Tag Archive | "Hillary Clinton"

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The End Is Near

Posted on 08 May 2008 by Antonio D. French

During a Obama campaign conference call with reporters yesterday, Senator Claire McCaskill said it would be “inappropriate and awkard and wrong for any of us to tell Senator Clinton when it is time for the race to be over.”

She said the decision is Clinton’s alone.

Here’s the complete conference call (McCaskill’s comments are around -18:00):

Also featured on the call was Senator John Kerry, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick, Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano, and Obama campaign manager David Plouffe.

Here is the Clinton campaign’s conference call also from Wednesday:

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Obama wins big in NC, Clinton narrowly wins IN

Posted on 06 May 2008 by Antonio D. French

WATCH OBAMA’S NORTH CAROLINA VICTORY SPEECH:

 

WATCH CLINTON’S SPEECH IN INDIANA:

 

TUESDAY, MAY 6 - ELECTION DAY!

Obama is scheduled to speak here in the Reynolds Coliseum on the campus of North Carolina State University tonight around 9:00. They’ve set up his podium on one end of the basketball court. Around half-court is the riser set-up for TV networks. The back court is filled with dozens of tables for up laptop reporters.

Behind the scenes

TUESDAY, MAY 6 - ELECTION DAY!

Clinton is running commercials on North Carolina TV featuring poet and author Maya Angelou. In the ad, Angelou, who is black, says she believes she has found “the best person to be President of the United States.”

 

TUESDAY, MAY 6 - ELECTION DAY!

In Bill Clinton’s speech last night in Raleigh, he once again suggested Barack Obama can’t win the November general election.

 

Watch the full speech here:

 

MONDAY, MAY 5

Bill Clinton hit 11 towns in North Carolina today while his wife is in Indiana. We’re going to try to catch up with him tonight in Raleigh.

Barack Obama was in Durham today at CREE Inc, a manufacturer of semiconductors used for green lighting. Here’s some video:

 

SUNDAY, MAY 4

If Barack Obama wins the North Carolina primary Tuesday, it will not be a small feat historically. The headline of the local paper tells the story: “Race Still Influences Voters, Poll Finds”. The article gives some context:

Racial issues have shaped North Carolina politics since the Reconstruction era. In 1880, The New York Times detailed county-by-county violations of white Democrats keeping black Republicans from voting. In Wilmington in 1898, whites rioted and forced blacks from their homes after a local election, the only known political coup in U.S. history.

In more recent years, former Gov. Terry Sanford lost the Tar Heel Democratic presidential primary in 1972 to Alabama Gov. George Wallace, a segregationist who made his name fighting school integration.

And then there was the Harvey Gantt/Jesse Helms U.S. Senate race of 1990. Helms, the Republican incumbent, was in a close race with Gantt, Charlotte’s first black mayor, until airing a last-minute ad that showed a pair of white hands crumpling a rejection letter and blaming the job loss on affirmative action.

On the current TV ads (see below):

In the Democratic gubernatorial race, state treasurer Richard Moore linked Lt. Gov. Bev Perdue to the Ku Klux Klan in advertisements.

The N.C. Republican party aired commercials tying both Perdue and Moore to the Rev. Wright despite requests from McCain and the national Republican establishment to hold its fire.

“Although both parties claim they don’t, they have racial overtones,” Bacot said of the ads.

From the mouths of North Carolina voters:

Greg Gallagher, 52, a construction worker who lives in Pamlico County, was so uncomfortable hearing about Obama’s pastor that he worries about the candidate himself.

“The more I know, the less I like him,” said Gallagher, who is white. “You listen to this guy — it’s not going to pull people together. It’ll break them apart.”

Bev Barksdale, 48, a bartender in Oriental who worries most about health care, said she e-mailed Clinton last week advising the senator that black voters in Eastern North Carolina will come out for Obama.

“I said, ‘You need to come further east.’ In the counties, people are uninformed, uneducated and black,” said Barksdale, who is white. “I’m not a racist, but I think a lot of black people are coming out to vote because of the race issue.”

Like Gallagher, she would vote for McCain or not at all before casting a ballot for Obama. She said he has too little experience, and she doesn’t think he’s willing to pledge allegiance to the flag.

“That is huge to me,” she said. (Obama has led the pledge in the U.S. Senate.)

In Kinston, Daniel Adams, a 30-year-old scientist, recently switched his registration from Republican to Democrat (”It’s like someone who’s just finished AA,” he said jokingly.)

A native of Eastern North Carolina who has lived and worked abroad, Adams has grown used to — if frustrated by — the racism he hears from extended family. They always vote white, he said.

