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Team player? Senator Clinton signed autographs after campaigning for presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama in Henderson, Nev., Friday. (Jae C. Hong/AP)

Obama’s challenge: What role for the Clintons?

A roll-call vote for Hillary Clinton at the convention would be 'cathartic,' she says. Then there's Bill.

By Linda Feldmann  |  August 10, 2008 edition

Washington - The national political conventions, it is often said, have become nothing more than infomercials. And if the Democratic Party has its way, the 2008 convention in Denver will be just that: a four-day, future-focused love-fest centered on the theme of change.

But with just two weeks to go before the opening bell, presumptive nominee Barack Obama is still grappling with how to handle the biggest power couple of the Democratic Party – Hillary and Bill Clinton. Both have now secured prime-time speaking slots during the convention, she on Tuesday night, Aug. 26, as keynote speaker, he the next night, right before the still-unnamed vice presidential candidate.

The trickier issue for Senator Obama may be how to appease Senator Clinton’s supporters, many of whom remain sorely disappointed that she lost the close nomination race and feel she has been treated unfairly. Now that it is clear she will not be Obama’s running mate, given her speaking assignment, conversations between the Obama and Clinton camps center on whether Clinton’s name will be placed in nomination during the first round of delegate voting. The idea would be to allow Clinton delegates the satisfaction of voting for her – the first woman to come close to winning a major-party presidential nomination – before they fall in line and vote for Obama.

“There’s this notion she didn’t get fair media coverage, and now on top of that, there’s this notion she didn’t get fair treatment from Obama, assuming he picks somebody else” as his running mate, says Susan MacManus, a political scientist at the University of South Florida in Tampa. “So from the perspective of her supporters, this may be the only element of fairness that can be injected into the whole process – allowing her supporters to have a chance to vote for her in the roll call.”

Ms. MacManus believes it would be smart for Obama to welcome such a vote, allowing Clinton delegates and supporters the “catharsis” they want and allowing them to move on and work for the Obama ticket. “The last thing you need is disgruntled delegates, because they’re the ones who need to go home and do all the get-out-the-vote work,” she says.

Several important swing states – beginning with Florida, Ohio, and Pennsylvania – are rich with older, female, and working-class voters who went heavily for Clinton in the primaries and whom Obama has struggled to attract in general-election polls against the likely Republican candidate, John McCain.

Under convention rules, Clinton must make a written request to have her name placed in nomination. She has put out ambiguous signals as to whether she would do that. A videotape posted on YouTube shows her addressing supporters in California two weeks ago and talking about the need for a “catharsis.”

“I happen to believe that we will come out stronger if people feel that their voices were heard,” Clinton said. “I think that is a very big part of how we actually come out unified, because I know from just what I’m hearing that there’s an incredible pent-up desire and I think that people want to feel like, okay, it’s a catharsis, we’re here, we did it, and then everybody get behind Senator Obama.”

Obama appeared cool to the idea of a roll-call vote for Clinton in remarks to reporters on his campaign plane. “I don’t think we’re looking for catharsis,” he said, but added he’s leaving the details to the two campaign’s teams.

On Friday, as Obama left for a vacation in Hawaii, Clinton appeared as an Obama surrogate at a campaign event in suburban Las Vegas – her first appearance on behalf of her former rival since their joint appearance in June. “Anyone who voted for me or caucused for me has so much more in common with Senator Obama than [with] Senator McCain,” she said.

But forces beyond the two campaigns are also at play in the Clinton-Obama drama. The city of Denver has issued a parade permit to a group called Colorado Women Count/Women Vote for Aug. 26 – the day of Hillary Clinton’s speech and the 88th anniversary of women’s suffrage. The group plans to march through Denver to show appreciation for Clinton’s campaign effort and to urge a roll-call vote on her nomination. Another group, 18 Million Voices, is planning a pro-Clinton rally in Denver as well.

