Former DNC Chairman Switches Support From Clinton to Obama

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Thursday Former Democratic National Committee Chairman Joe Andrew announces he has switched his allegiance from Hillary Clinton to Barack Obama and is encouraging fellow superdelegates to make their choice for a nominee soon. (AP Photo)

A Democratic superdelegate and former head of the party who served while Bill Clinton was president said Thursday he’s changing his allegiance from Hillary Clinton to Barack Obama because of Obama’s skill in handling the Rev. Jeremiah Wright controversy and his opposition to a proposed gas tax holiday.

Joe Andrew had originally endorsed Clinton on the day she declared her candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination. While holding a conference call in support of Obama on Thursday, he encouraged other superdelegates to act quickly in making their choice.

He said he’s now convinced that Obama represents the promise for a change in the way Washington will work.

“What I saw this past week as Barack Obama answered the questions about his former pastor and as Barack Obama took on the heavy and difficult task of doing what is right on an energy policy and environmental policy and not doing what is politically expedient in order to give a quick pander to Hoosier voters to say we ought to have a cut in the gas tax reconfirmed to me in my mind that it is time for change,” Andrew said from his hometown of Indianapolis.

Andrew also issued a letter that he is sending to superdelegates that says he is switching his support because “a vote for Hillary Clinton is a vote to continue this process, and a vote to continue this process is a vote that assists (Republican) John McCain.”

Asked for a response to Andrew’s decision, Clinton spokesman Phil Singer said, “We support that Democratic process and think that every American should be able to weigh in and support the candidate of his or her own choosing.”Andrew becomes the second superdelegate this week to say he has switched his support for Obama as a result of the Wright controversy.

Indiana. Rep. Baron Hill, who represents a crucial swing district in the state, endorsed Obama on Wednesday. Clinton has the backing of Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh, who has a vast organization in the state and has been campaigning aggressively with the former first lady.

Obama initially refused to denounce his former pastor, but did so this week after Wright said Obama is just posturing to distance himself from a world view that could damage his campaign.

“He has shown such mettle under fire,” Andrew said in the interview. “The Jeremiah Wright controversy just reconfirmed for me, just as the gas tax controversy confirmed for me, that he is the right candidate for our party.”

Andrew’s decision — and the announcement of Texas superdelegate and United Steelworkers member John Patrick — puts Obama closer to closing Clinton’s superdelegate lead. Clinton had a big advantage among superdelegates, many of whom like Andrews have ties to the Clintons and backed her candidacy early on. But most of the superdelegates taking sides recently have gone for Obama, who has won more state contests.

Obama now trails her by just 16 superdelegates, 247-263. This week, he picked up 11 superdelegates, including three add-on delegates named by the Illinois Democratic Party, while she netted three.

Superdelegates are nearly 800 elected leaders and Democratic Party officials who aren’t bound by the outcome of state contests and can cast their ballot for any candidate at the national convention. They are especially valuable in this race since neither Clinton nor Obama can win enough pledged delegates to secure the nomination through state-by-state elections.

Obama now leads in the delegate count overall 1735 to 1597 for Clinton. A candidate needs 2,025 delegates to win the nomination. About 230 superdelegates remain undecided, and about 60 more will be selected at state party conventions and meetings throughout the spring.

Other party leaders are encouraging superdelegates to pick a side by late June to prevent the fight from going to the national convention in August. Andrews wrote in his letter that he is calling for “fellow superdelegates across the nation to heal the rift in our party and unite behind Barack Obama.”

Obama and Clinton are running close in Indiana and both need a victory there — Obama to help rebound from a loss to Clinton in Pennsylvania and to prove he can win Midwestern voters and Clinton so she can overcome Obama’s lead in the race overall.

In North Carolina, which votes alongside Indiana on Tuesday, Obama has been leading by double digits, but recent polls taken since Wright’s outspoken press tour began last Friday show Obama may have been damaged by the relationship. Clinton has closed the gap and even passed him in one poll in the Tar Heel State, according to RealClearPolitics..

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

319 Responses to “Former DNC Chairman Switches Support From Clinton to Obama”

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Comment by Juanita Christina

Give me a break Mr Joe Andrew. Why not back Senetor Clinton and end this campaign? You sound ridiculous.

 
Comment by Jason Lockwood

You go Andrew!……. at least he still believes in bigger government, higher taxes, socialist/communist policies…. destroying conservative, American freedoms…….just what our country needs.

Jason Lockwood
Chairman - Kimball County, Nebraska GOP

 
Comment by adrian

I thank God that there are peolpe we vote into public office, are doing whats right and not playing politics.

 
Comment by Kathy

I don’t agree with him. I vote for Obama is a cop out at this stage. Let democracy work. The game is not over.

 
Comment by mike

As much as I’d like a holiday from paying gas taxes, Obama is right. Those taxes pay for our bridges and roads and we have been hearing all kids of things about our aging bridges. Lowering the price of gas encourages gas use as well. There is two sides to the coin. Obama has called his and I commend him for not going with the pack wherever they run. I hope the superdelegates do the right thing. Clinton left a gaping hole in the Democratic party in 2000 that Bush fell right into. Clinton (Hillary) is digging again. Do we want McCain to have a free ride this fall? It’s time to decide.

 
Comment by Sylvia

He does not think for us yet we VOTE for him…..we need to STOP voting for HIM!!!!!

 
Comment by Danny Huffman

It is amazing to watch the Democratic leaders such as Joe Andrew joining the candidate who is the most Liberal that has ever run for this office. Doesn’t he know that history has shown these ultra left candidates never are elected as President. They never learn. The candidate nearest the center almost always gets elected. Look for McCain to win at least 40 states this fall as Obama joins the losers club wth McGovern, Dukakis, and Mondale.

 
Comment by b bean

I don’t believe Obama is electable so it must be personal for Andrews going against Clinton. Obama is a nice guy, I believe, but he doesn’t have the right stuff right now to be president. We need to know him and his wife better. His judgement in the Wright thing was bad.

 
Comment by Scott L

The Dems have stabbed Hillary Clinton in the back. I really hope she runs independent to give them a taste of their own medicine.

 
Comment by Darlene Anthony

With Obama picking up 8 superdelegates to Clinton’s 3 this week …the Rev. Wright bloodletting has finally stopped!

 

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