If it’s not the first rule of Republican politics, it should be: never, ever, ever underestimate anybody whose last name is Clinton. Not Bill, not Hillary. Not Chelsea, not even George. They’re very good at what they do, and when they’re about to be written off for dead, that’s when they’re at their very best.
Life After The Election For Hillary
February 29, 2008
By Jennifer Rubin
Hillary Clinton came out of the Potomac Primaries in roughly the same position as Mike Huckabee: needing a miracle. Unless she wins the Texas and Ohio primaries next week nothing short of divine intervention will deliver the nomination to her. After losing eleven straight primaries (even Democrats abroad don’t like her) she is down to a final roll of the dice on March 4. Polls show her with a small lead in Ohio and essentially tied in Texas, but slipping fast in both must win states.
Hillary Clinton Campaign Sent Into Tailspin Over Bill’s Mistakes
February 29, 2008
By Sheldon Alberts
Bill Clinton is sitting on a giant tool box in the back of a Chevy pickup truck, waiting to address a small gathering of Democrats, when the fellow introducing him attempts a joke comparing Barack Obama to a rooster.
Why I’m Afraid of the Clintons
February 29, 2008
By Dan Schnur
Superdelegates: Obama Cutting into Clinton’s Lead
February 29, 2008
By Michael Cooper
Senator Barack Obama has made significant inroads over the last month among the Democratic elected officials and party leaders known as superdelegates who will cast a fifth of the votes at the party’s convention, cutting into Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s long-held advantage with the group.
Clinton Campaign nixes “Bill in blackface?” listing
February 29, 2008
By M.E. Sprengelmeyer
Inquiries from the Rocky Mountain News prompted Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaign to remove a supporter's "Bill in blackface?" event announcement from Clinton's official campaign Web site.
The notice appeared in an "action center" section of www.hillaryclinton.com where average supporters are allowed to publicize local events that are not necessarily sanctioned by the campaign.
