stick to our guns figuratively and in reality.

 

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