Ted Kennedy To Endorse OBAMA

Makkonnen

The Quizatz Haderach
BGOL Investor
Teddy Kennedy To Endorse Obama?
By Greg Sargent - January 27, 2008, 11:54AM

A few weeks ago, right after John Kerry endorsed Barack Obama, we reported here that the Hillary campaign was working intensely to win over Kerry's fellow Senator from Massachusetts. The idea was that a Teddy Kennedy endorsement of Hillary would take the steam out of comparisons between Obama and J.F.K.

Now it looks as if the opposite may happen. After some indications that he might remain neutral, Kennedy may be on the verge of endorsing Obama. From Obama's interview on ABC this morning:

Mark Halperin reports, on Time Magazine’s Web site this morning – and our reporting seems to confirm it — that Ted Kennedy is also on the verge of endorsing you. Is that true?

OBAMA: Well, you know, I’ll let Ted Kennedy speak for himself. Andnobody does it better. But obviously, any of the Democratic candidates would love to have Ted Kennedy’s support. And we have certainly actively sought it.

And you know, I will let him make his announcement and his decision when he decides it’s appropriate.

No denial from Obama on this. Separately, another Kennedy endorsed Obama on the Times Op ed page this morning. The title of the endorsement:

A President Like My Father

You have to assume that Camp Obama was happy about this.
 
http://www.boston.com/news/politics/politicalintelligence/2008/01/ted_kennedy_end.html
Ted Kennedy endorsing Obama
Posted by James F. Smith January 27, 2008 12:29 PM

By Susan Milligan
Globe staff

WASHINGTON -- Senator Edward M. Kennedy will endorse Barack Obama for president tomorrow, breaking his year-long neutrality to send a powerful signal of where the legendary Massachusetts Democrat sees the party going -- and who he thinks is best to lead it.

Kennedy confidantes told the Globe today that the Bay State's senior senator will appear with Obama and Kennedy's niece, Caroline Kennedy, at a morning rally at American University in Washington tomorrow to announce his support.

That will be a potentially significant boost for Obama as he heads into a series of critical primaries on Super Tuesday, Feb. 5.

Kennedy believes Obama can ``transcend race'' and bring unity to the country, a Kennedy associate told the Globe. Kennedy was also impressed by Obama's deep involvement last year in the bipartisan effort to craft legislation on immigration reform, a politically touchy subject the other presidential candidates avoided, the associate said.

The coveted endorsement is a huge blow to New York Senator Hillary Clinton, who is both a senatorial colleague and a friend of the Kennedy family. In a campaign where Clinton has trumpeted her experience over Obama's call for hope and change, the endorsement by one of the most experienced and respected Democrats in the Senate is a particularly dramatic coup for Obama.

"The America of Jack and Bobby Kennedy touched all of us. Through all of these decades, the one who kept that flame alive was Ted Kennedy,'' said Representative Bill Delahunt, A Quincy Democrat who is also backing Obama. ``So having him pass on the torch [to Obama] is of incredible significance. It's historic.''

Obama's landslide win in South Carolina yesterday gives Obama and Clinton two wins each in the primary campaign, and puts the two senators in a fierce battle for delegates on Feb. 5, when 22 states will hold Democratic primaries and caucuses.

While polls show Clinton ahead in some large states, including her home state of New York and delegate-rich California, the Kennedy endorsement gives Obama a stamp of approval among key constituencies in the Democratic party that could make Super Tuesday more competitive.

Kennedy plans to campaign actively for Obama, an aide said, and will focus particularly among Hispanics and labor union members, who are important voting blocks in several Feb. 5 states, including California, New York, New Jersey, Arizona and New Mexico.

The Massachusetts senator was key in helping his colleague, Senator John F. Kerry, score a comeback win in Iowa in 2004, sending Kerry on a path to the nomination. Kennedy campaigned on his own and released several senior members of his staff to work for Kerry.
 
Ted Kennedy embraces Obama
By: Mike Allen and Carrie Budoff Brown
January 27, 2008 05:55 PM EST

Rejecting a personal entreaty from President Bill Clinton, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) plans to endorse Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) for president in a joint appearance on Monday, Democratic sources said.

