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Philly Mayor Sticking With Clinton
Summary from United States, from articles in English
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Since then Obama's bid to become the first black president has garnered more votes, more delegates and more donations than the New York senator's equally historic bid to become the first female president. (article 1)
Given Obama's overwhelming support so far from blacks, there is little doubt that the Illinois senator will prevail among Philadelphia's 1.4 million residents and its nearly equal numbers of black and white voters. (article 1)
As the two candidates crisscross the state for the next six weeks, there are a number of players to watch who could make a difference behind the scenes and in front of the camera leading up to election. (article 3)
The Barack Obama campaign just sent out a press release announcing that Obama has accepted invitations to debate in Pennsylvania and North Carolina. (article 4)
The North Carolina debate, which would be hosted by CBS News and moderated by Katie Couric and Bob Schieffer, is scheduled for April 19th. (article 4)
The Clinton campaign held a conference call today to make an electability argument for the former first lady built around the upcoming primary in Pennsylvania. (article 2)
The Pennsylvania vote, Clinton's chief strategist Mark Penn told reporters, will be a " very significant test of who could really win the general election. (article 2)
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Other stories about Obama, Clinton and Campaign:
Event tracking:
Story keywords
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Obama, Clinton, Campaign, Hillary, Democratic |
Source articles
- Philly Mayor Sticking With Clinton (Washington Post, 03/14/2008, 404 words)
- Clinton Camp Pushes Electability Argument In Conference Call (CBS News, 03/13/2008, 362 words)
- Dems woo Pa. political players (USA Today, 03/14/2008, 855 words)
- Democrats To Debate In Pennsylvania (CBS News, 03/13/2008, 161 words)
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blaster@cs.columbia.edu
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