Clinton Urges Supporters to Ignore Calls to Quit
Her voice raspy, her tone determined,
Hillary Rodham Clinton urged her supporters on Thursday to ignore
the political pundits who have declared her toast.
The former first lady raced into a long West
Virginia-to-the-West Coast campaign day, declaring she would move
forward with her presidential effort and insisting anew that she,
not rival Barack Obama, would be the stronger Democratic candidate
to face Republican John McCain in November.
At a rally under the dome of the West Virginia Capitol, Clinton
dismissed calls for her to drop out as "deja vu all over again."
She said she had faced similar pressure before going on to win in
New Hampshire, Ohio, Texas and Pennsylvania.
She made her case for pressing on, even as she thanked her
supporters for doing the same.
"A lot of you have stuck with me; you've been through all the
ups and downs in this campaign, the biggest victories and toughest
moments," Clinton said. "I think it is because you understand
that you've got to have a president who gets up every day and
fights for you, who never gives up on you."
Her fading chances didn't diminish the loyalty of Evelyn Smith,
78, one of hundreds of supporters who jammed into the Capitol and
waited nearly two hours to hear Clinton speak.
"It's going to take a miracle for her to get the nomination,
which I could sit down and cry about because I think she really
deserves to be president and the first lady president," Smith
said.
Whatever the odds, Smith said Clinton should stay in the race
until the final contests June 3. She said, "I'm a lot like she is,
and I would go to the finish line even if I came in last and took a
fall. I'd make it to the finish line, and I think she should,
too."
Jim Duffield, 64, agreed.
"We don't have a winner yet. Of course she should keep going
until we get a winner," Duffield said.
Said Clinton as her audience cheered: "I'm running to be
president of all 50 states. I think we ought to keep this going so
the people of West Virginia's voices are heard."
In contrast to her confrontational comments in speeches leading
up to recent primaries, Clinton's only mention of Obama was to say
next Tuesday's election would be a test for both her and the
Illinois senator. She did highlight her strengths with various
voting blocs through the primaries, an implicit comparison with her
Democratic foe. She said the states she has won and the voters she
has attracted are essential if the party is to beat McCain and
claim the White House.
"We need to bring back hardworking people to the Democratic
Party," the New York senator said. "I'm winning Catholic voters
and Hispanic voters, blue-collar workers and seniors. People Sen.
McCain will need in the general election."
She added, "Some call you swing voters. I call you Americans."
Exit polls in Indiana and North Carolina on Tuesday showed
Clinton continuing to dominate Obama in attracting support from
whites, particularly white men, and voters who lack college
degrees. An average of 57 percent of whites have backed the New
York senator in Democratic primaries since Super Tuesday on Feb. 5.
West Virginia's demographic makeup of white, older voters favors
Clinton. During her appearance Thursday, she offered the same
populist pitch she began making in the closing days before Indiana
and North Carolina.
She renewed her call for a summertime holiday for the federal
gasoline tax, with oil companies making up the difference, a
proposal that many economists - and Obama - have dismissed as a
meaningless pander.
The West Virginia rally was the first event in Clinton's
exceptionally busy campaign schedule Thursday. She also planned
appearances in South Dakota and Oregon, which have primaries in
coming weeks.
She is favored to win West Virginia's primary but has fallen
further behind Obama in delegates won in primaries and caucuses.
Her hopes for the Democratic nomination rest on strong showings in
the remaining contests to convince more than 200 party elders and
other "superdelegates" to support her.
Obama was in Washington talking with superdelegate members of
Congress, telling them it was now time to declare for him.
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