The embrace provides a dramatic rocket for Obama to ride into the frantic, nationwide campaigning ahead of the spate of Super Tuesday primaries on Feb. 5, the biggest day for nominating contests in U.S. history. Caroline Kennedy, the senator's niece and the daughter of President John F. Kennedy, will also appear at the rally, the sources said.

Democrats said the endorsement will help Obama with traditional Democratic groups where Clinton has been strong — union households, Hispanics and downscale workers.

Also, the nod by the most experienced member of the Senate adds significant standing to Obama, who is working to prove he has the experience necessary to be president.

The announcement stunned Senate colleagues, who had expected Kennedy to remain neutral until the increasingly vitriolic nominating contest with Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) settled out.

“This is the biggest Democratic endorsement Obama could possibly get short of Bill Clinton,” said a high-level Democrat.

The Clinton campaign launched a last-ditch effort over the last few days to stop Kennedy's move, orchestrating a flood of phone calls to Kennedy from sources ranging from union chiefs to his Massachusetts constituents.
See Also

* Obama's big win keeps his hopes alive
* McCain and Romney spar over Iraq, economy
* Obama calls Clinton strategy outdated

The former president also called Kennedy in a vain attempt to keep him out of the race, a source familiar with the conversation said.

During his two terms in the White House, President Clinton made repeated overtures to the Kennedy family. So the senator’s rejection of his wife is at least as embarrassing as her 28-point loss in the South Carolina primary on Saturday.

Kennedy is set to appear with Obama at the “Stand for Change” rally the campaign is holding at American University in Washington, D.C., at lunchtime on Monday, the sources said.

For months, former aides to President John F. Kennedy and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy showered praise on Obama, describing him as the heir to the Kennedy mantle.

But when Politico reviewed the Kennedy family’s endorsements and campaign contributions in December, reporters found a house divided.

A tangle of longstanding political ties, friendships and gut feelings caused the Kennedys and those closely identified with them to scatter across the primary field.

Old hands to President Kennedy and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy came out for Obama, in part because he reminded them of the charismatic brothers. One of the former advisers, Harris Wofford, said Obama “touches my soul.”

“For me, no one has done that since John, Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King,” Wofford said in December. “I waited a long time to have that feeling.”



But Hillary Rodham Clinton picked up more direct support. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend and her sister, Kerry, have hit the trail for her. The Kennedy family, including Caroline Kennedy and her husband, Edwin, had sent more than $15,000 to Clinton. (Obama had received more than $9,000 from family members.)

Eunice Kennedy Shriver and a half-dozen other family members put money on Sen. Christopher Dodd, who is very close with Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and has known the family for decades.

With Dodd out of the race, the constraints for Sen. Kennedy had likely diminished.

Word of Kennedy’s planned endorsement leaked the same day that his niece, Caroline Kennedy, endorsed Obama with a New York Times Op-Ed headlined, “A President Like My Father: Obama will inspire a new generation of Americans.”

“I have never had a president who inspired me the way people tell me that my father inspired them. But for the first time, I believe I have found the man who could be that president – not just for me, but for a new generation of Americans,” she wrote.

The Kennedy endorsement is likely to give Obama a lift among Hispanic voters because of Kennedy's passionate advocacy of immigration legislation. The Obama campaign, which lags far behind Clinton among Hispanic voters in national polls, is likely to prominently display the endorsements by both Kennedys in Latino communities.

The disclosure also comes the same weekend that the House's highest-ranking Latino, California Rep. Xavier Becerra, also announced that he is backing Obama.

Obama was coy about the upcoming endorsement when ABC’s George Stephanopoulos asked him about it on “This Week.”

“I'll let Ted Kennedy speak for himself,” Obama said. “And nobody does it better. But obviously, any of the Democratic candidates would love to have Ted Kennedy's support. And we have certainly actively sought it.”

The Republican National Committee piled on, issuing a statement saying: “Senator Kennedy’s rejection of his friend and colleague is a stunning blow to Clinton’s campaign.”

