Hillary Clinton says she'll stay in the presidential race

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May 7, 2008 01:40 PM EST | AP

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Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., offers a Sharpie pen to an aide after signing race car helmets while campaigning at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Ind. Tuesday, May 6, 2008, the day of the Indiana primary election. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

SHEPHERDSTOWN, W.Va. — Hillary Rodham Clinton says she will remain in the presidential race "until there's a nominee." The former first lady declined to say whether that meant through the roll call of the states at the Democratic National Convention this summer.

Clinton also disclosed that she had loaned her campaign an additional $6.4 million in recent weeks, additional evidence that her once front-runner campaign was in deep trouble.

She told reporters the loans were a sign of her commitment to her quest for the White House. She earlier loaned herself $5 million as she struggled to keep up with a better-financed Obama campaign.

Meanwhile, Barack Obama pocketed the support of at least four Democratic convention superdelegates on Wednesday, building on the momentum from a convincing North Carolina primary victory.

Obama, now the front-runner, was home in Chicago during the day as his aides spread word that he would soon begin campaigning in states likely to be pivotal in the fall campaign. They also relayed word of the four endorsements, expected to be made public later in the day.

Both disclosures were meant to signal fresh confidence that the nomination was quickly coming into his possession after a grueling marathon across 15 months and nearly all 50 states.

Clinton's appearance in Shepherdstown, W.Va., was meant to underscore her determination to stay the course. She also arranged a private meeting later in the day with uncommitted superdelegates.

Clinton won the Indiana primary narrowly early Wednesday, but the overall impact of the night's two contests was to lengthen Obama's lead in national convention delegates without fundamentally altering the nature of the race.

Obama has 1,840.5 delegates to 1,688 for Clinton in The Associated Press tally. It takes 2,025 delegates to win the nomination in Denver this summer.

Clinton told reporters it would take 2,209 or 2,210 delegates to win the nomination, not the 2,025 in use by the Democratic National Committee. The higher total would come into play if the delegations were seated from Michigan and Florida, two states that held primaries outside the time frame that party rules required.

The former first lady campaigned for months to have new votes in both states, although lately has said she merely wants the delegations seated.

Obama's campaign manager, David Plouffe, said on Tuesday night it was possible a compromise could be worked out to seat the Michigan delegates. He did not mention Florida.

Asked at her news conference whether she intended to remain in the race through the convention roll call, Clinton said, "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."

While Clinton showed no sign of surrender, former Sen. George McGovern, the party's 1972 presidential candidate, urged her to reconsider.

Obama's campaign on Wednesday weighed ways to bring the drawn-out Democratic nominating process to a close while mapping out a strategy that will involve campaigning in battleground states where primaries have already been held.

Obama's drive to nail down the party nod was buoyed with a double-digit win in North Carolina and a stronger-than-expected run in Indiana, where he almost overcame rival Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Obama was expected to compete for the six remaining Democratic contests but to also turn attention to general election states, aides said.

Likely Republican presidential nominee John McCain has "run free for some time now" because of Democratic preoccupation with the ongoing primary fight, said Obama strategist David Axelrod. "I don't think we're going to spend time solely in primary states," he said. "We have multiple tasks here."

The Illinois senator was enjoying a rare down day in his hometown before returning to Washington, D.C., late Wednesday

He was expected to travel later in the week to Oregon, where he appears to hold the advantage, and then head to the Appalachian coal-states of West Virginia and Kentucky, where Clinton seems to have the edge.

Meanwhile, in an e-mail to supporters soliciting contributions, Obama called his North Carolina showing "a decisive victory."

As for Indiana, "we did much better than all the pundits predicted, despite Republicans changing parties to support Senator Clinton, believing she would be easier for Senator McCain to defeat," Obama wrote. "Now is the time for each one of us to step up and do what we can to close out this primary."

Obama's campaign made broad suggestions that it was time for the 270 remaining unaligned superdelegates _ who will determine the outcome of the race _ to get off the fence, claiming the delegate math leaves little path for a Clinton victory.

"We think the Clinton camp has gotten away with a little bit of creating these alternative views of reality," said Obama campaign manager David Plouffe.

Clinton's loan more than doubled her personal investment in her bid for the Democratic nomination. She gave her campaign $5 million earlier this year.

A campaign aide said Clinton gave her campaign another $5 million on April 11, more than a week before the Pennsylvania primary. She then again dipped into her personal wealth for $1 million last week and $425,000 on Monday, one day before the North Carolina and Indiana primaries.

