Alphabetical           State by State
 Mideast News Send this page to a friend!  
 Home
 News and Weather
 Africa
 Alternative Media
 Asia
 Australia
 Breaking News
 Business
 By Category
 Canada
 Central America
 College and University
 Columns
 Columns and Columnists
 Current Events
 Daily
 Editorial
 Entertainment
 Europe
 Ezines
 Filters
 Government
 Indices
 Industry Information
 Internet Broadcasts
 Ireland
 Journalism
 Magazines
 Media
 Middle East
 New Zealand
 News Directories
 News Satire
 Newspapers
 Newswires
 North America
 Online
 Personalized News
 Politics
 Radio
 Regional
 Services
 Software and Agents
 South America
 Sports
 Technology
 USA
 Universities and Colleges
 Weather
 Weekly
 World
Copyright © 1998-00 OpenHere
Company Information
Suggest a Site
FAQ
VirtualDesk
Login:

Password:
Mideast:  Obama And Clinton Campaign in Key Primaries in Indiana and North Carolina  
Tuesday, May 6, 2008 3:59 PM

Democratic presidential contenders Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are making a final push for support on the eve of Tuesday's...


Democratic presidential contenders Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are making a final push for support on the eve of Tuesday's primaries in Indiana and North Carolina. VOA National Correspondent Jim Malone has the latest on the U.S. presidential campaign from Washington.

Both candidates have a lot at stake in Tuesday's primaries.

Senator Clinton hopes to keep alive her underdog hopes of winning the Democratic nomination by extending her momentum after convincing victories in Pennsylvania and Ohio.

Obama seeks to recapture some momentum of his own after weeks of being on the defensive over his relationship with his former pastor, the Reverend Jeremiah Wright.

Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks during a campaign stop at a train depot in High Point, North Carolina, 05 May 2008
Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks during a campaign stop at a train depot in High Point, North Carolina, 05 May 2008
Clinton told a crowd in North Carolina that her political experience gives her an advantage over Obama on the issue of which candidate is best prepared to assume the presidency on day one.

"You know, the world is going to breathe a sigh of relief when that moving van pulls out from behind the White House and is heading back to Texas," she said. "But then, I want you to think about what the next president will be confronting."

"Two wars, a war to end in Iraq, and bring our troops home and a war to win in Afghanistan and go after those who attacked our country. An economy in crisis with gas prices exploding," she continued.

Obama told television interviewers he remains confident that he will emerge as the Democratic Party nominee for president, once the primary and caucus voting ends on June 3.

Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama (center) chats with construction workers as he tours the construction site in Evansville, Indiana, 05 May 2008
Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama (center) chats with construction workers as he tours the construction site in Evansville, Indiana, 05 May 2008
Obama holds a narrow, but difficult to overcome lead in the delegate count and has tried to refocus his campaign on economic issues in recent days and away from the controversy involving Reverend Wright.

Obama spoke on MSNBC television.

"You know, everybody goes through their turns of getting whacked around a little bit in the press, and certainly we have had our turns lately," he said. "But what I have seen is that the American people are looking for somebody who is really going to fight for them, who can make sure they can live out their hopes and their dreams."

New public-opinion polls give a mixed picture of the impact of the Wright controversy on the Obama campaign.

The USA Today Gallup Poll showed the Wright issue has helped Clinton move to a lead over Obama among Democrats nationwide by a margin of 51 to 44 percent.

But a new CBS News New York Times Poll suggested Obama was having some success in moving past the Wright controversy. Sixty percent of people surveyed in that poll approved of Obama's handling of the issue.

Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain speaks at a news conference in Phoenix, 05 May 2008
Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain speaks at a news conference in Phoenix, 05 May 2008
Meanwhile, the presumptive Republican nominee, Senator John McCain, is vowing that he will not make Obama's ties with Reverend Wright an issue in the general election campaign if Obama is the Democratic nominee.

McCain spoke at a news conference in Arizona.

"Senator Obama has said that it is a legitimate political issue in his campaign," he said. "He will respond to that, not me. Do I believe that Reverend Wright's comments were outrageous? Of course, so do all Americans. But it will be a discussion that Senator Obama will have with the American people."

McCain has the luxury of focusing on uniting his party and raising money while the Democratic race continues indefinitely.

Some political experts believe that many of the prominent Democrats who remain uncommitted in the Obama-Clinton battle will rally to Obama once the primaries end in early June.

Tom DeFrank of the New York Daily News says many of the so-called congressional superdelegates believe Senator Obama would be more helpful to their own re-election prospects in the November election than Hillary Clinton.

DeFrank appeared on VOA's Issues in the News program.

"There is a feeling that Obama has generated such enthusiasm, and so many new voters have registered as Democrats that many members of Congress running for re-election feel like Obama probably is a safer bet at the top of the ticket than Hillary," he said.

Recent polls give Clinton a slight edge in Indiana, while Obama remains favored in North Carolina.

 

Mideast

  • Mideast Home

  • Mideast:  Iraqi Prime Minister Offers Cash for Weapons in Mosul

  • Mideast:  Bin Laden: Al-Qaida Will Continue War Against Israel  

  • Mideast:  Bush in Saudi Arabia for Nuclear Deal  

  • Mideast:  Bush to Hold Talks With Saudi King on Oil Prices

  • Mideast:  US House Defeats Iraq Funding Measure, Approves Others

  • Mideast:  UN Scales Down Global Growth Forecast

  • Mideast:  US Defense Secretary Calls for More Leverage on Iran Before Talks  

  • Mideast:  Iraqi Troops Search for Al-Qaida Militants in Mosul

  • Mideast:  McCain Predicts Iraq War Won by 2013 if He's Elected President

  • Mideast:  Renewed Fighting in Iraq's Sadr City Kills at Least 7

  • Mideast:  Obama Rejects Bush Remark to Israeli Parliament as 'False Political Attack'

  • Mideast:  White House: Bush Comments to Israeli Parliament Were Not About Obama

  • Mideast:  Palestinians Mark Israel's 60th Anniversary With Protests; Israeli Forces Open Fire

  • Mideast:  Bush Says US, Israel United Against Iran's Nuclear Ambitions

  • Mideast:  Arab Mediators Expect to Finalize Deal on Lebanon Crisis

  • Mideast:  Iraqi Troops Enforce Crackdown on Al-Qaida in Mosul

  • Mideast:  Bush Says Letting Iran Have Nuclear Weapons 'Unforgivable'

  • Mideast:  Lebanese Cabinet Reverses Anti-Hezbollah Decisions That Sparked Fighting

  • Mideast:  Analysts Say Major Progress Unlikely in Arab-Israel Peace Process  

  • Mideast:  Rocket Strikes Israeli Shopping Mall, Bush Continues Visit  

  • Mideast:  White House: No Security Guarantees for Iran in Nuclear Talks

  • Mideast:  Bush Says Iran Behind Lebanese Fighting  

  • Mideast:  Suicide Bombing Near Iraqi Capital Kills 20

  • Mideast:  Beirut Residents Fear Renewed Violence  

  • Mideast:  Former President Jimmy Carter Defends Recent Meeting with Hamas Leaders  

  • Mideast:  Arab League Envoys in Lebanon to Mediate End to Crisis

  • Mideast:  President Bush Arrives in Israel on a Five-Day Mideast Trip

  • Mideast:  Bush in Israel to Start Middle East Trip

  • Mideast:  Poll Shows People Want Their Governments More Responsive

  • Mideast:  Jimmy Carter Discusses Controversial Mideast Trip, US Presidential Race With  


  • More Headlines