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: I won't quit
08/05/2008 07:21  - (SA)  

  • Clinton loans her campaign $6m
  • Obama closes in on victory
  • Hillary 'running out of options'
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  • Clinton claims victory
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  • Shepherdstown - Democrat Hillary Clinton on Wednesday vowed she was staying in the party's bitter White House race, despite mounting pressure to hand the baton over to rival Barack Obama.

    "I am staying in this race until there is a nominee," Clinton told reporters in West Virginia, which holds its presidential primary next Tuesday. "I am going to work as hard as I can to become that nominee."

    The former first lady had leapt straight back onto the campaign trail with a hastily arranged stop here, after being trounced by Obama in Tuesday's North Carolina primary and winning by only a hair's breadth in Indiana.

    But the results triggered swift calls on Wednesday for her to end the party's agony, and step down to allow the healing process to begin ahead of the November presidential elections.

    George McGovern, the Democrats' defeated presidential candidate in 1972, urged the New York senator to step aside as he threw his support behind Obama.

    Toast

    "I do not see how she has much chance of pulling out the nomination now, and I think it is important for Democrats to get united to win the general election in November," McGovern, who previously supported Clinton, told Fox News.

    "Toast," trumpeted the New York Post banner headline over a picture of Clinton saying she had blown her last shot in Indiana in the marathon nomination battle.

    In a further sign that she is floundering, her aides admitted that Clinton had lent her campaign $6.4m over the last month from her own pocket.

    But with Obama only 183 delegates shy of the 2 025 needed for the party's nomination, Clinton, on her own quest to be the first woman in the Oval Office, appears to be running out of options.

    "We now know who the Democratic nominee is going to be, and no one is going to dispute it," said NBC channel's commentator Tim Russert.

    Other commentators said the party's remaining undeclared superdelegates, who can vote for the candidate of their choice, would soon start flocking to Obama's side having held off while awaiting Tuesday's election results.

    "More superdelegates will come out today for Barack Obama. They will come three, four, five at a time, and this nomination will be locked up," said ABC television commentator George Stephanopoulos.

    'It's up to the voters'

    Clinton aides also fiercely rejected calls for her to quit the race, saying she would continue to press her case that she would be the best nominee to take on Republican John McCain in November.

    "The reality is that many pundits have counted Senator Clinton out many times in this contest," said Howard Wolfson, her communications director.

    "Many of them are doing it again today. The punditocracy does not control this contest, voters do."

    Only six primaries, with a total of 217 delegates at stake, remain: West Virginia, Kentucky, Oregon, Montana and South Dakota, and the US territory of Puerto Rico.

     
     



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