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How Clinton’s Final Campaign Moments Unfolded
Summary from United States, from articles in English
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The staffer, who spoke under the condition of anonymity to CBS News, said that Clinton's decision to drop out was " a multi-stage process. (article 3)
It all began after Clinton decided to make a visit to her campaign headquarters following a speech in downtown Washington yesterday morning. (article 3)
The staff was under the impression that Clinton was going to " swing by, but it turned into something else said the source, adding that Clinton ended up staying much longer. (article 3)
In a rerun of a very familiar movie, the media establishment was too quick to crank out the obituaries for a former first lady who keeps bouncing back against Barack Obama. (article 1)
With the approach of early February's Super Tuesday the day everyone just knew would settle the race Clinton's slippage in key state polls prompted suggestions that the end was near. (article 1)
Someone, please remind Sen. Hillary Clinton of the old naval expression, "A slip of the lip can sink a ship" Hill's 'Assassin' Talk a Shocker May 24). (article 2)
She was defeated by her husband, by her own party and, definitively last weekend, by the party's Rules and Bylaws Committee. (article 4)
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Other stories about Obama, Clinton and McCain:
Event tracking:
Story keywords
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Obama, Clinton, McCain, campaign, Democratic |
Source articles
- The Long and Winding Road (Washington Post, 06/05/2008, 531 words)
- New York Post (NY Post, 06/05/2008, 610 words)
- How Clinton’s Final Campaign Moments Unfolded (CBS News, 06/05/2008, 352 words)
- Kathleen Parker: Hillary's biggest problem is Bill (dallasnews.com, 06/05/2008, 603 words)
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blaster@cs.columbia.edu
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