PORTLAND, Ore.(AP)
Campaigning a few miles from each other Friday, Barack Obama
trained his eye on November and the GOP, while Hillary Rodham
Clinton battled for her political life, trying to hang on a few
more weeks or even days in hopes of denying him the Democratic
presidential nomination.
Obama, increasingly confident that Clinton cannot overtake his
lead, ignored her in his prepared remarks at a Portland-area
workplace. Instead he pointedly criticized Republican Sen. John
McCain's economic, health and Iraq policies, saying the
probable GOP nominee would continue failed Bush administration
priorities.
When asked about Clinton, Obama heaped more praise than
criticism on the New York senator, continuing his efforts to avoid
antagonizing her or her supporters.
Also campaigning in Portland, ahead of Oregon's May 20
primary, Clinton took the opposite tack, knowing she can't take
on McCain unless she somehow derails Obama. At a roundtable at
Doernbecher Children's Hospital, she criticized Obama's
health care plan for promising universal coverage to children but
not adults.
"An artificial distinction between children and adults is
unworkable," Clinton said. "You've got to have a
seamless health care system which covers every single person. My
plan does, my opponent's doesn't."
She added, "This is a big difference in this campaign.
It's not a difference of politics so much as commitment. ...
How can anyone run to be the Democratic nominee and not have a
universal health care plan?"
Obama, a first-term Illinois senator, says he has not secured
the Democratic nomination, even as party superdelegates continue to
abandon Clinton, or their previously undeclared status, and endorse
him. But his campaign increasingly looks like a general election
affair, with him focusing on McCain and devoting two full days this
week to Oregon, a perennial battleground state between the two
parties.
Speaking to a few dozen employees of Vernier Software &
Technology, which develops educational materials, Obama said McCain
was "dead wrong when he said recently that he thinks our
economy has made 'great progress' under George Bush. Is
there anyone outside of Washington D.C., who could truly believe
that?"
He rebuked McCain for supporting Bush's "tax cuts for
the wealthiest Americans," a temporary halt to the federal
gasoline tax and continued heavy U.S. presence in Iraq.
Obama did not mention Clinton until an employee asked about
their respective health care plans. He acknowledged Clinton's
criticisms, but said the government should not penalize low-income
adults who choose not to buy health insurance even with a
significant government subsidy.
When asked if he might make Clinton his running mate, Obama said
it would be presumptuous to speculate because "I have not won
this nomination yet."
"But I will say that she has shown herself to be an
extraordinary candidate and an extraordinary public servant,"
he said. "She is hardworking, she is tough, she is very smart.
And so I think she would be on anybody's list, short list, of
vice presidential candidates."
He predicted Clinton will win the Kentucky and West Virginia
primaries "by significant margins," although he will
campaign in those states next week.
Clinton's top fundraisers and advisers said she would
continue campaigning through the final primaries, believing voters
in the remaining six contests deserve a voice in the nominating
process.
Hassan Nemazee, co-chairman of her finance committee, said her
fundraising in recent days had been sufficient to carry the
campaign through the next several weeks. "There is no reason
for her to stop now," Nemazee said.
The McCain campaign issued a lengthy rebuttal to Obama's
remarks. It noted that Obama once supported a gas tax suspension,
which Obama now calls a mistake. It accused him of seeking unwise
hikes in taxes and spending.
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