No quitter
The never-say-die Hillary Clinton has no plans to leave the riveting presidential nominating battle.
A dream ticket?
Democrats are talking about the possibility of Obama taking Clinton on as his running mate.
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Clinton urged to back out
07/05/2008 23:00  - (SA)  

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  • Sioux Falls - Former Senator George McGovern, an early supporter of Hillary Rodham Clinton, urged her to drop out of the Democratic presidential race and endorsed her rival, Barack Obama.

    After watching the returns from the North Carolina and Indiana primaries on Tuesday night, McGovern said on Wednesday it is virtually impossible for Clinton to win the nomination. The 1972 Democratic presidential nominee said he had a call in to former President Bill 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 on 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 85-year-old McGovern. 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 is time to unite the Democratic Party, he said. Democratic leaders have worried that a fractious race will hurt the party's chance of beating Republican nominee-in-waiting John McCain in the general election.

    "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.

    McGovern is not a superdelegate, one of the prominent Democrats who has a vote at the national convention.

     
     



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