Clinton For Vice President Movement Disavowed By Campaign

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BETH FOUHY and NEDRA PICKLER | June 5, 2008 11:58 PM EST | AP

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In this July 19, 2006, file photo Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., speaks with Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., right, during the annual convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Washington, prior to their race for the Democratic presidential nomination. After Obama secured the nomination Tuesday, June 3, 2008, he called Clinton in the evening and left a message. Meanwhile, Clinton's aides and surrogates have pitched her for the No. 2 spot, though she has not officially ended her campaign. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File )

WASHINGTON — Hillary Rodham Clinton and likely Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama met privately Thursday night to talk about uniting the Democratic Party.

"Senator Clinton and Senator Obama met tonight and had a productive discussion about the important work that needs to be done to succeed in November," their campaigns said in joint statement.

The statement included no details of their talks, as pressure mounted for Obama to invite Clinton to become his running mate.

Robert Gibbs, an Obama spokesman, would not say where the former rivals met, except that it was not at Clinton's home in Washington, as had been widely reported.

Reporters traveling with Obama sensed something might be happening between the pair when they arrived at Dulles International Airport after an event in Northern Virginia and Obama was not aboard the airplane.

Asked at the time about the Illinois senator's whereabouts, Gibbs smiled and declined to comment.

Clinton returned to Washington after the last primaries on Tuesday night, when Obama earned the 2,118 delegates he needed to secure the Democratic nomination. She planned to announce Saturday that she was ending her campaign and supporting Obama.

The meeting followed Clinton's disavowal hours earlier of efforts by some supporters who have urged Obama to choose her as his running mate.

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"She is not seeking the vice presidency, and no one speaks for her but her," communications director Howard Wolfson said. "The choice here is Senator Obama's and his alone."

Even as Clinton was bowing out of the race, supporters in Congress and elsewhere were ramping up a campaign to pressure him to put her on the ticket.

Bob Johnson, the billionaire founder of Black Entertainment Television and a Clinton supporter, on Wednesday sent a letter to the Congressional Black Caucus urging the group to encourage Obama to choose Clinton as his No. 2. Johnson said he was doing so with her blessing.

Obama is seeking to become the first black president.

Clinton has told other friends and supporters she would be willing to be Obama's running mate. But her immediate task is bringing her own presidential bid to a close, and how.

In an e-mail to supporters, the New York senator said she "will be speaking on Saturday about how together we can rally the party behind Senator Obama. The stakes are too high and the task before us too important to do otherwise."

Clinton expressed the same sentiment in a conference call with 40 members of her national finance committee, whom she urged to begin raising money for Obama and for the Democratic National Committee.

"She was in good spirits and totally supportive, without qualification, of Senator Obama and his campaign," finance co-chairman Alan Patricof said of the call.

It was a shift in tone by the former first lady, who announced 17 months ago that she was "in it to win it." Many of her supporters want her as the vice presidential candidate, in their minds a "dream ticket" that would bring Obama her enthusiastic legions and broaden his appeal to white and working-class voters.

On his campaign plane Thursday, Obama praised Clinton for inspiring millions of voters and said she had opened the doors for his two young daughters to imagine being president one day.

"We're going to speak to them but also listen to them and get advice," he said of Clinton's campaign team.

Obama also said he would welcome help from former President Clinton, calling him an "enormous talent."

Obama indicated he intends to take his time making a decision about inviting Hillary Clinton to join the ticket.

"We're not going to be rushed into it. I don't think Senator Clinton expects a quick decision and I don't even know that she's necessarily interested in that," Obama told NBC in an interview.

Clinton's move to formally declare that she is backing the Illinois senator came after Democratic congressional colleagues made clear they had no stomach for a protracted intraparty battle. Now that Obama has the delegates needed for the nomination, Clinton had little choice but to end her quest.

Some of her closest supporters _ the nearly two dozen House Democrats from her home state of New York _ switched their endorsements to Obama Thursday. Their public announcement followed two days of private phone calls weighing her options.

"She was just as spunky as ever," Rep. Charlie Rangel said of Clinton's mood on the calls, as her friends and supporters urged her to come to a decision "sooner rather than later."

Many of the lawmakers said it was important for them, as New Yorkers who are close to Clinton and helped launch her presidential bid, to work together to repair some of the rifts in the party.

