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Chelsea comes to desperate Hillary's aid

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Published Date: 17 February 2008
SHE won't admit it but desperation appears to be creeping in. Daughter Chelsea and husband Bill will be deployed this week to prop up Hillary Clinton's faltering presidential campaign.
Chelsea, now 27 and a far cry from the somewhat awkward braces-wearing teenager of old, is being dispatched to Hawaii while the former president will join his wife in Texas to help her cover a state the size of western Europe.

The delegate-rich Lo
ne Star state, which votes on March 4, is vital to Clinton's hopes of clawing back the lead the Democrat rival Barack Obama has established after a string of primary victories.

Campaign staff hope the sight of all three Clintons campaigning across America will help voters identify Hillary with "family values", softening an often brittle public image.

Chelsea's move to Hawaii, which votes in a primary on Tuesday, marks the emergence into the public eye of a woman who, until recently, has stayed out of the limelight.

Since living with her parents in the White House in the early 1990s, the tall, elegant Chelsea has earned a history degree from Stanford University and now works for a New York hedge fund managed by one of her mother's fund-raisers.

Chelsea has attracted little public attention apart from choosing as a boyfriend Marc Mezvinsky, son of a disgraced former congressman Ed Mezvinsky, who is serving a six-year sentence for fraud.

How she handles the new role is unclear. In December she refused to answer a question by a nine-year-old working for a school paper, explaining that she could not talk to the press, "even though I think you're cute".

For Bill, the Texas deployment marks a return from a political dead zone he has occupied since his role as Hillary's "attack dog" went wrong in January.

His assertion that Obama's opposition to the Iraq war – which Hillary supported – was a "fairy tale" caused a storm of controversy. He later apologised, but when polls showed he was having a negative effect on his wife's campaign, he slipped into the background.

Campaign officials hope he can rekindle some of his former popularity, but not everyone thinks he can succeed. "Chelsea is not the problem; Bill is the problem. He has annoyed a lot of people," said Allen Steiner, an expert on American constitutional history at Iowa University.

"It's a mistake to attack Obama. Nobody dislikes him."

But Hillary is getting anxious, after a week that has seen her nomination bid turned upside down.

First came eight straight losses in primary states where, until a few weeks ago, she had comfortable majorities.

Then the replacement of her campaign manager triggered leaks from staff indicating disquiet among her planners.

Finally came rumours that her coffers are bare and that she is preparing to add to the $5m she has already lent to her campaign. By contrast, Obama's campaign is raising record sums with a huge internet campaign among his mostly young supporters. He also has a narrow lead in delegates.

Some doubt that replacing her 'Team Clinton' with 'Family Clinton' can reverse Hillary's fortunes.

"They're pulling out all the stops and throwing everything they can at it," said Democratic Party pollster Phil Noble. "If they had a dog, they would bring the dog out."

Officially, the Clinton campaign is buoyant: she still leads the polls in Texas, and in Ohio, which votes on the same day.

Wins in these states could put her on a par with Obama in delegate numbers, giving her momentum to pull ahead in the final big state race, in Pennsylvania on April 22.

A win here would, in turn, give her a platform for victory, because she leads Obama in the number of party-appointed Super Delegates giving her their support.

Yet for all this to happen, she must find a way of halting Obama's ever wider lead in the polls, persuading voters that her claim to "experience" trumps Obama's call for "change".

The mathematics of the campaign means that neither candidate is likely to win more than 50% of the popular vote in the primaries that remain, leaving the choice in the hands of the Super Delegates.

But Democratic sources say Hillary's Super Delegates would be reluctant to give her the nomination this summer if Obama has captured the popular vote. To win, she must find a way to get back lost ground.



The full article contains 737 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 16 February 2008 8:10 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Hillary Clinton
 
1

Silence of the Yams,

17/02/2008 00:58:21
Obama is a fraud, but it seems he's going to get the nomination.
2

Haggis MacBagpipes,

Central Canada - ex Perth & Glesca' 17/02/2008 01:50:47
#1 - That's a rather bold statement, where's your proof?

I'd rather have Obama than that hard-faced Clinton, who cries when she doesn't get her own way.

She's not popular on this side of the world, because people remember what her husband was like as President, she has had 'kick at the cat' in the White House...it's time for a change.
Cheers,
Haggis MacBagpipes™©
3

Lynne,

USA 17/02/2008 03:28:41
S of the Y..he's just a new face. The media is pushing this..He was a JUNIOR Senator for 2 years for goodness sake..He has no experience. Certainly didn't vote for much while he was in the Senate either. He answered Here or Present, which amounts to no vote at all. What a joke!!
4

Encephalon,

17/02/2008 07:12:33
#3 Totally agree-much as I despise Clinton and her crocodile tears-where is all the money coming from to fund Obama's campaign and why is the media so friendly towards him? I cannot believe it is just because he is African-American!

