Clinton
to end historic candidacy, support Obama
WASHINGTON -
Hillary Rodham Clinton is ending
her historic bid to become the first
female president and will back rival
Barack Obama on Saturday, capping
a 17-month quest that began with the
words "I'm in it to win it" with a more
humble plea for party unity.
Hours after Barack
Obama sealed the nomination, Democrats
coalesced around his candidacy, sending
a strong signal to Clinton that it was
time to bow out. The former first lady
told House Democrats during a private
conference call Wednesday that she will
express support for Obama's candidacy
and congratulate him for gathering the
necessary delegates to be the party's
nominee.
"Senator
Clinton will be hosting an event
in Washington, D.C., to thank her
supporters and express her support for
Senator Obama and party unity.
This event will be held on Saturday to
accommodate more of Senator Clinton's
supporters who want to attend," her
communications director Howard Wolfson
said.
Also in the speech,
Clinton will urge once-warring Democrats
to focus on the general election and
defeating
Republican presidential candidate
John McCain.
The only degree of
uncertainty was how. Clinton is
exploring options to retain her
delegates and promote her issues,
including a signature call for universal
health care.
The announcement
closed an epic five-month nominating
battle pitting the first serious female
candidate against the most viable black
contender ever.
Obama Tuesday night
secured the 2,118 delegates to claim the
Democratic nomination, but Clinton
stopped short of acknowledging that
milestone. Instead, she was defiant,
insisting she was better positioned than
Obama to defeat McCain in November.
"What does Hillary
want? What does she want?" Clinton said,
hours after telling supporters she'd be
open to joining Obama as his
vice-presidential running mate.
But by Wednesday,
other Democrats made it abundantly clear
they wanted something, too: a swift end
to the nominating contest.
Democratic Party chairman
Howard Dean
and the Democratic congressional
leadership released a statement urging
the party to rally behind Obama, and
several lawmakers including
Iowa
Sen. Tom Harkin, Colorado
Sen. Ken Salazar and Louisiana
Sen. Mary Landrieu all endorsed
their Illinois colleague.
Obama also announced
he had named a three-person vetting team
that included
Caroline Kennedy, daughter of the
late
President John F. Kennedy.
An adviser said
Clinton and her lieutenants had
discussed various ways a presidential
candidacy can end, including suspending
the campaign to retain control of her
convention delegates and sustain her
visibility in an effort to promote her
signature issue of health care. This
adviser spoke on condition of anonymity
because officials were not authorized to
discuss the conference call Clinton held
with her congressional supporters.
Other options include
freeing her delegates to back Obama and
ending her candidacy unconditionally.
The official stressed that neither
Clinton nor her inner circle had decided
specifically what course to take other
than to recognize that the active state
of her bid to become the nation's first
female president had ended.
On the telephone call
with impatient congressional supporters
including New York
Rep. Charles Rangel, a longtime
political patron, Clinton was urged to
draw a close to the contentious
campaign, or at least express support
for Obama. Her decision to acquiesce
caught many in the campaign by surprise
and left the campaign scrambling to
finalize the logistics and specifics
behind her campaign departure.
It was an inauspicious
end for a candidacy that appeared
indestructible when it began 17 months
ago.
Armed with celebrity,
a prodigious fundraising Rolodex, a
battle-tested campaign team and a
popular two-term former president as a
husband, many observers believed
Clinton's victory in the Democratic
nomination contest was a sure thing.
But in Obama, the New
York senator faced an opponent who
appeared perfectly suited to the time —
a charismatic newcomer who opposed the
Iraq war from the beginning and
who offered voters a compelling message
of change. Clinton voted for the
legislation that authorized military
force against
Iraq.
After a disastrous
showing in the leadoff
Iowa caucuses Jan. 3, Clinton won
New Hampshire's primary Jan. 8, setting
off the state-by-state war of attrition
with Obama that followed.
Her fortunes rose and
fell like a fever chart: She was up in
Nevada, down in South Carolina. Then,
after a roughly even finish on
Super Tuesday Feb. 5, she
suffered a string of unanswered losses
that, almost before Clinton noticed, put
Obama so far ahead in the delegate hunt
that all the big-state victories she
piled up couldn't close the delegate
gap.
By March, her options
limited, Clinton adopted the persona of
a tenacious fighter for the middle
class, and powered successfully through
primaries in states like Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Indiana, West Virginia and
Kentucky, showing grit that earned her
valuable political currency.
White men, blue-collar
workers, socially conservative Democrats
and older women were especially
receptive to her message, and her strong
showing with those voters exposed
Obama's vulnerabilities among those
groups.
Democrats whose No. 1
concern had been ending the Iraq war at
the campaign's outset, started worrying
more about the economy. That was a
switch from Obama's strength to hers.