Clinton aides today downplayed the significance of the endorsement.

“She has a great deal of respect for Sen. Kennedy and is very proud of all the endorsements she's received from her Senate colleagues,” said Doug Hattaway, a Clinton spokesman. “At the end of the day, the voters are going to choose a candidate on their merits, not on their endorsements.”

Politico’s Chris Frates, John F. Harris, Martin Kady II and Ben Smith contributed to this report.

TM & © THE POLITICO & POLITICO.COM, a division of Allbritton Communications Company
 
Sen. Kennedy to Endorse Obama

By Shailagh Murray
Sen. Ted Kennedy will endorse Sen. Barack Obama tomorrow at American University, campaign sources said. The veteran Massachusetts senator follows his niece Caroline Kennedy, who today in the New York Times compared Obama to her late father.

Kennedy's decision came after weeks of mounting frustration with the Clintons over their campaign tactics, particularly those with racial overtones. Kennedy expressed those frustrations directly to the campaign but was reportedly infuriated when Bill Clinton yesterday compared Obama's South Carolina victory to Jesse Jackson winning the state's much smaller caucuses in 1984 and 1988.

Posted at 1:22 PM ET on Jan 27, 2008
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/01/27/sen_kennedy_to_endorse_obama.html?hpid=topnews
 
Oh shit...Now it's REALLY picking up...

Ted Kennedy is my favorite U.S. Senator...He usually gets stuff done and is usually at the forefront of many laws that benefit the middle class...

I'm still unhappy that he couldn't get his constituents to stop spending money for the war, though... :(
 
Kennedy and Dodd are my favs in congress. Those two are the only reason we arent wearing swastikas sitting in a pile of dirt
 
Updated shit.

NYT LEAD MONDAY: Hillary's campaign will try to 'shift former President Bill Clinton back into positive, supportive-spouse role' he played before her loss in Iowa...

Kennedy For Obama: Intends to campaign aggressively with Western trip this week, followed by appearances in Northeast... Kennedy upset over attempts by Clinton campaign to highlight Obama's race and distortions of statements, record... made views known in call with former president....

She is done if he is going to Cali with him.
 

Real Question:

Teddy is from the left of center wing of the Democratic Party.
In the long run, will Teddy's endorsement help or hurt Obama?

QueEx
 
He isn't part of the Democratic Leadership Council which is Bill Clinton's group. People think Kennedy they think good things, despite his personal life. You have to understand that throughout his entire presidency he compared himself to JFK and now his family endorses the other guy. That is too fucking much.
 

Real Question:

Teddy is from the left of center wing of the Democratic Party.
In the long run, will Teddy's endorsement help or hurt Obama?

QueEx
I think the answer to that question is in why Obama is broadly popular to left and right.
Obama already appeals across the board to independents and dems. Repubs have lost many people to their bullshit. Those people will vote indy or dem - period. Ted campaining for obama in liberal areas won't push away anyone. Obama will continue to court disenchanted republicans as well.
The main thing we need to realize is that Obama helped get Half a million primary voters in RED SOUTH CAROLINA. The people who voted Edwards or HRC will not be voting for MccAIN OR rOMNEY.
Even if Obama didn't have the massive crossover appeal he does have (iowa + nevada) he'd still win with the massive hatred dems have for repubs right now.
I think this election will be the largest landslide victory ever against whatever repub runs as long as Obama is the candidate.

Im tired as shit so that might not have came out right :)
 
He isn't part of the Democratic Leadership Council which is Bill Clinton's group. People think Kennedy they think good things, despite his personal life. You have to understand that throughout his entire presidency he compared himself to JFK and now his family endorses the other guy. That is too fucking much.
Its beautiful to me. Political free trade to ass fuck him and shillary like he did millions of americans
 
He isn't part of the Democratic Leadership Council which is Bill Clinton's group. People think Kennedy they think good things, despite his personal life. You have to understand that throughout his entire presidency he compared himself to JFK and now his family endorses the other guy. That is too fucking much.


