Top supporters of Senator Barack Obama, joined by at least
one prominent but uncommitted Democrat, raised the pressure
Sunday on Senator Hillary Clinton to bow out of the presidential
nominating race if she fails to score clear victories in two
big-state primary contests Tuesday.
"I just think that D-Day is Tuesday," said Governor
Bill Richardson of New Mexico, a former Democratic presidential
hopeful who has yet to throw his weight behind either leading
candidate. He said the increasingly negative campaign advertisements
aired by both Democrats made it more urgent that the party
unite quickly behind a nominee.
Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island and Vermont hold primary contests
on Tuesday, and the Clinton campaign, trailing in the delegates
needed for nomination and having lost 11 straight contests,
has said the New York senator needs to win either Texas or
Ohio. Both candidates were campaigning Sunday in Ohio.
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With Senator John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee,
able to profit from the Democrats' internecine battles, the
chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Howard Dean,
leveled unusually tough attacks against McCain on Sunday.
"He runs on his integrity, but he doesn't seem to have
any," Dean said on CNN. "John McCain has a history
of doing what it takes, regardless of what the ethics are.
I think he's going to be a flawed candidate." He appeared
to be referring to reports, including one in The New York
Times, that suggested that McCain sometimes applied tougher
ethical standards to others than to himself - a charge McCain
has spiritedly denied.
Richardson, saying that it was vital to Democrats' hopes
in the November election to mount a positive, unifying campaign,
said on CNN that "whoever has the most delegates after
Tuesday, a clear lead, should be, in my judgment, the nominee."
For that to be Clinton, she would have to dramatically exceed
the results predicted by polls, which now show Texas a virtual
toss-up after weeks of steady progress there by Obama, while
Ohio voters narrowly favor Clinton.
In the smaller states, Clinton holds a lead in Rhode Island
polling while Obama has the edge in Vermont.
Howard Wolfson, the Clinton communications director, offered
no hint Sunday that the senator was close to withdrawing.
He argued again that Clinton had shown her ability to win
populous states like California and New York that will be
needed for victory in November. Clinton, he said, had "a
very strong case to make" that she would be the stronger
Democrat against McCain.
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