Clinton Fights Pressure to Withdraw, Tees Up for Fight With Party Elders
Hillary Clinton campaigns at Mishawaka High School in Indiana Friday. She rejected mounting pressure to end her campaign. (AP Photo)
Hillary Clinton, under mounting pressure to bow out of the presidential race and avoid a floor fight at the Democratic National Convention in August, is standing firm in her determination to fight Barack Obama to the finish.
Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut, a former candidate himself, said Clinton has virtually no chance of winning, and Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont said Friday the New York senator should just end her campaign.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wants the party’s uncommitted superdelegates to support the candidate who has the most votes, which to this point is Obama. And Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean on Friday urged all those superdelegates to announce whom they will support by July 1.
But Clinton says she will not abide by anyone’s timetable.
“There are some people who are saying, ‘You know, we really ought to end this primary; we just ought to shut it down’,” she said Friday in South Bend, Ind. “Well, one thing you know about me, when I tell you I’ll fight for you, I’ll get up every day and that’s exactly what I will do.”
Clinton told FOX News in an interview Wednesday that the race is a “long way from being over,” and that she’ll take it to the convention if she has to.
The Clinton campaign sent a fund-raising letter Friday that argued: “Every time our campaign demonstrates its strength and resilience, people start to suggest we should end our pursuit of the Democratic nomination … and they know we are in a position to win.”
The promise of short-term reward is not lost on Clinton. Polls show her way ahead in Pennsylvania, which holds its primary April 22 and offers an attractive 158 pledged delegates. That is roughly how many delegates separate the candidates.
“I think there’s very little chance that Hillary Clinton will drop out at all,” said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics. “I think this will go all the way through to the end of the primaries. And look, she’s poised for a very substantial victory in Pennsylvania.”
But Democratic primaries are not winner-take-all. With a proportional allotment, Clinton has little chance of gaining much ground on Obama in Pennsylvania, even if she wins handily.
And party leaders are concerned that every day the Democratic race lasts gives another opening to presumptive GOP nominee John McCain.
On the day that McCain launched his first general election ad of the campaign, Obama supporter Leahy called on Clinton to withdraw, citing Obama’s endorsement by Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey as the latest sign of her undoing.
“There is no way that Sen. Clinton is going to win enough delegates to get the nomination,” Leahy told Vermont Public Radio in an earlier interview. “She ought to withdraw and she ought to be backing Senator Obama. Now, obviously that’s a decision that only she can make. Frankly, I feel that she would have a tremendous career in the Senate.”
Dodd, who also has endorsed Obama, told National Journal radio that party leaders need to “reach a conclusion” over the next several weeks.
“I think it’s very difficult to imagine how anyone can believe that Barack Obama can’t be the nominee of the party. I think that’s a foregone conclusion,” he said. “I think you have to make a decision, and hopefully the candidates will respect it and people will rally behind a nominee that, I think, emerges from these contests over the next month.”
The upper-level pressure is coming from Pelosi and Dean. They are both uncommitted and are not outright calling on Clinton to leave the race, but they are stonewalling part of her victory strategy.
Clinton and her supporters are banking on uncommitted superdelegates to put her over the edge, and they are looking to the convention as a final opportunity to settle the dispute over the Michigan and Florida delegations. Clinton won the primaries in both states, but they were disqualified for holding their primaries early, and none of the candidates campaigned in either of the states.
Dean’s determination to compel the superdelegates to announce their picks on July 1 could result in a candidate being chosen before the Florida and Michigan controversies are resolved.
Appearing on CBS’ “Early Show” on Friday, Dean said: “Well, I think the superdelegates have already been weighing in. I think there’s 800 of them and 450 of them have already said who they’re for. … I’d like the other 350 to say who they’re on between now and the first of July so we don’t have to take this into the convention.”
In a separate interview with The Associated Press, Dean warned against “demoralizing” Democrats with a drawn-out fistfight between Clinton and Obama.
Pelosi, meanwhile, has urged superdelegates to follow the choice of the pledged delegates, more of whom favor Obama. She rejected an overture by wealthy Clinton donors Wednesday that she recant that position.
With no end to the intra-party squabbling in sight, Obama joked Friday that this primary season is “like a good movie that lasted about a half an hour too long.”
“I think there are some people who felt like ‘God, when will this be over?’” he told a Pittsburgh, Pa., crowd. He later qualified, adding: “It’s been hard and tough because both Clinton and I understand what is at stake, how important this race is, how important the next presidency will be to the American people and to families right here in Pennsylvania.”
Though trailing in Pennsylvania, Obama’s shown a resilience to the recent controversy over his former pastor Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr.
According to a Gallup Poll released Friday, Obama leads nationally with 50 percent to the New York senator’s 42 percent, his biggest lead in that survey since the Wright controversy broke.
In response to Leahy’s calls for the race to end, Clinton supporter Sen. Chuck Schumer in a conference call Friday urged supporters to wait and see, citing the upcoming Pennsylvania primary.
Former Vice President Al Gore said Thursday that he expects the Democratic nomination fight will work itself out before the party’s convention.
“What have we got, five months left?” he told The Associated Press in a brief interview after a speech at Middle Tennessee State University.