WASHINGTON — Hillary Rodham Clinton and likely Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama met privately Thursday night to talk about uniting the Democratic Party. "Senator Clinton and Senator...
WASHINGTON — Hillary Rodham Clinton and likely Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama met privately Thursday night to talk about uniting the Democratic Party. "Senator Clinton and Senator...
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Even in defeat, Hillary is still in the game......playing the 17 millon vote card. Let's kiss and make up, Obama. Hillary is still houvering, waiting for Obama to make a mistake......If I were Obama, I would be cautious with anything that would be infered as a promise or commitment­.......the fact remains.......if you choose Hillary.....Bill comes with the package.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 06/06/2008

As an ex Hillary supporter. (Until she lost on Tuesday) I have to say I'm not feeling too welcomed into the Obama camp right now... with all these anti Hillary statements even AFTER Obama wrapped up the nomination. I'm trying to be a gracious loser, but I'm certainly not seeing much humility or gracioiusness on the Obama side right now. And I don't think that is what Barack wants us to do right now. After all, isn't his team the "uniter" camp.

How about welcoming us (Ex HRC supporters) with some humility as the winners in the primary into your team. After all we have a lot of work to do in order to beat the republicans this fall. And, all these projections on what HRC is trying to do (IE: strong arm her way to being asked as VP) continue to be proven untrue.

Hope you accept us. What do you say guys?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 06/06/2008

You have always dranked Obamaide. Who do you think you are fooling?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 06/06/2008
- pacats I'm a Fan of pacats 4 fans permalink

Welcome

Democrats 08.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 PM on 06/06/2008
- renoir I'm a Fan of renoir 16 fans permalink

Watch the candidate instead of reading here, if you want to see conciliatory talk. Obama has never been anything but gracious and supportive of the Democratic process and of Hillary's campaign.

You know? I was all for Richardson. But he dropped out before I could vote for him. I didn't blame anyone for that... I just moved on to my next choice: Obama. What do you want from your co-Dems? An invitation? Here it is! Join up! Welcome! Glad to have you! Fabulous! Let's get to work!

Clinton has put everything on hold by announcing that she's going to give a speech tomorrow. Would you really have Obama jump right in now, rather than give her that moment? He's been nothing but generous to Clinton... up to and including letting her have her moment on Saturday. After all, he won the nomination. Wasn't his time... indeed the entire country's moment to celebrate his candidacy... last Tuesday? But he's stepped back and let her keep her moment. I would think that that alone would signal to Clinton supporters that he respects her and wants the party to unite. What the hell else can he/we do?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 PM on 06/06/2008

I think we all welcome you whole-heartedly. But look at the Clinton folks on here who say they are voting for McCain, and look how ungracious Hillary was on Tuesday. These sorts of things keep us on edge. We understand the need for unity, but HRC hasn't been setting a good example unity-wise, which hasn't done a lot to build trust.

Anyway, I don't really want to lecture here - just explain why it is a little hard to be gracious, and may continue to be until we see the Clintons truly backing Obama. As someone who was pulling hard for Tsongas in 1992, Bradley in 2000, and Dean in 2004, I understand where you are coming from(& for once my candidate won!). It's hard when your candidate - the one that to you is so clearly the better choice - does not win. But it is important to remember who the REAL enemy is (A hint - the real enemy likes war and taking from the poor and giving to the rich. This is good to remember).

And I am glad to have you aboard - someone as gracious as you was never the reason why most of us got fired up. There are always the exceptions, but I am sure you know some of them from your side of the fence too.

Health Care, Peace, a Clean Environment and Sustainable Energy in 2008! Because THESE are issues that matter more than any candidate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:11 PM on 06/06/2008

I don't think we can assume that everyone posting about shifting their allegiance from Clinton to McCain is for real. It's been identified as the next phase of Operation Chaos, which is built on lying about one's political affiliation for purposes of disinformation. Anyone who claims to support McCain having been a lifelong Democrat was never really a Democrat anyway. McCain's brand of leadership makes real Democrats shudder.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 PM on 06/06/2008

I was taught (I'm English and live in France) that we ignore history at our peril. Has Amerrica not fully grasped the folly of having a VP who believes there position is worth more than a "warm bucket of spit"? There are no true co-leadership sucess stories and I suspect Obama/Clinton would not be the, er, first. The USA - and the world - need a LEADER, not a committee; they're things that decide on the design of Nissan Micras or VW Rabbits and their ilk.
And this is before anyone countenances the truly absurd notion of Mr Clinton bouncing off the East Wing walls like a frenetic pinball ball....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 PM on 06/06/2008
- FZliveson I'm a Fan of FZliveson 79 fans permalink
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What would satisfy Hillary besides the Big Spot?
What would her talents and experience really be good for?
Health? Immigration? Narcissism Dept. Secretary?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 PM on 06/06/2008
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UNTIL SHE CONCEDES SAYS SHE LOST and throws her full support behind Obama, she is still running for PRESIDENT...

