Posted on 12/08/2007 8:01:49 PM PST by LdSentinal
The presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton, the Democrat frontrunner, is facing a wave of defections by supporters to Barack Obama, as an aura of inevitability about her nomination fades.
With Oprah Winfrey, the talk show host and Obama enthusiast, challenging former president Bill Clinton for star power on the campaign trail, the coronation of Hillary has been put on hold.
A few days ago, Helen Quarles peeled off the Hillary for President bumper stickers from her car and replaced them with Obama 08.
I didnt think anybody could turn me away from Hillary, said Quarles, who worked as a volunteer for Clintons first Senate election campaign in New York. I liked her and was very fond of Bill.
Quarles now lives in South Carolina, which holds its primary election next month. In the South, a lot of people dont like Hillary, so I felt it was up to me to turn things around for her. I really wanted her to win, but theres something about Obama, she said. To me, he is the one who is going to make a difference.
Quarles, 69, has a golden centre row ticket to see Winfrey in action with Obama and his wife Michelle today at the University of South Carolinas 80,000-seat football stadium.
I think Oprah can change anybodys mind. I really do. She can draw people in and get them to listen to him, Quarles said.
The decisive factor for her was hearing Michelle Obama talk on television recently about her husbands family background and values: I didnt really know who Obama was. She touched my heart.
Former Friends of Bill, who served in the White House in 1990s but defected early on to Obamas campaign, are not surprised by the drift away from Hillary.
Betsy Myers, a White House adviser on womens issues - and sister of Dee-Dee Myers, Bill Clintons former press secretary - is now chief operating officer for Obamas campaign and responsible for much of its organ-isational prowess.
Myers worked with Clinton when she was first lady. Politics are about relationships, so it was not an easy choice, but I was really looking for a new generation of leadership skills, away from the old control and command model, she said.
For me, it wasnt a vote against Hillary Clinton but a vote for Barack. He is very authentic and comfortable in his own skin and has a history of working across the aisles for the common good . . . He would never utter the words right-wing conspiracy or even think like that, Myers said, referring to Hillary Clintons swipe at her husbands opponents during the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
William Daley, Bill Clintons former secretary of commerce, is another prominent Obama backer, with strong roots in Chicago, the candidates home town.
He is the son of the late Richard J Daley, Chicagos one-time mayor, and the brother of its present mayor, Richard M Daley.
Hes an extremely talented young fellow, who I have watched grow. He can strongly convey to the world that there is a different generation and a different style about America, William Daley said.
Ive known the president and Mrs Clinton for a long time and have enormous respect for them, but were still fresh in a new century. Among the American people there is a bit of a Bush-Clinton-Bush-Clinton issue.
Daley - in common with a discreet handful of Friends of Bill who are backing Hillarys presidential bid - feels she would be better suited to the job of Senate majority leader. It would be perfect for her, he said. She would be a great person defending the Democrats and doing the back and forth on talk shows.
Clintons campaign staff - normally self-assured - began to wobble last week as the polls narrowed. A po-faced press release accusing Obama of wanting to be president since kindergarten was mocked and later explained away by Mark Penn, Clintons top strategist, as a joke.
Clinton herself came under fire for claiming that the fun part of the campaign had started - code for going negative on her rival. In South Carolina, the latest poll shows Obama moving into first place over Clinton by 26% to 24%. In the summer Clinton held a 15-point lead.
In Iowa, Obama moved into the lead in two polls last week, although the race remains too close to call. In New Hampshire, Clintons formerly substantial lead over Obama has dropped to single digits.
In both Iowa and New Hampshire, people dont like to be told who is going to win, Myers said. They take their job very seriously and like to make up their own mind.
Myers is already spending half her week in New Hampshire, which holds its primary on January 8, five days after the Iowa caucus. Victory in those two states is essential to build momentum for Obama, who remains the underdog.
Judie Reever, a state representative in New Hampshire, believes Clinton is looking vulnerable for the first time.
I was initially very excited that we were going to have a woman running for president. I met Hillary when Bill Clinton was running for office. She was wonderful and gracious if people said nasty things about her, Id say, Thats not my experience. It never occurred to me that I wouldnt support her.
All of sudden, I got the sense that she was who the Republicans would like to be the candidate. Theres a love-hate relationship with her and when all is said and done, wed be a divided nation even if she won - and Im not sure she would. Every time I heard Obama speak, I kept saying, Yes!, and I suddenly realised he was the person I was going to support.
Clinton still leads Obama by 18 points in a national poll of polls and is significantly ahead in big states such as Florida and California.
Dick Morris, Bill Clintons former adviser, maintains that she could lose the first primaries and still go on to win, once the focus shifts to her rivals weakness.
Democrats are going to be reluctant to nominate someone they know so little about as Obama and will wonder if the nation is ready for an African-American candidate (it is) or for a man who has been senator for 104 weeks before running for president (its not), he wrote.
Too many defectors will leave Clintons campaign in tatters, but if the flow can be reversed, she could reemerge as the comeback girl.
Hitlery or the manchurian candidate?
Tutty Fruity?
Oh, Rudy!
ANY of the GOP nominees could beat Obama (save Ron Paul)
I don't know what to say to this other than it is plain stupid.
Hehe. You just know she’s desperate when BJ-Bill is speaking non-stop, and then she drags out Chelsea and Mom. Panic has officially set in. Gee, I didn’t think it would start till much later. Eleven months to go...I wonder how low she can get in the polls in 11 months?
Hitlery can’t touch Oprah!
We are about to see just how stupid the Sheep really are: the Vagina Vote for Her, or the Oprah Vote for him?
I wouldn't want to touch either one of them.
I never knew Betsy Myers was Dee Dee Myers’ sister. It is still my contention, and has been all along, that Hillary will not get the nomination.
Then why doesn't Oprah run? I guess she doesn't want the pay cut.
I believe more strongly all the time that it won't matter who gets the dem nod. Any one of them will lose the general.
The Clintons may, at long last, be entering that twilight phase, both of them, of being, finally, UNlucky.Everything’s not coming up roses/
I wonder if She Who Must Not Be Named has Oprah’s FBI file?
Next thing you know we’ll see the “stiffs” of Ron Brown and Vince Foster propped up in a corner somewhere as supporters of Hillary..... as long as she’s trotting everyone out.
I would have called you nuts a month ago. But now, you may be right.
BTW, what stocks do you see going up?
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