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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- SwingVoter I'm a Fan of SwingVoter 19 fans permalink
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From now on people, when ever you want to refer to McCain, please make sure you use 'John W. Bush McCain.'

Ex: We cannot support John W. Bush McCain because he is advocating the failed policies of Dick Cheney.

Ex: John W. Bush McCain refuses to support a recent G.I. bill in congress, citing "it gives too much benefits to our veterans."

Ex: America cannot entrust a currently unstable U.S. economy to John W. Bush McCain who is on record saying, he does not understand the economy.

Please, spread the word about John W. Bush McCain.

America cannot afford John W. Bush McCain--not in treasure and definitely not in blood.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:51 AM on 06/06/2008
- keriheb I'm a Fan of keriheb 6 fans permalink

Perhaps he should be called McCheney.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 06/06/2008

Obama better get some good foreign policy advisors quick!

He's gonna need some smart dudes -

JERUSALEM — Israel will attack Iran if it doesn't abandon its nuclear program, a Cabinet minister hoping to replace embattled Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was quoted Friday as saying.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 06/06/2008
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 71 fans permalink

They have to do this while Bush is in office; otherwise, the support may not be as solid. If Olmer is forced to resign, Bebe can rule.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:14 PM on 06/06/2008
- Marrob I'm a Fan of Marrob 5 fans permalink

Thank God Hillary isn't seeking the VP spot because she will be the first woman president in 2012. Obama's presidency wil be a total flop. He ain't ready for prime time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 AM on 06/06/2008

if all you clinton/obama supporters take the emotion out of this decision, you'll see for a lot of reasons it doesn't make sense to offer her the v.p. position. forget all the clintons baggage, obama has problems of his own with certain segments of the voting public. add to that hillary's nearly 50% disapproval rating and independents and repubs who might have voted for obama, just might swing back to mcsain and vote for him if she is on the ticket. forget about her probably having a tough time playing second fiddle, and her loose canon husband, and if you rationally think about it, it makes no sense.

i think obama will probably have a very short list of perspective choices, they'll probably 'poll' them and see how it flies, and than make their choice. i'd love to see another woman, but hillary supporters will feel slighted, so i doubt that will fly. without sounding racist, i think it will be a 'white male', although i'm a big bill richardson fan. folks obama has gotten this far,,,,,,,,,,i'm sure he'll make the right choice for v.p. it just won't be hillary.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 06/06/2008

That's such a joke. More people would vote for him because she's on the ticket, then people would vote against him because she's on the ticket.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 PM on 06/06/2008
- Chandidevi I'm a Fan of Chandidevi 26 fans permalink

There are reports that the two met at the Marriott Hotel with the Bilderberg Group - a group of international elitist power-brokers who will vet Obama. They are the folks to whom the Clintons report. This is not being covered by MSM.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 AM on 06/06/2008
- PAposter I'm a Fan of PAposter 143 fans permalink
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Has anyone seen Obama since this "meeting", where the hell is my President?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 AM on 06/06/2008

The idea is Hillary is owed anything is ridiculous. Just one new example of her behavior:

Superdelegate says Clinton campaign used 'divisive tactics'

A Democratic superdelegate from New Jersey said he is worried that unifying the party behind Barack Obama may be difficult because the Clinton camp "has engaged in some very divisive tactics and rhetoric it should not have."

Rep. Rob Andrews, who supported Hillary Clinton throughout the primary season, disclosed he received a phone call shortly before the April 22 Pennsylvania primary from a top member of Clinton's organization and that the caller explicitly discussed a strategy of winning Jewish voters by exploiting tensions between Jews and African-Americans.

"There have been signals coming out of the Clinton campaign that have racial overtones that indeed disturb me," Andrews said at his campaign headquarters in Cherry Hill Tuesday night after he lost his bid for the U.S. Senate nomination. "Frankly, I had a private conversation with a high-ranking person in the campaign ... that used a racial line of argument that I found very disconcerting. It was extremely disconcerting given the rank of this person. It was very disturbing."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 06/06/2008
- NotMcCain I'm a Fan of NotMcCain 85 fans permalink
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I wish this superdelegate had had the courage to come forward sooner. He seems to be hinting that it was Bill himself or Hillary, since the gender is consciously left out. There were many signs of it form some surrogates (Bill, Ferraro), and clearly upset the stronger superdelegates like Ted Kennedy.