The National Organization for Women (NOW) is planning a feminist gathering – “Women’s Equali-tea” – on the first day of the convention to celebrate Women’s Equality Day. The guest list features a long line of feminist leaders and women members of Congress. Obama’s wife, Michelle, has been invited but has not responded yet. NOW endorsed Clinton early in the campaign, and is still deciding whether to endorse Obama.

NOW president Kim Gandy does not expect a decision before the convention and she endorses the idea of having Clinton’s name placed in nomination. “I think it makes it easier for [Clinton backers] to support the Democratic nominee,” she says.

( More politics stories )

Comments

1. Darlene Menard | 08.14.08

I think many will find out that dems. still favor Hilary. Here in N.H. we really do love her and wish things had gone a different way.What is sad about all this is many will not even vote now in Nov. now.
The way our world is right now I sincerely hope there is a big spot for Hilary and Bill in the next admin. if Obama is elected!!Bill would be an excellent secretary of state.Hilary is the hardest worker in the Senate i know of besides Ted Kennedy when it comes to a Fight.

2. cindy | 08.15.08

all wonem support Hillary Clintons and her efforts, but she is no the nominee and many of use who gets it are supporting Obama. A vote against obama is a vote for McCain. There have been many campaigns before this one and many will come after - the bottom line is that the republicans headed by G Bush and Dich Cheney have put this country in a bind. They started a war for greed that has killed over 5,ooo of our citizens for NOTHING, The Clinton’s sent our jobs overseas NAFTA. Many of us our loosing our homes, jobs, gas is sky high, foreclosures. What is it going to take for the folks to look pass Obamas color (which we all know is the problem here) and elect someone who is trying to get us back on track and make changes that we have been promised for years. The Clinton had their chance an Bill violated the oval office by having sex in the white house. If hillary can’t control her dog how can she run this country? Obviously, the many who will not be voting are rich and this awful economy does not effect their households. Pity..Many of us are putting our trust in God and Obama. God will continue bless America and all its citizen regardless of their race, creed, or color.

3. Robert | 08.16.08

Dems do not in fact favor Hilary. If they had, she would have won, plain and simple. Her 18 million votes? That is counting Florida and Michigan, where no one contended, and she was the only one with a name on the ballot in Michigan, and yet many people voted uncommitted. She would have had less votes in both states had there been a competition.

They also do not tally individual votes for states that have a Caucus instead of a Primary. Obama destroyed her in those states. There was record turnout in many Caucus states too, including mine here in MN, where people spent an hour trying to go to the sites to vote, many walked a mile to get to the sites because that was actually faster than fighting traffic and trying to park.

Face it, Obama won, Clinton lost. Not voting because you are bitter is dumb, if your views are more matched with Obama, then vote for him. If you supported Hilary because of her stances, then you agree with Obama, if you just wanted to vote for her because she’s a woman, well, you should be ashamed, as that is no reason to support someone. The same goes for Black supporting Obama because he black and no other reason.

If Hilary had won, she would not beat McCain, she has way too much baggage, including Bill. She was very divisive, and I know Many Democrats who would have voted republican just to keep her out, and many of those were women. She acted like it was her right, like she was entitled to it for some reason, yet she won’t admit she is where she is because of Bill.

Having her name in the roll call in the convention could be a disaster, as it will possibly lead to a divided convention, which McCain’s group will gladly take advantage of.

4. Mary T | 08.18.08

Cathartic? We’re talking about ‘disappointed’ adults here who didn’t get their way in an election? No, we’re talking about Hillary Clinton’s egoism, aren’t we?

If Hillary had not been Bill Clinton’s wife…shoot, if she hadn’t been a woman…her decades-long dream of being president would never even have gotten off the ground. For Heaven’s sake…Can’t she and/or her followers grow up (mentally) and get over it?

5. DON | 08.20.08

No hiLLRAY NO VOTE FOR OBAMA PERIOD..I KNOW ALMOST 50 PLUS PEOPLE WHO TAOLD ME THE SAME

6. r.g. | 11.06.09

I caucused for Hillary and would like to see her on the ticket again some day.

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