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There Goes The Opposition — Kerplop!

Hillary's Got Hope

OOPS, THERE GOES THE OPPOSITION — KERPLOP!

HILLARY QUITS RACE; ENDORSES OBAMA

WASHINGTON (AP) – Hillary Rodham Clinton ended her historic campaign for the presidency on Saturday and told supporters to unite behind rival Barack Obama, closing out a race that was as grueling as it was groundbreaking.

The former first lady, who as recently as Tuesday declared herself the strongest candidate, gave Obama an unqualified endorsement and pivoted from her role as determined foe to absolute ally.

“The way to continue our fight now to accomplish the goals for which we stand is to take our energy, our passion, our strength and do all we can to help elect Barack Obama, the next president of the United States,” she said in a speech before cheering supporters packed into the ornate National Building Museum, not far from the White House she longed to govern from.

“Today as I suspend my campaign, I congratulate him on the victory he has won and the extraordinary race he has run. I endorse him and throw my full support behind him and I ask of you to join me in working as hard for Barack Obama as you have for me,” the New York senator said in her 28-minute address.

With that and 13 other mentions of his name, Clinton placed herself solidly behind her Senate colleague from Illinois, a political sensation and the first black to secure a presidential nomination.

Obama, in a statement, declared himself “thrilled and honored” to have Clinton’ support.

“I honor her today for the valiant and historic campaign she has run,” he said. “She shattered barriers on behalf of my daughters and women everywhere, who now know that there are no limits to their dreams. And she inspired millions with her strength, courage and unyielding commitment to the cause of working Americans.”

Aides said Obama watched Clinton’s speech live on the Internet and tried to call her later. His campaign put a photo of Clinton on its Web site and urged supporters to send her a message of thanks.

For Clinton and her supporters, it was a poignant moment, the end of an extraordinary run that began with an air of inevitability and certain victory. About 18 million people voted for her; it was the closest a woman has come to capturing a nomination.

“Although we weren’t able to shatter that highest, hardest glass ceiling this time, thanks to you, it has about 18 million cracks in it and the light is shining through like never before,” she said.

Indeed, her speech repeatedly returned to the milestone her candidacy represented for women. In primary after primary, her support among women was a solid bloc of her voting coalition. She noted that she’d received the support of women who were 80 and 90 years old, born before women could even vote.

She acknowledged the unprecedented success of Obama’s candidacy, as well.

“Children today will grow up taking for granted that an African-American or a woman can, yes, become the president of the United States,” she said.

Obama secured the 2,118 delegates needed to clinch the nomination Tuesday after primaries in South Dakota and Montana. He planned to spend the weekend at home in Chicago.

Joining Clinton on stage were her husband, the former president, and their daughter, Chelsea, to loud cheers from the crowd. When she spoke, they stepped away.

In decided to suspend her campaign, Clinton kept some options open. She gets to retain her delegates to the nominating convention this summer and she can continue to raise money. It also means she could reopen her campaign if circumstances change before the Denver convention, but gave no indication that was her intention.

As soon as Clinton finished speaking, some of the nearly 300 Democratic party leaders and elected officials across the country who had pledged their support to her as superdelegates released statements announcing they now back Obama. The switchers included some of Clinton’s most high-profile supporters, including Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, Maryland Sen. Barbara Mikulski and Maine Gov. John Baldacci.

Clinton supporters began lining up at dawn to attend the farewell address. A smattering of Obama backers showed up as well, saying they did so as a gesture of party unity.

Supporters and press jammed the museum’s vast ground floor, with the second and third floor balconies quickly filling up as well. The stage was draped with American flags, and a sound system blared upbeat music.

As they awaited her arrival, campaign staffers milled the room, exchanging hugs and saying goodbye.

Clinton seemed almost buoyant in her address, feeding off the energy of a loud and appreciative crowd.

“Well, this isn’t exactly the party I planned but I sure like the company,” she said as she opened her speech.

Clinton backers described themselves as sad and resigned. “This is a somber day,” said Jon Cardinal, one of the first in line. Cardinal said he planned, reluctantly, to support the Illinois senator in the general election. “It’s going to be tough after being against Obama for so long,” he said.

Clinton’s presidential Web site on Saturday thanked her backers. “Support Senator Obama today,” her Web page said. “Sign up now and together we can write the next chapter in America’s story.”

Republicans quickly launched a “Clinton vs. Obama” page on the Republican National Committee’s Web site drawing attention to her criticism of Obama during the campaign.

As a prelude to Saturday’s speech, Obama and Clinton had a face-to-face meeting Thursday evening at the Washington home of a Senate colleague, California Democrat Dianne Feinstein.

Clinton was expected to campaign for Obama and to help with fundraising, while seeking his assistance in retiring her $30 million campaign debt. The New York senator has told colleagues she would be interested in joining Obama as his running mate.

The undisputed front-runner when she announced her candidacy in January 2007, Clinton saw her march to the nomination derailed a year later after being swamped by Obama in Iowa’s leadoff caucuses. She stayed alive after a narrow victory in New Hampshire five days later. But her campaign never fully regained its footing despite strong showings in several big-state primaries beginning in March.
06/07/08 15:20 © Copyright The Associated Press.

* Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who endorsed Sen. Clinton for president, has said that if his candidate is not the party’s nominee, he will unite with his fellow Democrats (and, ahem, family members) to support Barack Obama.

And with all this Obama/JFK/”Hope” fever in the air, thought this might be a good time to bring back a slightly revised version of Kennedy’s 1960 campaign theme song in honor of the presumptive Democratic nominee. So with our sincere apologies to Ol’ Blue Eyes, here `tis:

HIGH HOPES

Everyone is voting for Barack
Cause he’s got what all the rest lack 
Everyone wants to back — Barack
Barack is on the right track. 
‘Cause he’s got high hopes 
He’s got high hopes
Twenty-Oh-Eight’s the year for his high hopes. 
Come on and vote for O-bama
Vote for O-bama
And we’ll come out on top!
Oops, there goes the opposition – ker – 
Oops, there goes the opposition – ker – 
Oops, there goes the opposition – KERPLOP!

O–B–A–M–A
He’s the man we need today 
Everyone wants to back — Barack 
Barack is on the right track. 
‘Cause he’s got high hopes
He’s got high hopes
Twenty-Oh-Eight’s the year for his high hopes. 
Come on and vote for O-bama
Vote for O-bama 
Keep America strong. 
Obama, he just keeps rollin’ – a – 
Obama, he just keeps rollin’ – a – 
Obama, he just keeps rollin’ along.

 

 

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Filed under election 2008, hillary clinton, jackie kennedy, JFK, John F. Kennedy, lady bird johnson, LBJ, lyndon b. johnson, media, politics, president kennedy, RFK Jr., robert kennedy jr., the kennedys, Uncategorized