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March 22, 2008
Yesterday, Barack Obama's campaign team conducted a teleconference call with reporters which they began by going hard after Hillary Clinton, accusing her of being dishonest. Obama's campaign manager, David Plouffe, led off: [Y]ou know, the truth is that Senator Clinton has not been fully vetted, in our view, by the press on a very important issue, which is that she is not seen as trustworthy by the American people. She has consistently in this campaign engaged in political calculation to mislead voters. Foreign policy adviser Greg Craig weighed in: I will say that, when it comes to the way she's explained her vote in October of 2002 [authorizing the Iraq war], I think that deceives the American people. There was more in the same vein. It's fair to say that the teleconference consisted almost entirely of bashing Hillary Clinton's character. Later in the day, Obama himself gave a press conference in Portland that included this exchange: QUESTION: Senator, your campaign manager this morning said that Senator Clinton was too dishonest and untrustworthy to be elected president. I'm wondering if that's the campaign that you wanted to have at this stage of the (inaudible). This quality of Obama's--pretending to be above the fray while in fact conducting a bare-knuckled political campaign--has understandably infuriated Hillary Clinton and her supporters. The Clinton campaign did a teleconference with reporters yesterday, too, which included a number of attacks on Obama: Senator Obama talks about voter participation while he actively disenfranchises millions of Americans. He calls for high-minded debates while practicing low-down politics. He promises a different kind of campaign, while attacking Senator Clinton's character. He promises transparency, while hiding basic info and stonewalling the press. The Democrats all hope they can somehow select a candidate prior to their convention and avoid the bloodbath that could result if the superdelegates choose the nominee in a floor fight. But it's hard to see how that could happen. There is no way for the 800 superdelegates to get together to try to reach some kind of consensus, and the animosity between the Clinton and Obama campaigns is deep and real. Absent unexpected results in the remaining primaries, it's hard for me to see how the Democrats can avoid a pitched battle in Denver. To comment on this post, go here. Posted by John at 1:17 PM
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