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Among Democrats in Iowa, negatives add up for Clinton
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hillarynews
Joined: 24 Jan 2007 Posts: 2255
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Posted: Mon Dec 10, 2007 12:00 pm Post subject: Among Democrats in Iowa, negatives add up for Clinton |
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Among Democrats in Iowa, negatives add up for Clinton
A lot of Democrats in this state agree with Jana Linderman and Yvonne Weber.With Iowa's first-in-the-nation presidential caucuses less than four weeks away, they've made a conscious choice not to support Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.And their rejection of the national Democratic front-runner is carefully reasoned and deeply felt.
Category: Top Story
A lot of Democrats in this state agree with Jana Linderman and Yvonne Weber.With Iowa's first-in-the-nation presidential caucuses less than four weeks away, they've made a conscious choice not to support Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.And their rejection of the national Democratic front-runner is carefully reasoned and deeply felt."I think her politics and her style are very much the same as the Bush White House and the Karl Rove political playbook," said Linderman, a young lawyer from Cedar Rapids, who's supporting Illinois Sen. Barack Obama. "As a Democrat, I'm tired of that, of people talking down to me, using political tactics that have been focus-grouped.""She's at the bottom of my list," said Weber, 53, a schoolteacher from Mason City, who's undecided. "She has too many corporate connections, and her position on Iran really steamed me. But if she's the nominee, I'll be 100 percent behind her."Clinton might win the Iowa caucuses; recent polls have her a close second to Obama, within the margin of error. She has assembled a strong political organization and has a committed base. And even if she fails to win Iowa, she'll still be in a strong position to win the nomination."It's been a yearlong dialogue in Iowa, and people have been very receptive to Sen. Clinton," said Mo Elleithee, a spokesman for the campaign. "We have identified a lot of supporters, many of whom have never gone to a caucus, and if we can turn them out, we'll do fine." But in this state, where the initial battle of the 2008 presidential campaign is being waged, Clinton is confronted with legions of doubters within the party - nearly all of whom, it should be noted, say they'll support her if she wins the nomination.
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Source: The Hillary Project
Description: reporting the news about Hillary that the media refuses to |
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