Sad. But Obama will rise above it and urge the rest of us to do the same now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:15 PM on 06/06/2008
- GravitonX I'm a Fan of GravitonX 70 fans permalink
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We have a deal for the Hillary Clinton camp:

Support Obama to Victory this November and you will receive 100% Black support (and a far larger voter base) and Victory in 2016.

Deal?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 AM on 06/06/2008
- JJeff88 I'm a Fan of JJeff88 23 fans permalink

One reason we blog here is, in my opinion, because we can vicariously put ourselves in Barack's shoes or Hillary's shoes.

And so we all plead with our candidate to stay on, drop out, keep your delegates, release your delegates, choose her, don't choose her etc. etc.

Yet the one thing that has struck me during the past 48 hours has been the maturity and soundness of Barack Obama's judgment and his coolness under fire on a range of matters - from Israel's security to claiming victory on RNC convention turf to visiting Bristol, TN to placing Mr. Tews on the DNC to taking charge of the VP selection process.

With this in mind, I know longer feel inclined to plead with Sen. Obama to do anything - he seems to be doing just fine these days (thank you very much).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 AM on 06/06/2008
- renoir I'm a Fan of renoir 18 fans permalink

I completely agree. And although I have been dismayed by some of Clinton's tactics, if Obama chose her to be VP, I would trust that judgment. I personally want him to select someone else (Richardson), but will support whoever he chooses, knowing that he's a smart, capable and savvy man. Our next President! Can you believe it? How fantastic!

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

Just go away already, Hill.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 AM on 06/06/2008

Now all he needs to do is find a good VP. This site holds a Vice President Poll every week, so you can see what America thinks. Just visit:
http://www.votenic.com

and help your favorite candidate choose his/her running mate. They started a VP poll last week, and the results from that poll have just been posted. This poll is honest and represents all of America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 AM on 06/06/2008
- robynuva I'm a Fan of robynuva 5 fans permalink

Meeting last night:

Obama: Well, if you want the job, we will put you on a very short list, but please understand that means a full vetting of Bill’s library funding. And, if we have a problem there, Caroline Kennedy will have to have a press conference to announce why we can’t pick you. I can’t be seen turning you down without a good reason. If you are not comfortable with that I suggest you make a statement saying you don’t want the job.

HRC: how about I just go back to the Senate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 AM on 06/06/2008
- the964kid I'm a Fan of the964kid 68 fans permalink
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If that were true then Hillary wouldn't have had let surrogates (who informed her of their intentions) like Lanny David, Wasserman Shultz, and that fool Bob Johnson all advocating for a VP-ship.

Hillary would be the worst VP pick for Obama, and I don't think she can keep VP pressure up til August.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 AM on 06/06/2008
- vinny I'm a Fan of vinny 115 fans permalink
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Will Obama make a fundamental mistake in these talks with Clinton? Will he forget about those who elected him, and concede something he shouldn't? How would you Obama voters / contributers feel about concessions to Clinton for the sake of "party unity"?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 AM on 06/06/2008
- 1PALady I'm a Fan of 1PALady 2 fans permalink
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Vinny - No, we trust his judgement, we think he'll make the right decision.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 PM on 06/06/2008
- PAposter I'm a Fan of PAposter 143 fans permalink
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Why does Hillary and others like her, continue to talk about how many votes she got? Since when does it matter how many votes you got? I mean, I know the numbers are historic, but they are still votes earn by one of two remaining candidates in a Primary Season. The purpose is for one of these candidates to earn enough delegates for the nomination. Then, we all vote for the candidate that won, unless of course we find something more appealing about the candidate for the opposing party. That is not the case here, so what the f*ck are we talking about about votes for? It makes absolutely no sense.

You got 18M votes, I got 18M votes, who give a f*ck? Let's Go!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 AM on 06/06/2008
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