Clinton's campaign reported raising $10 million online after her Pennsylvania victory on April 22. Evidently, the money was not enough and her fundraising was unable to keep up with her expenses heading into Tuesday's contests.

Moreover, Obama has routinely outspent her in primary after primary and 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.

According to the latest campaign finance reports filed with the Federal Election Commission, Obama began the month of April with $42 million in the bank for the primary to Clinton's $9.3 million.

But Clinton had debts of $10.3 million at the start of the month, much of it money owed to her main polling, phone banking and advertising consultants.

And in endorsing Obama, former Sen. George McGovern said Wednesday it's virtually impossible for Clinton to win the nomination. McGovern said he had a call in to former President Clinton to tell him of the decision, adding that he remains close friends with the Clintons.

"I will hold them in affection and admiration all of my days," he said of the Clintons.

McGovern's announcement comes a day before Clinton was scheduled to travel to South Dakota to campaign. The state holds its primary June 3 with 15 pledged delegates at stake.

McGovern said he had no regrets about endorsing Hillary Clinton months ago, even before the Iowa caucuses.

"She has run a valiant campaign. And she will remain an influential voice in the American future," he said.

But Obama has won the nomination "by any practical test" and is very close to a majority of the pledged delegates, said McGovern, who is 85. Obama moved within 200 delegates of clinching the nomination with his split decision on Tuesday of a win in North Carolina and a narrow loss in Indiana.

It's time to unite the Democratic Party, he said.

"Hillary, of course, will make the decision as to if and when she ends her campaign. 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," he said.

 
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"Clinton also disclosed that she had loaned her campaign an additional $6.4 million in recent weeks, additional evidence that her once front-runner campaign was in deep trouble. She told reporters the loans were a sign of her commitment to her quest for the White House. She earlier loaned herself $5 million as she struggled to keep up with a better-financed Obama campaign."
A loan is not a commitment. It would count as one, if she donated it. That's how supporters of any campaign show their support: by donations. Not by loaning money to their favorite candidates. Does Obama's website also has a button for "Loan now" next to "Donate now"?
Besides, I don't know if a political campaign can be called legitimate when it is financed by loans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 AM on 05/08/2008

Clinton can stay as long as she needs to, she has half of the democrats expecting her to compete until the end of the race. If that means taking it to the convention, then so be it.

Here's what a major Obama supporter did:

In 1980, Ted Kennedy came into the Democratic convention at Madison Square Garden in New York City with 1,225 delegates to President Carter"s 1,981 and 122 uncommitted.

If Kennedy could take it to the convention when he trailed by 756 delegates, Hillary can go to the convention trailing by her current 150 or so.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 AM on 05/08/2008

I can't believe so many Clinton supporters are selfishly hand America to another Republican. You people seriously think that McSame will turn this country around and take us in a new direction? You're basically voting for more tax cuts and more military action we can't afford. Stop pouting and stick with your team.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 PM on 05/07/2008

Hillary is too much like Bush in one disturbing respect: If reality is not to her liking, she defines her own reality and stays the course. We don't need another irrationalist plodding through a complex world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 PM on 05/07/2008

It is surprising all the HRC supporters blaming the treatment they received on this site as the reason they are not backing Barack. I would go on Taylor Marsh and get called a troll and insulted too but I never once thought I wouldn't vote for HRC cuz I am a dem first.

Hopefully rational minds prevail in the end once the hard feelings and emotions have cooled...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 PM on 05/07/2008

The Huffington Post will be very surprised come November. The Hillary Clinton supporters, the real base of the party, will never back Obama and will sit it out and or vote McCain. The pundits keep saying not to believe the polls and that the party will come together, well, the pundits have anointed a losing candidate, so what else are they going to say. Yes, today was 'game over', but the game is over for the Democratic Party in its efforts to regain the Whitehouse.

