Hillary Clinton's advisers 'in a state of panic'

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Hillary Clinton's advisers 'in a state of panic'

By Tim Shipman in Washington and Philip Sherwell in Chicago
Last Updated: 11:53am GMT 10/02/2008

Hillary Clinton's most senior advisers are in a state of "panic" about her presidential prospects and are plotting to enlist Democrat leaders in Congress to thwart her rival Barack Obama's ambitions.


The Clinton camp is braced for Mr Obama to win a series of primary elections over the next three weeks, which they fear could hand the Illinois senator unstoppable momentum in the race for the White House.

Hillary Clinton's advisers 'in a state of panic'
Hillary Clinton has to win Texas and Ohio

Mr Obama has begun calling those "super delegates" - 795 congressmen and senior party officials who could break a dead heat - who are committed to Mrs Clinton, asking them to change their minds and help him wrap up the nomination.

As of tonight, the two candidates were neck and neck but Mr Obama appeared to be gaining momentum.

"He's saying: 'Hey, I won your state and I won your congressional district, why are you supporting her?'" a Democrat strategist revealed.

The Clinton camp hopes to stop the Obama bandwagon by winning Texas and Ohio primaries on March 4, after which Mrs Clinton is planning to call on party grandees including Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House of Representatives and Harry Reid, the party's leader in the Senate, to persuade Mr Obama to stand down.


Clinton aides have privately admitted that Mr Obama would only consider such a move if offered the position of vice presidential running mate, something Mrs Clinton has always been reluctant to consider.



A senior Democrat who has discussed Clinton campaign thinking with a member of her inner circle said: "The Clintons are in a state of panic. She has to win both Texas and Ohio."

But he added that this might prove impossible if Mr Obama maintains his momentum and wins most, or all, of the nine contests which come before that.

Mr Obama won yesterday's primary elections held in Washington state and Nebraska, and is expected to do well in Louisiana.

He is also favourite to sweep Maryland, Virginia, and Washington DC, which all vote on Tuesday, as well as Wisconsin and Hawaii, where he once lived, on February 19.

Only in Maine is Mrs Clinton confident, though Virginia and Wisconsin may also go her way.

Asked about the upcoming states, Mr Obama's chief strategist David Axelrod told The Sunday Telegraph: "We feel comfortable with them. What was once inevitable is no longer inevitable. The momentum has switched in this race.

"We closed a 20 point gap in the national polls in the last two weeks. The more people are exposed to his message, the better he does."


But he added: "We are up against the Clinton machine. We are the perpetual underdog and will be throughout this process. We're ready to go all the way to the convention."

Clinton aides believe that if Mr Obama does not deliver a knock-out blow before March 4, the advantage will swing back to her and she will argue for a deal in which uncommitted super-delegates unite behind her, to preserve party unity.

But the prospect of a deal behind closed doors, that could brush aside the views of voters in the primaries, is already creating fury in the party.

Donna Brazile, an African American strategist, said last week: "If 795 of my colleagues decide this election, I will quit the Democratic Party."

But the Clinton camp fears that a failure to engineer a deal could lead to bitter battles at the Democrat convention in Denver in late August, which could even end with Al Gore, the former vice president, emerging as a compromise candidate.

"There's a five per cent chance of that happening, but that's five percent too high," the Clinton source said.

Mrs Clinton is also under financial pressure.


She claimed that she received $7.5m in donations after admitting lending her campaign $5m last week.

But the source claimed that her campaign is actually in far worse financial trouble than they are letting on.

There will be no proof of how much she raised for three months, when the totals are formally declared to election watchdogs.

The one thing the Clinton and Obama camps can agree on is that John McCain, who is popular with independents and moderate Democrats, is their "worst nightmare".

They now fear that he could pick Colin Powell or former congressman JC Watts, both of whom are African American, as his running mate.

But Mr McCain still has to shore up his conservative base and is actively looking at the Governors of Minnesota, South Carolina, Indiana, Mississippi, Florida and Texas: Tim Pawlenty, Mark Sandford, Mitch Daniels, Haley Barbour, Charlie Crist and Rick Perry.

Allies of President Bush are making the case for Rob Portman, a former White House Budget office director and Ohio congressman.

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its pretty pathetic that obama basically has to win all the rest of the states and so decisively to offset all of hillarys schemes.
 
you really think hes going to clean sweep including texas? i think hillary still leads there

I really do. I think his momentum and fundraising and message is resonating with democratic voters in a way not seen in years. Heck, if I weren't so stubborn I might vote for him, I like him that much.
 
shes still leading in tx and ohio in double digits last i saw. thats some turn around. I dont think shes going to go away quietly.
 
If Obama wins every primary until March 4th - which he should - she won't have a chance of sweeping both TX & OH. It reminds me of the claims that Rudy would "still take FL" after losing the entire month of January.

Unless something drastic happens in this race, she is toast. By something drastic, I mean some exaggerated or completely fabricated "skeleton in the closet" that the Clinton campaign leaks to the media.
 
If Obama wins every primary until March 4th - which he should - she won't have a chance of sweeping both TX & OH. It reminds me of the claims that Rudy would "still take FL" after losing the entire month of January.

Unless something drastic happens in this race, she is toast. By something drastic, I mean some exaggerated or completely fabricated "skeleton in the closet" that the Clinton campaign leaks to the media.

And the last thing you mention could actually happen. I wouldn't put it past them. Anything to raise doubt and get Hillary a few more votes that she otherwise probably wouldn't get. Man I'm getting cynical in my old age.
 
And the last thing you mention could actually happen. I wouldn't put it past them. Anything to raise doubt and get Hillary a few more votes that she otherwise probably wouldn't get. Man I'm getting cynical in my old age.

It's not cynical - it's realistic. We're talking American politics here.

When I imagine Hillary or her campaign manager saying something like "I don't care what we have to do or say to stop him in one of these states, just make it happen!" it seems perfectly plausible to me. I don't think there is anything they won't try.
 
happy days if obama wins the nomination.. We should be all set with a choice of:

Obama/????Edwards???
vs
McCain/powell/watts
 
Millions of lower & middle class Democrats.

I guess I don't see his appeal. He won one term to the Senate in North Carolina and I believe polls showed his losing had he run again in 2004. I understand his populist rhetoric appealed to some duing his 2008 campaign but it didn't translate into many votes for him.

Maybe compared to other possible VP candidates he does offer more. Compared to John McCain Obama will lack in experience. It seems one way to counter that would be someone with excellent foreign policy experience or more national political experience in general.

Ultimately I don't think the VP plays that big of a role so this debate is mostly semantics but its interesting nonetheless.
 
wow the wussy dem males are pissing themselves all the way till OBama nails the last one in the Clinton coffin.
She'll win Texas cause of the Latino vote, Ohio is not poor enough or stupid enough to go with the Union vote.
Obama is winning it.
 
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