What exactly does he stand for other than "change" -change what ?? Americans are the most privileged people on the planet-does he wish to change that!
5

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta, CA...bye Bush -Cheney..u. evil leaders. 17/02/2008 09:04:14
4
Encephalon,

Hey Dude,

Barack Hussein Obama is an American, There is no such country as African-American or A-A citizens.

Barack's father was a Black man a muslim from Kenya.
His mother is a White woman an atheist from KS, USA
Which makes BHO a person of mixed ethnicity.

Known by the English as a half-caste.

BHO is a media winner for our sick American media . He looks young, good looking . has a great set of pipes, and great at delivering speeches.
The TV camera's love this Dude.

He offers PROMISES and Hope but does not say how he can deliver his promises, and his Hope bit, sounds tribal.

As a Democrat voter, I prefer HC to be nominated.

And aside from her intelligence and knowledge of national and international affairs, she understands the corrupt workings inside The Beltway in Washington DC.

The Beltway Dudes will eat BHO for breakfast were he to become Pres.

GC
6

Shiltrum,

Republic of Alba 17/02/2008 10:32:22
Difficult to get TOO involved in someone elses election, 'cos I'm much more interested in what blocking tactics the Unionistas will attempt at OUR elections, since I just don't believe that they will lie down and play dead just because the voters turn their back on the union.
However I reckon that, imperfect though she may be, Hillary is at least intelligent and, after the current incumbent, that might be just all the change that our Yankee cousins need !!
7

Brod,

Los Angeles 17/02/2008 10:32:36
Obama is the most qualified and most presidential candidate remaining in the field. America will not miss the opportunity to elect him. He is a truly special once in a generation figure. Don't be lazy, you're on the Internet. If you want to find out about his very detailed policies and proposals, they are at your fingertips. Don't expect him to get wonky and detailed on the stump. That's not what political rallies are for. If you want to witness a truly brilliant and visionary individual, simply watch one of Obama's many newspaper editorial board interviews. You will walk away stunned, I assure you. This is not a typical or ordinary politician. His answers will amaze you simply because politicians never talk that way.

Speaking of newspapers, the editorial boards are populated by highly educated, very well-imformed people. Time and time again they have endorsed Obama over Hillary. Here in California Obama was endorsed by about 95% of our newspapers. So I think I value their opinion over a bunch of foreigners in Scotland.
8

Encephalon,

17/02/2008 14:46:23
#7 "simply watch one of Obama's many newspaper editorial board interviews. You will walk away stunned, I assure you."


I can assure you I wont-not for any politician-they are all snakes.


#5 "Barack Hussein Obama is an American, There is no such country as African-American"


Really, I actually thought he was Chinese-The Manchurian Candidate!


He has had a remarkably easy entry into both state and national politics by any standard, it would be interesting to know who facilitated this-who is bank-rolling him. His policies, such as they are, are very liberal. Simply banging on about "change" -whatever that means is meaningless.

Or am I being too cynical?
9

Media 1,

cape town 17/02/2008 18:21:08
I dont know why Hillary or the wet behind the ears Obama care. Neither of them can beat the heavy weight political figure of McCain
10

CaliforniaBhoy,

18/02/2008 04:56:00
You know, the did have a dog, a chocolate lab named "Buddy". He got smooshed by a car when they left the gate open!

BTW Media 1, I think it will be a cold day in hell when McCain gets elected President. In fact, I fancy Rangers chances of winning the league better and you know I don't really think that will happen!

However, I do think a Hillary nomination would give McCain a better chance than an Obama nomination. Obama is electable! A Clinton-McCain presidential contest would be a battle to determine which one is most unelectable.
11

Gruithainn,

Arbroath 26/02/2008 09:35:57
GalacticCannibal #5 - you get 10 out of 10 for your opening sentence. I'm generallly an America-friendly guy & frequent visitor, but one thing that would bug the S**t out of me if I was an American, would be this insistence by so many who need to be an adjectival-American of whatever description. I'm not a white-Scot, a lapsed-Protestant-Scot - I'm simply a Scot. I'm very proud of that fact, it's more than enough for me. I'll be glad when all Americans are happy to be simply that.

BTW the term 'half-caste' is deemed derogatory this side of the Pond, even in England, mixed-race/ ethnicity are more contemporary terms in Europe these days.

 

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