“I think it’s going to resolve itself. But we’ll see.”
Gore didn’t elaborate.
FOX News’ Aaron Bruns and Bonney Kapp and The Associated Press contributed to this report.





…But Clinton says she will not abide by anyone’s timetable…
or rules, laws, opinions, votes…
Senator Obama hasn’t a chance. The Clinton’s have a right to buy their way back into the White House. You have no right not to accept this fact. Shame on you! We do not want to be a “Judas” nation do we?
I see yet another article about Hillary making up stories, this one about a soccer game in her youth posted on Fox News when soccer didn’t even exist for girls. I know her supporters think she’s the second coming but with all these blatant lies you’d think everyone would say “enough already”. Even other Congress-critters seem to be calling her various forms of “liar”.
GO HILLARY! Where are all the women voters???? Do not give up, this country needs a women in the white house to finally clean up the mess all the men have made throughout the world!
Hold on lady. Do not lose heart. Stay the course and fight for what you believe. Whom on earth are these other people who have the right to advise you, let alone tell you, if they have not contributed to your campaign and efforts? America will not vote for Obama. He is no different that the guy who calls himself a Pastor. Rememberin the old saying: tell me whom your friends are and I will tell you who you are.
This is truly a case of the lesser of two evils….and a daunting choice it is as we learn more about Obama daily.
I wouldn’t vote for either of these Pro-death Democrats in a million years, but it’s becoming readily apparent that the Democratic heirarchy is playing the race card to a most sickening level by pressuring Clinton to end her candidacy.
The Democrats know that they have elevated the unproven, unknown and completely overrated Barack Obama to rockstar status through their typical TV marketing and Hollywood hype machine. Nevermind that this rank novice has done absolutely NOTHING in his political career but give frankly boring speeches devoid of any substance whatsoever. The pulpit like oratory means ABSOLUTELY NOTHING without specifics and he has none to offer. We’ve heard it all before and I’m not impressed.
But at this point, if Obama is NOT the nominee, the fallout among black voters will be a crushing arrow to the heart of the Democratic Party. If he does win, he has been sufficiently damaged by the comments of his so-called pastor that his support among moderates in the general election will continue its erosion. Obama’s voting record needs no vetting at all since he hardly has one, but had the Dems properly vetted Obama’s personal life and his devotion to Jeremiah Wright, they would have had the good sense to slow down this premature, media-driven freight train of a campaign that should have taken place in 2012, if ever.
Oh well…it’s too late now.
The colossal simpletons running the Democratic Party, namely chief blowhard Howard Dean, have a very entertaining mess which has painted them into a corner they have NO WAY out of…..it’s a choice between an unexperienced, long-winded, growingly suspect cheerleader in Barack Obama OR a calculating, conniving liar as wicked as the day is long in Hillary Clinton…flanked of course, by Bill. And should Hillary hold out and continue her run….the probability of a full Democratic Party meltdown at their convention skyrockets. And yes, that could include some nasty street stuff.
Great job Democrats!! Three words sum up this completely avoidable fiasco…..
President John McCain
Hillary please dont quit yet!!!!!!!! We want to see you completely bury yourself with no chance of you ever coming back……We dont think you are quite there yet, so hang in there and keep digging that hole….
Thanks, from a voter who has seen enough of the Clinton folly’s
Gee I’m starting to think the Democratic party is anti-female. A bunch of old men asking Hillary to resign… I’m thinking of becoming a Republican because the Democrats are becoming a bunch of hypocrites. Why are all these old “men” wanting Hillary to quit. They have never done that when a “man” is running for president. They claim to be the open minded party bull…starting to see their true colors. No way I would vote for that racist Obama. They asked him yesterday to compare Imus to Wright and he was too stupid to even have a good response. He’s a hot air balloon, please someone put a pin it already…
its funny that Hillary thinks its ok to keep fighting but slams Bush for the same reasoning…but nobody has called Hillary fair and balanced…not even her supporters, which I have to say are as rude, arrogant and stupid as she is…I mean when the only ‘white’ vote you can get is the uneducated “working”- really racist- vote, I think that tells you alot about her support.
so you keep swinging and punching and soon enough your fight will be back where it started with Bill’s interns and your own supporters-which I’m sure she will blame for not winning.
anyone but Hillary or McCain (who does that leave?)
How anti-democratic these so called long time democratic leaders are. Hilary deserves a fair shot at reaching for the “brass ring” without her co-workers in the congress stabbing her in the back. Speaker Pelosi herself was scolding Super-Delegates place in this process, and yet she is one herself. Senator Leahy started whinning for Hilary to quit. He used to be such the big talker saying the goverment needs to stay out what the Founding Fathers set forth.
I am no Hilary fan. I think her health care plan will send us the way of Canada’s system. I feel she will take us towards FDR. Like Cavuto says in america we allow business and people to be as stupid as you want to be, but if you do not read what you sign the government should not bail you out, or e will keep doing it over and over.
“I’ll fight for you,”
HILLARY, HILLARY, slap slap HILLARY…
I don’t want you to fight for me… I want you to go away!!!