The Clinton Machine vs The Kennedy Machine
Sparks are gonna fly.
 


The Clinton Machine vs The Kennedy Machine
Sparks are gonna fly.
not gonna happen
B Clinton has been officially called off. Ted would have stayed out if not for Bill's bullshit. That hurt Hillary tremendously. Shit if it wasnt for him I dont know if Obama would have won by as large a margin- Im sure he still would have won though.

Hillary will try stupid dirty shit like the Florida thing but look for her attacks to disappear. She doesn't want to not have any career when this shit is over and so far shit is blowing up in her face.

Bill Clinton just marginalized himself :lol: and maybe Hillary too.

The Clintons were begging Ted to not endorse Obama. They dont dare talk shit about Ted or his endorsing Obama. That shit would get real ugly real fast and they'd lose.
 
:lol:This is ironic. All of the so called Black conservatives, Black republicans and so called Black centrist are on the same side as Teddy Kennedy. Make no mistake, if they wee not receiving their marching orders to bash the Clintons, they would be unleashing their wrath on Teddy. If and when Obama becomes the democratic nominee for president, let’s see if they bash the republicans for the racial vitriol they will inevitably heap on Obama.
 
LOL. You're so busy trying to keep up with sides;
you're getting confused over whom is on which side.

In the meantime, what are your boi Bill and his "side"
kick Hillary up to next; still misunderestimating the
side Black people will take when one from our
qualified side is in the game ???

QueEx
 
LOL. You're so busy trying to keep up with sides;
you're getting confused over whom is on which side.

In the meantime, what are your boi Bill and his "side"
kick Hillary up to next; still misunderestimating the
side Black people will take when one from our
qualified side is in the game ???

QueEx


First of all, as I have said numerous times, I am not supporting the Clintons. So you can take that bullet out of your rhetorical arguments. I have time to make up my mind. I have certain issues I want addressed and that candidate will get my support. Unfortunately, our elections have become popularity contests. That is why Black republicans look like fools when they claim they support Obama. They rail against so called liberals and Obama is clearly a liberal, yet they say don't vote for a Black person just because they are Black. This is why very few Black republicans get elected by Black folks. Do you like Obama because of his political stance or because of he is Black, because if he becomes president, he will definitely govern to the left of Hillary, who is the most republican of the democrats.
 

Real Question:

Teddy is from the left of center wing of the Democratic Party.
In the long run, will Teddy's endorsement help or hurt Obama?

QueEx

It will help with the really FAR leftist types not to mention helping Obama get his hands on some much needed SUPER TUESDAY old money support he's gonna need. Not to mention his power will help curb bullshit in the media when it comes up so Obama can focus on coalition building, and getting to the White house.

Where it won't help is if Kennedy appears too often in the media and/or fuck up saying Obama's name wrong again. When Obama first got in the race, he called Obama, Osama.

-VG
 
It will help with the really FAR leftist types not to mention helping Obama get his hands on some much needed SUPER TUESDAY old money support he's gonna need. Not to mention his power will help curb bullshit in the media when it comes up so Obama can focus on coalition building, and getting to the White house.

Where it won't help is if Kennedy appears too often in the media and/or fuck up saying Obama's name wrong again. When Obama first got in the race, he called Obama, Osama.

-VG

wtf-copy.jpg
 
It will help with the really FAR leftist types not to mention helping Obama get his hands on some much needed SUPER TUESDAY old money support he's gonna need. Not to mention his power will help curb bullshit in the media when it comes up so Obama can focus on coalition building, and getting to the White house.

Where it won't help is if Kennedy appears too often in the media and/or fuck up saying Obama's name wrong again. When Obama first got in the race, he called Obama, Osama.

-VG

Yeah. I think too that Ted's negatives are more likely to appear in a potentially harmful way in the general election where the issues are more apt to be cast as liberal vs. conservative, regardless of where the candidates themselves might actually fall on the consevative/liberal continuum. If I were an Obama advisor, I would be concerned over what Kennedy might do/say between now and the general election (assuming Obama wins the nomination) that might be tough to defend or cause Obama to spend precious time on defense instead of on offense.