“I think race always plays into decisions, especially with politics, especially in the South,” said Adams, who is white. He wanted to break that mold. And so for the longest time, Adams liked Obama’s idealism.

“I once thought he could change the country,” said Adams.

But he has lost some faith in Obama now, wondering how the man could sit for 20 years in Wright’s pews. Adams will vote for Clinton in the primary.

SUNDAY, MAY 4

Entering the final 48 hours before the important North Carolina and Indiana primaries on Tuesday.

Here is the negative ad being run by the North Carolina Republican Party. It is officially attacking the Democratic candidates for governor, but the real target seems to be Barack Obama. The ad is running now. It seems like the NCGOP would prefer if Hillary Clinton won the Democratic primary.

SATURDAY, MAY 3

Three days before Election Day, there were already lines today outside of polling places in North Carolina.

North Carolina has what they call “One-Stop Early Voting”, meaning a resident who is qualified to register to vote may register In-Person and vote at a One-Stop Site in the person’s county of residence during the One-Stop Absentee Voting period. The One-Stop Voting period extends from 19 to 3 days before Election Day. Today was the last day before Tuesday’s actual Election Day.

In Greensboro today, lines spilled outside of the polling place located in a recreation center in a park. The park was scheduled to be the site of a rally and barbeque featuring Hip-Hop artist and actor Mos Def, an Obama supporter, but organizers informed us that Mos Def missed his flight and was unable to attend. But that didn’t stop throngs of college students from still coming out to vote today.

FRIDAY, MAY 2

We’re heading to North Carolina for the days leading up to the important Democratic primary this Tuesday between Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

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VIDEO: Bill Clinton Suggests Obama Can’t Win

Posted on 06 May 2008 by Antonio D. French

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VIDEO: Bill Clinton in Raleigh, NC

Posted on 06 May 2008 by Antonio D. French

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The Gas Tax debate

Posted on 05 May 2008 by Antonio D. French

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VIDEO: “The Empire Strikes Barack”

Posted on 04 May 2008 by Antonio D. French

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POLL: What’s your Tuesday prediction?

Posted on 04 May 2008 by Antonio D. French

With the Obama-Clinton fight heading into yet another round on Tuesday, what do you think will happen when the final vote is counted.

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What's your prediction for Tuesday's elections?
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POLL: Is Hillary trying to sabotage Obama?

Posted on 28 April 2008 by Antonio D. French

Is Hillary Clinton trying to sabotage Barack Obama so she can come back in 2012?

I believe so.

Respected Congressman James Clyburn (D-SC) thinks so:

The Post-Dispatch’s Bill McCulloch believes it too:

It became clear a couple of months ago that Barack Obama was going to get the nomination. Given the way the delegates are allotted on a proportional basis rather than on a winner-take-all basis, Obama’s lead became insurmountable during his winning streak. And there was never a realistic hope that the superdelegates would overrule the will of the voters. If they did, there would be chaos. The party would risk alienating its single most faithful bloc — African-Americans.

So let’s play chess. Let’s look ahead. Let’s assume that Obama wins the nomination. If you are the Clintons, what then?

You’ve got to hope that he loses the general election. If he wins in 2008, he’ll run for re-election in 2012. That means the next chance for Hillary would be 2016. She’ll be 69 by the time that election comes around. (She’ll be 61 in October of this year.) Chances are, her time will have passed.

So what do you think?

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Do you think Hillary Clinton is trying to sabotage Barack Obama so she can run again in 2012?
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VIDEO: The Numbers Are Against Clinton

Posted on 23 April 2008 by Antonio D. French

Behind in the popular vote, behind in the number of contests won, and perhaps most significantly a long way behind in cash, Hillary Clinton needed to win by a much larger margin in Pennsylvania last night to increase her chances of winning the Democratic nomination.

But then again, there’s always the “kitchen sink” strategy.

Maybe a few more weeks of labeling the likely Democratic nominee, Barack Obama, an “inexperienced, America-hating, muslim elitist” will help Clinton win a few more votes among over-60 white rural voters. Sure, she still can’t win in pledged delegates, contests won, or votes earned, but maybe she can get a group of 100 elites in the Democratic Party to override all those elections and choose her over Obama.

Just in time to face Republican John McCain in November as the Democratic candidate with a bitterly divided party and the highest negatives of any nominee in history.

The Clinton strategy really makes you wonder who they’re working for.

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Clinton’s Victory Speech

Posted on 23 April 2008 by Antonio D. French

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