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Clinton rejects call to quit race | Clinton rejects call to quit race |
(1 day later) | |
US presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton has rejected calls by supporters of her rival, Barack Obama, to abandon her campaign for the Democratic nomination. | US presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton has rejected calls by supporters of her rival, Barack Obama, to abandon her campaign for the Democratic nomination. |
Senator Patrick Leahy, an influential Democrat and Obama supporter, had said that by remaining in the race she was helping the Republican party. | Senator Patrick Leahy, an influential Democrat and Obama supporter, had said that by remaining in the race she was helping the Republican party. |
Mrs Clinton told supporters she had no intention of abandoning the race. | Mrs Clinton told supporters she had no intention of abandoning the race. |
The New York senator is trailing Mr Obama in the number of delegates needed to obtain the nomination. | |
But the latest opinion polls suggest that she is leading Mr Obama by more than 10 points in the next major primary in Pennsylvania on 22 April. | |
My attitude is that Senator Clinton can run as long as she wants - her name's on the ballot and she is a fierce and formidable competitor Barack Obama "There are some folks saying: 'Well, we ought to stop these elections'," she told a crowd at a high school in Indianapolis, Indiana. | |
"I didn't think we believed that in America. I thought we of all people knew how important it was to give everyone a chance to have their voices heard." | "I didn't think we believed that in America. I thought we of all people knew how important it was to give everyone a chance to have their voices heard." |
Former President Bill Clinton said those calling for his wife to pull out of the race should "just relax". | |
"Everywhere I go, all these working people say, 'Don't you dare let her drop out - don't listen to those people in Washington'," he said during campaigning in Pennsylvania. | |
Mrs Clinton also made a campaign stop in Kentucky, where her main theme was jobs and the economy. | |
Race for delegates | |
Mr Obama was in Pennsylvania, where he distanced himself from Mr Leahy's comments. | |
DEMOCRATIC DELEGATE RACE BARACK OBAMA: 1,623 States won: 25 HILLARY CLINTON: 1,499 States won: 16 Delegates needed to secure nomination: 2,024. | |
Source: AP at 0804 GMT 30 March | |
"My attitude is that Senator Clinton can run as long as she wants. Her name's on the ballot and she is a fierce and formidable competitor," the Illinois senator said. | |
"I think that she should be able to compete, and her supporters should be able to support her, for as long as they are willing or able." | "I think that she should be able to compete, and her supporters should be able to support her, for as long as they are willing or able." |
Mr Leahy, who chairs the powerful Senate Judiciary Committee, said in a statement on Friday that Mrs Clinton "has every right, but not a very good reason, to remain a candidate for as long as she wants to". | |
"As far as the delegate count and the interests of a Democratic victory in November go, there is not a very good reason for drawing this out," he said, arguing that she had scant chance of winning the nomination. | |
Mr Obama currently leads by 1,623 delegates to the party convention in August to Mrs Clinton's 1,499. | |
To secure the nomination, the winner must secure 2,024 delegates - which correspondents say neither candidate will be able to do on the basis of delegates won in the remaining primary elections alone. | |
If Mrs Clinton manages to win a larger share of the national popular vote, it is thought that she may secure the backing of the so-called super-delegates who could tip the balance. | |
Analysts say a bitter, drawn-out fight between the two contenders, going right up to the Democratic convention in August, could damage the eventual nominee's chances of beating their Republican rival, John McCain. |
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