It was smart for Obama to meet, I think Obama instigated it - to call Hillary's bluff and say Enough is Enough!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 PM on 06/06/2008
- keriheb I'm a Fan of keriheb 6 fans permalink

HRC does not have all of those supporters, many or most of these people voting for her were Limbaugh saboteurs voting to screw up the democratic election, and they succeeded, at least in part.

The proof that these people don't support HRC is that she is $20 - $40 million in debt. If HRC had supporters she would not have any debt. If they supported her they would send her some money. If these people are supporters and they each sent in $5.00 all of her debts would be paid off and HRC would still have some left over to get her hair done.

HRC and her supporters are all saying how weak Obama is but she is in debt, her so called supporters are not giving her any money and she is hat in hand asking for money and a job.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 PM on 06/06/2008
- mabinog I'm a Fan of mabinog 38 fans permalink
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Really, honest, truly, not interested at all...(wink, wink)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 06/06/2008

nice touch, another Pinocchio moment

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:31 PM on 06/06/2008

come onnnnnnn, don't you believe her?......'-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 06/06/2008
- rh654 I'm a Fan of rh654 13 fans permalink

If Hillary could jettison Bill Clinton I think that she would be a great VP choice.

But can you imagine being President and having to deal with Bill Clinton hovering around?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 PM on 06/06/2008
- SharonB I'm a Fan of SharonB 13 fans permalink

Whoda thunk it?

I bet they never in a million years ever thought that Bill would end up being one of the main reasons that she might not make it to either Pres OR Vice Pres. After all those years of putting up with his crap and parsing, excusing, and lying about it she finds out that she might have been better off without him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:17 PM on 06/06/2008
- keriheb I'm a Fan of keriheb 6 fans permalink

I think if HRC could jettison Hillary I could vote for her.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 06/06/2008
- olivia I'm a Fan of olivia 96 fans permalink

Moderator off getting a massage?

110 comment pending

I guess you get what you pay for

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 06/06/2008

I sencerely hope that Hillary Clinton DOES not run as VP to BO. The media, DNC, and BO supporters would just use her to blame all of his short-comings on.

McCain 08

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 06/06/2008
- Bocababs I'm a Fan of Bocababs 19 fans permalink

I heard they ended it by laughing. I would like both of them to "laugh all of us all the way to White House." If he does not offer Hillary the VP slot, I am absolutely sure that he will offer her a cabinet position or another postion should he be lucky enough to win the White House.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 06/06/2008
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I think we should all forget about "Clinton wants the Vice Presidency" because it is obvious Hillary is acting in a way that makes it impossible for Obama to pick her and she and her staff know that very well.

Exactly what she is angling for, I don't know, but it certainly isn't the VP spot.

No way Obama could pick her because a prospective President can't pick his subordinate under pressure from the subordinate.

That is, in a way, why you read that JFK offered the VP spot to LBJ thinking LBJ was not interested and would turn down the offer, because otherwise it would appear that JFK had caved to pressure on his first appointment, hardly a good way to begin a campaign.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 PM on 06/06/2008
- Zeebob I'm a Fan of Zeebob 2 fans permalink

I bet the two of them went to the Bilderberg Group meeting in Washington, it just makes sense. Barack had to deal with the devil so that they wouldn't X him off the face of the earth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 PM on 06/06/2008

??????????­?blink???b­link??????­??????
Really.

Zeebob, please remove the tinfoil hat. There is a time and place for that but I doubt that this is it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:10 PM on 06/06/2008
- Braves71 I'm a Fan of Braves71 6 fans permalink


Sen. Obama is being gracious and proceeding in his usual careful
thoughtful way. Far more grace than he would receive in a reverse
situation and without 'prodding'.
He should ONLY move quickly when the
fierce urgency of NOW is at foot-and ONLY then. Just as he is doing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 PM on 06/06/2008
- jmwtex I'm a Fan of jmwtex 2 fans permalink

If HRC lives of up to the expections to the Obama fans, she will be smart. She will say the rights words publicly but strategically look for how she can make sure McCain wins or help destroy Obama during his first term. Considering what many Obama people on this website and other Media have expressed about her, she has nothing to lose by living up to those expectations. It will be interesting to see if the nightmare person that the Obama people have created and painted vividly through the different forms of media actually manifests itself and comes back to haunt the Obama administration. I can see a future where the Clintonites join with the Republicans in retribution for the way the Obama fans have joined in preaching the Republican view of the Clintons and the Clinton presidency. This does not look goo for long term unity. There maybe enought to get Obama elected, but after watching the Obama fans act in the manner that they most despise about the Clintons, all I can see retribution in the future and at some point the Obama people are going to have take at least a modicum of responsibility for having created this mess. Right now they are completely unable to do so. It is all HRC's fault to them. Which of course, it is not.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 06/06/2008
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