Obama will be 'obliterated'. I'm sick of the Democratic Party hacks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 PM on 05/07/2008

"Wah, Wah, Wah my candidate didn't win so I am going to pout and call names." A little more party unity is called for in my opinion. Of course we all know about opinion...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 AM on 05/08/2008

Somebody please explain how Senator Clinton can be concerned about the Florida and Michigan voters, when her stated intention is to disenfranchise every Democratic primary voter in the country by having the supers overturn the primary results. How can she want to count two states and ignore all states at the same time?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 05/07/2008

Sen Obama has not had a real victory since Late February. He was supposed to take NC by 25points and was supposed to win in Indiana. Hill was able to close the big gap in NC and managed a win in IND.
Hillary received many hundred thousand votes and has a huge groundswell in base Dem support.
She will not quit and she will not lose.
Don't count those chickens before they come home to ROOOOST.
Hillary is still in this to win.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:08 PM on 05/07/2008

For totally selfish reasons she stays in....Too bad for America if she would ever be the nominee....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 05/07/2008
- M.S. Bellows, Jr. - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of M.S. Bellows, Jr. permalink

Clinton didn't win as big in PA as she was projected to, either; it's in the nature of races to tighten over time. A 14 point win is huge by any standard; you need to quit moving the goalposts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:55 PM on 05/07/2008

Maybe Hillary is staying in the race to get more contributions so she can repay herself for all the money she so generously donated to her campaign. Just a thought.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:59 PM on 05/07/2008
- utd I'm a Fan of utd permalink

Why would she give herself 6.4 million more today today though?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 PM on 05/07/2008

I really think she has an addiction - an addition to the spotlight.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:16 PM on 05/07/2008

To Hillary supporters,
some of whom don't think the best about Obama supporters:

Please consider this: not everybody in Obama camp is bad, just as not everybody in Clinton camp either. Don't let a handful spoil the group. And while both camps have strong supporters, in the end one of them has to win and the other has to lose. Tough, but this is what makes the party stronger.

Please consider this: it is time to unite the party behind the nominee. If Clinton was that nominee, you'd want the Obama supporters to close rank. It goes both ways...

Please consider this: the goal is a democratic president in the White House this Fall. Too much is at stake if Republicans get a third chance to wreak havoc with this country and the world. We have a race to win now!

Respectfully,
a fellow democrat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:02 PM on 05/07/2008

Forget it. Clinton supporters have been personally attacked on this site and others such as The Daily Kos. We are done. I'm not voting for Barack Obama. I'll sit out the 1st election in my lifetime as a Democrat. I'm not buying what he's selling, I never did. I did my DD on Obama's record (zilch-record) and his approach to politics (He's panderer, and the same old type of pol except with no backbone and or true core beliefs).

Hope the college kids in this forum come out in droves for Obama and aren't smoking weed in there dorms this fall, he'll need them. Because he's lost the real base. Farewell. Last opinion on this biased , mean-spritied website. Good luck this fall.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 PM on 05/07/2008

It no longer a suspicion. This woman is obsess with attaining "power" no matter who or what gets
on her way. We are fortunate that we have discovered before it was too late.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:58 PM on 05/07/2008

" ... endorsing Obama, former Sen. George McGovern said Wednesday it's virtually impossible for Clinton to win the nomination."
Clinton will not resign from this race and will take this fight all the way to the convention floor. However, Obama has to begin the process of a general election while watching his back! Clinton has proved up to this point that she will engage in any manner of action designed to get her into the White House. Await with baited breath Clinton's next move but at the same time, tired of the negative campaigning and snipping going on in the Democratic party! Got to get focused ~ GO OBAMA 2008

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 05/07/2008

For whatever reason, Hillary Clinton wants to keep going. And should be able to campaign. That's America. I support her right.

As for us, we are seeing the innards of how political campaigns have worked in America so far. It's good to see how people are manipulated by candidates and the media. It's good for us to gain political insight into the range of tactics used to win. The more we know, the less likely we stand to get as fooled. It's our responsibility to stay informed and inform one another.

But I think HIllary Clinton relied too much on the record of Bill Clinton. For example, Bill Clinton said, "I feel your pain," but passed welfare reform; Bill's administration created a lot of very low paying jobs but didn't fight for all Americans to earn a living wage. Bill Clinton fought for trade income but created NAFTA. He didn't fight off the special interests groups with any zest. He didn't fight for me that's for sure. I like Hillary. I think her future is strong. I don't think she can be president without bringing in the same old people, however. John McCain, of course, dwells in his own party's past and we have to remind one another just how frightful he will make things.

Now, if all goes well, it'll be Barack Obama's turn to fight for us. I believe he has decency and he'll fight and win some things for us as long as we stay involved.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:52 PM on 05/07/2008

Time to be a statewoman and not a politician. Time to be a grownup. Time to salvage your reputation.
What Clinton needs to do is call Obama and say "How can I position my withdrawal from the race to give you the maximum bang, the maximum turbo charge? What steps do you and your team want me to take to optimize your launch into the general campaign?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:39 PM on 05/07/2008
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