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Full Version: Clinton Letter to Superdelegates: "I Can Still WIN!"
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Stormtrooper53
QUOTE
Dear ___________,

The stakes in this election are so high: with two wars abroad, our economy in crisis here at home, and so many families struggling across America, the need for new leadership has never been greater.

At this point, we do not yet have a nominee - and when the last votes are cast on June 3, neither Senator Obama nor I will have secured the nomination. It will be up to automatic delegates like you to help choose our party's nominee, and I would like to tell you why I believe I am the stronger candidate against Senator McCain and would be the best President and Commander in Chief.

Voters in every state have made it clear that they want to be heard and counted as part of this historic race. And as we reach the end of the primary season, more than 17 million people have supported me in my effort to become the Democratic nominee - more people than have ever voted for a potential nominee in the history of our party. In the past two weeks alone, record numbers of voters participated in the West Virginia and Kentucky primaries. And with 40 and 35 point margins of victory, it is clear that even when voters are repeatedly told this race is over, they're not giving up on me - and I am not giving up on them either.

After seven years of feeling invisible to the Bush administration, Americans are seeking a President who is strong, experienced, and ready to take on our toughest challenges, from serving as Commander in Chief and ending the war in Iraq to turning our economy around. They want a President who shares their core beliefs about our country and its future and "gets" what they go through every day to care for their families, pay the bills and try to put something away for the future.

We simply cannot afford another four - or eight - years in the wilderness. That is why, everywhere I go, people come up to me, grip my hand or arm, and urge me to keep on running. That is why I continue in this race: because I believe I am best prepared to lead this country as President - and best prepared to put together a broad coalition of voters to break the lock Republicans have had on the electoral map and beat Senator McCain in November.

Recent polls and election results show a clear trend: I am ahead in states that have been critical to victory in the past two elections. From Ohio, to Pennsylvania, to West Virginia and beyond, the results of recent primaries in battleground states show that I have strong support from the regions and demographics Democrats need to take back the White House. I am also currently ahead of Senator McCain in Gallup national tracking polls, while Senator Obama is behind him. And nearly all independent analyses show that I am in a stronger position to win the Electoral College, primarily because I lead Senator McCain in Florida and Ohio. I've enclosed a detailed analysis of recent electoral and polling information, and I hope you will take some time to review it carefully.

In addition, when the primaries are finished, I expect to lead in the popular vote and in delegates earned through primaries. Ultimately, the point of our primary process is to pick our strongest nominee - the one who would be the best President and Commander in Chief, who has the greatest support from members of our party, and who is most likely to win in November. So I hope you will consider not just the strength of the coalition backing me, but also that more people will have cast their votes for me.

I am in this race for them -- for all the men and women I meet who wake up every day and work hard to make a difference for their families. People who deserve a shot at the American dream - the chance to save for college, a home and retirement; to afford quality health care for their families; to fill the gas tank and buy the groceries with a little left over each month.

I am in this race for all the women in their nineties who've told me they were born before women could vote, and they want to live to see a woman in the White House. For all the women who are energized for the first time, and voting for the first time. For the little girls - and little boys - whose parents lift them onto their shoulders at our rallies, and whisper in their ears, "See, you can be anything you want to be." As the first woman ever to be in this position, I believe I have a responsibility to them.

Finally, I am in this race because I believe staying in this race will help unite the Democratic Party. I believe that if Senator Obama and I both make our case - and all Democrats have the chance to make their voices heard - everyone will be more likely to rally around the nominee.

In the end, I am committed to unifying this party. What Senator Obama and I share is so much greater than our differences; and no matter who wins this nomination, I will do everything I can to bring us together and move us forward.

But at this point, neither of us has crossed the finish line. I hope that in the time remaining, you will think hard about which candidate has the best chance to lead our party to victory in November. I hope you will consider the results of the recent primaries and what they tell us about the mindset of voters in the key battleground states. I hope you will think about the broad and winning coalition of voters I have built. And most important, I hope you will think about who is ready to stand on that stage with Senator McCain, fight for the deepest principles of our party, and lead our country forward into this new century.

DENIAL - it ain't just a river in Egypt.

EDIT - linky
Lord Madhammer
uggh, does every dying gasp from Clinton warrant its own thread? optimuslaugh2.gif
Stormtrooper53
Well, there's a "John McCain is sooo old" thread, a highly successful "let's make fun of Obama thread," I guess we could have a "Hilary is fraking insane thread/?"

