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Recent News on the Keywords, dem race + race should + pelosi , Related to the Article Below:

Pelosi: Dem Race Should Continue
Newsroom America, New Zealand - Apr 1, 2008
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Tuesday superdelegates who could eventually decide who will be the Democratic Party's presidential candidate in the fall ...
Sunday Reading: When Will the Dem. Race End?
Washington Post, United States - Mar 30, 2008
A quick scan of the Sunday papers underscores that the central question in the Democratic presidential race remains: "When will it end? ...
Pelosi: Dem race has to 'run its course'
CNN Political Ticker - Apr 1, 2008
The House Speaker also maintained her argument that the party's superdelegates should not overturn the pledged-delegate outcome, and suggested she wasn't ...
Pelosi: Dem race should go on
USA Today - Apr 1, 2008
Obama, in an interview taped Monday and aired Tuesday on NBC's Today Show, said the former first lady "has certainly earned the right to stay in this race ...
NEWS ANALYSIS Clinton tries Dem elders' patience
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA - Apr 18, 2008
Barney Frank of Massachusetts, also a Clinton supporter, said recently that the candidate who trails in delegates after June 3 should quit the race. ...
Pelosi says no 'chemistry' for Dem unity ticket [VIDEO.DE]
Raw Story, MA - Apr 1, 2008
reporter: back home pelosi has become a vocal point in a tense democratic race after a letter was sent plit kreising that superdelegates vote. which seemed ...
Top Dem trio seek nominee deal by July 1
The Hill, DC - Apr 1, 2008
Immediately after his proposal became public, Clinton dismissed the notion that she would drop out of the race if she still had a chance to overturn Obama?s ...
Hillary has made the right call? so far
MSNBC - Mar 28, 2008
Still, Clinton should feel vindicated for staying in the race in part because of the Rev. Wright blow up. As of now, it appears Obama has weathered the ...

Politico
Dem elite working for June solution
Politico, DC - Mar 31, 2008
told the Las Vegas Review-Journal that something "will be done" to resolve the race before the convention. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif. ...
Clinton: Bill as JR?
MSNBC - Mar 26, 2008
On a more serious note, NBC/NJ's Mike Memoli reports Bill Clinton pushed back against those trying to nudge his wife out of the race. ...
Source: Google News
   
   

WASHINGTON (AP) — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the "super delegates" who may ultimately decide the Democratic party's presidential nominee have a right to vote as they wish, and that the drawn-out contest between candidates Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama should be allowed to reach its conclusion.

"These super delegates have the right to vote their conscience and who they think would be the better president, or who can win, but they also then should get involved in the campaigns and make their power known there," Pelosi said in an interview aired Tuesday on ABC's Good Morning America.

NOMINATION FIGHT: The voting road ahead

Pelosi recently drew objections from Clinton backers when she said she shared Obama's view that super delegates — nearly 800 elected officials and party leaders — should be guided by the vote for pledged delegates. Obama leads Clinton in pledged delegates earned in primaries and caucuses, but Clinton leads Obama in endorsements from super delegates. Overall, Obama has 1,632 delegates to Clinton's 1,500, according to the latest Associated Press tally. It takes 2,024 delegates to win the nomination.

Pelosi repeated her view that it would it be harmful to the party if super delegates were perceived to overturn the will of voters, but made clear she was not suggesting Clinton withdraw from the race.

"I think the election has to run its course," Pelosi said. "I think that for all that I have said about respecting the will of the people that the inference to be drawn from that is that we have to continue the election in terms of hearing from the people.

"I do think that it is important for us to get behind one candidate a long time before we go to the Democratic National Convention if we hope to win in November," Pelosi added.

Last week, Pelosi received a letter from 20 top Democratic donors who support Clinton, expressing unhappiness that Pelosi appeared to be backing Obama's position on pledged delegates and urging her to clarify her position.

Asked about the letter, Pelosi said: "It wasn't important to me."

Barring a complete meltdown by Obama, Clinton has almost no chance of surpassing his number of pledged delegates, even if she wins big in Pennsylvania's April 22 primary, the largest remaining cache of delegates. But some Democrats fear such victories would encourage her to keep criticizing Obama — her only hope for the nomination — and thus heighten doubts about Obama's ability to defeat Republican nominee-in-waiting John McCain in the fall.

Obama, in an interview taped Monday and aired Tuesday on NBC's Today Show, said the former first lady "has certainly earned the right to stay in this race as long as she wants ... I think she deserves to be able to run and make her case."

Some Democratic strategists have warned of damage to the party's chances in November if women — especially the older, white working-class women who are Clinton's base — sense a mostly male party establishment is unfairly muscling her out of the race. Women make up the majority of Democratic voters nationwide.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.
A graphic image of Democratic presidential hopefuls, Hilary Clinton and Barack Obama,is displayed before House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's speech during the California Democratic Party State Convention on Mar. 28, in San Jose.
By Dai Sugano, San Jose Mercury News via AP
A graphic image of Democratic presidential hopefuls, Hilary Clinton and Barack Obama,is displayed before House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's speech during the California Democratic Party State Convention on Mar. 28, in San Jose.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi: "I do think that it is important for us to get behind one candidate a long time before we go to the Democratic National Convention if we hope to win in November." House Speaker Nancy Pelosi: "I do think that it is important for us to get behind one candidate a long time before we go to the Democratic National Convention if we hope to win in November."

AP file

 

 

 

 

 
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