“Hillary is a despicable, power hungry, egomaniacal sad excuse for a woman.”
May 28, 2008
By Michael Goodwin
If Hillary Clinton imitates Sally Field's famed Oscar speech, she'll have to change it. "You don't like me," she would need to say. "You really don't like me."
That's the gist of reader response to my column in Saturday's Daily News. I wrote that Clinton citing Robert F. Kennedy's assassination in defending why she is still running was "sick" and accused Clinton of exploiting fears Barack Obama would be killed.
Not Hillary’s Proudest Moment: The Race Card, Then and Now
May 28, 2008
By Dick Morris & Eileen McGann
In its final days, Hillary Clinton's 2008 presidential cam paign has come to echo George Wallace's 1968 run.
Like Clinton, Wallace as a candidate stalked the Northeast exploiting white anger. Like her, he bypassed the nation's more educated and liberal parts to focus squarely on those who felt left behind, rallying animosity against elites.
Large Debts Will Soon Come Due for Hillary Rodham Clinton
May 28, 2008
Senator Clinton may have to spend the summer months going hat in hand to refill her own bank account.
The former first lady has loaned her presidential campaign more than $11.4 million to date, and she has only a few months to pay herself back, while her campaign will have much longer to deal with the nearly $9.5 million it owes vendors and political consultants.
Under a provision of the 2002 campaign finance law spearheaded by senators McCain and Feingold, candidates for federal office must repay their personal loans by the date of the election or forfeit all but $250,000. The date of election in the presidential primary campaign is considered the date when the party officially chooses its nominee, which for Democrats will be at the national convention during the final week of August.
http://www.nysun.com/national/large-debts-will-soon-come-due-for-clinton/78766/
Hillary Clinton Casts Wide Net of Exaggeration, Claims to Lead in “Every Poll”
May 28, 2008
By Fernando Suarez
During an evening rally in Montana’s largest city, Hillary Clinton explained to the crowd why she should be the Democratic Party’s nominee, but what ensued was a list of overstatements and exaggerations as she made her case. “You have to ask yourself, who is the stronger candidate? And based on every analysis, of every bit of research and every poll that has been taken and every state that a Democrat has to win, I am the stronger candidate against John McCain in the fall,” she said.
Bill Clinton: Puerto Rico key to wife’s popular vote claim
May 27, 2008
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton took to rural Puerto Rico on Tuesday, urging islanders to turn out in large numbers in a weekend presidential primary to give his wife Hillary a majority of the popular vote cast in all Democratic contests.
Speaking before some 300 workers of a uniform factory in this town in Puerto Rico's central mountains, Clinton said his wife as president would move to allow Puerto Ricans to determine whether they should retain their commonwealth status with the United States, become a state or be independent.