Honestly, I thought this was threadworthy because that letter sounds like what the Broncos coaching staff was saying during the 4th quarter with 2:00 minutes left in Super Bowl XIX; "Come on fellas, we can still win this!" (they lost 55-10, BTW)

I mean, "I'm in this for the 90 year old women who were still alive when women weren't allowed to vote?" Puh-leez.
Hot Rod
I sense a disturbance in the force
SkyClonus
I'm REALLY glad the last primary is next week. skeletor.png
( . Y . )
And THEN begins the general election race coverage fun!
SkyClonus
Hooray living in a swing state!
Aquarion
Hilary thinks she has earned the right to be president because for most of her adult life, she's been pulling all kinds of shady dealings and illegal crap to aquire more politcal power for herself and she would hate nothing more than for her decades of "hard work" to be all for naught. Sorry Hilary but you've wasted your life. You would have been better off becoming the warden of a prison for women.
Lord Madhammer
I'm all about the feminist cause and stuff, which is why Hillary mystifies me... anyone who thinks about it for a second will realize that she rode her husband's coattails to where she is today. And she's certainly happy to benefit from the good will people have towards her husband's administration. Is that the feminist ideal at work?
Nomolos
LMH we are in complete agreement here. she has absolutely done nothing but use her husbands powet and poularity to get where she is.
Cool Hand Lube
See, the point about feminism is that a woman should have the same rights to choose her destiny, path, whatever. I don't ever remember hearing about the Feminist Ideal of "Always Vote The Virginia".

She's an idiot.
Lord Madhammer
All I know is that I have a daughter for whom I want to ensure that every opportunity is available... I don't think Clinton is helping her out at all with her "hay check out my last name" appeal (and alternately, her "hay check out my 1960's-era bitter old ladies living vicariously through me fanbase"). I think of people like Indira Gandhi, Margaret Thatcher, Angela Merkel, Ann Richards, Janet Napolitano, Kathleen Sebelius, Nancy Pelosi (and the list goes on) as bona fide examples of female leaders who would be legitimate inspirational models for young women.
Nomolos
wat, no love for Britney?


I kid, I kid


on topic-i am just waiting for hills to completely lose it and start throwing tables, screaming at people etc.
Cool Hand Lube
I hear you. I have 3 girls at home, and I am constantly on the lookout for POSITIVE woman role-models for all of them. Needless to say, my 11 year old daughter is not impressed by Hillary.

She looked at me one day while watching Hillary try desperately to cling to the notion of her inevitable presidency and said, "She just basically said that women should all vote for her just because she's a woman."

I said, "Yep, she sure did. What do you think of that?"

She replied, "Well, shouldn't you vote for the person you think will do the best job?"

My daughter is a feminist.
( . Y . )
QUOTE (Lord Madhammer @ May 29 2008, 12:56 PM) *
I think of people like Indira Gandhi, Margaret Thatcher, Angela Merkel, Ann Richards, Janet Napolitano, Kathleen Sebelius, Nancy Pelosi (and the list goes on) as bona fide examples of female leaders who would be legitimate inspirational models for young women.

this
Lord Madhammer
QUOTE (Nomolos @ May 29 2008, 01:00 PM) *
wat, no love for Britney?


I kid, I kid

death.gif suicidekh5.gif death.gif

QUOTE
on topic-i am just waiting for hills to completely lose it and start throwing tables, screaming at people etc.

seriously, I'm starting to think that myself. I mean, what's she gonna do after the Rules Committee people decide on FL and MI this Saturday, and then the remaining primaries happen that week? The only option left for her is to go completely batshit insane.
Nomolos
wonder if she'll go jerry maguire or obsessive ex.

either way, getcha popcorn ready.
Darth Caine
Nomolos
SIGG'D thumbsup1.gif
sabor
this is beginning to reimd me of that martha burk scenario that happened a couple of years or so back


so far as i'm concerned the b!t(h aint got any more of a right to be the next president then the next person does
sertile
You guys need to read the talkbacks on the CNN ticker sometime. Really depressing stuff, particularly coming from Clinton's supporters. And I don't mean to slam everyone who voted for Clinton, but they were all gung-ho on her winning on account of superdelegates and had no problem ignoring pledged delegates or the popular vote... But since Obama got more superdelegates too you have half of them wailing about how he "stole the election" and was "selected, not elected" despite winning by every conceivable metric.
Sularias
Thats it, I'm going on Jihad Death to Ameridika! ya la la la la la la la la!
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