QueEx
 
<font size="5"><center>
Kennedy Calls Obama </font size><font size="6">
‘New Generation of Leadership’ </font size></center>



28kennedy4-600.jpg

Barack Obama with Edward Kennedy, Caroline Kennedy and Patrick Kennedy at a rally at
American University in Washington D.C. on Monday.


By JEFF ZELENY
Published: January 28, 2008

WASHINGTON — Senator Edward M. Kennedy implored Americans on Monday to “reject the counsels of doubt and calculation,” as he extended his endorsement and placed the aura of his family’s name around the presidential candidacy of Senator Barack Obama.

“It is time again for a new generation of leadership,” Mr. Kennedy said, speaking over a crowd of cheering supporters here at American University. “It is time now for Barack Obama.”

Mr. Kennedy promised to campaign aggressively for Mr. Obama, a strong endorsement from a veteran Democratic leader that might influence some in the party’s liberal Democratic base torn between Mr. Obama and Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton.

“We, too, want a president who appeals to the hopes of those who still believe in the American dream and those around the world who still believe in the American ideal and who can lift our spirits and make us believe again,” Mr. Kennedy said. “I’ve found that candidate and I think you have, too.”

He praised Mrs. Clinton and the third Democratic candidate, John Edwards. “They are my friends, they are my friends, they have been my colleagues in the Senate,” Mr. Kennedy said. “Whoever is our nominee will have my enthusiastic support.”

But he said one candidate had risen above the rest. “He understands what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called the fierce urgency of now,” said Mr. Kennedy, who was joined on stage by his niece, Caroline Kennedy, and her cousin, Representative Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island, who are also backing Mr. Obama.

“I stand here today with a great deal of humility,” Mr. Obama said after Mr. Kennedy’s endorsement. “I know what your support means. I know the cherished place the Kennedy family holds in the hearts of the American people.”

In a 20-minute address, Mr. Kennedy spoke effusively of Mr. Obama, who has served with him in the Senate for three years. He hailed his ability to transcend race in America, saying Mr. Obama’s candidacy could set the nation on a new course of reconciliation.

Mr. Kennedy, who associates said had grown furious at the tone of the presidential campaign, including the words and actions of former President Bill Clinton, said Mr. Obama would usher in a new era of politics. His speech was filled with references to his distaste for the bitterness and lack of bipartisanship that has infiltrated Washington.

“He will be a president who refuses to be trapped in the patterns of the past,” Mr. Kennedy said. “He is a leader who sees the world clearly without being cynical. He is a fighter who cares passionately about the causes he believes in, without demonizing those who hold a different view.”

Mr. Kennedy, whose endorsement was aggressively pursued by all the Democratic candidates, praised Mr. Obama’s ability to motivate a new generation of leaders. Not since his brothers, Mr. Kennedy said, has he seen a politician possess the ability to inspire.

“With Barack Obama, there is a new national leader who has given America a different kind of campaign — not just about himself, but about all of us,” Mr. Kennedy said. “A campaign about the country we will become, if we can rise above the old politics that parses us into separate groups and puts us at odds with one another.”

Mr. Kennedy is expected to head west with Mr. Obama, followed by appearances in the Northeast. Strategists see him bolstering Mr. Obama’s credibility and helping him firm up support from unions and Hispanics, as well as the party base.

Mrs. Clinton and her allies had pressed Senator Kennedy to remain neutral in the Democratic race, as he traditionally has done. Instead, the endorsement gave Mr. Obama the Kennedy charisma and connections before the 22-state showdown for the Democratic nomination on Feb. 5.

Mr. Kennedy, who called Mr. Clinton Sunday to tell him of his decision, remained uncertain of his decision as late as the middle of last week. But, according to allies, when he learned that his niece’s endorsement would appear as an Op-Ed piece in The New York Times on Sunday, he decided to bolster that with his own public embrace of the campaign at a joint rally at American University.

Trying to dilute the impact of the twin endorsements by the brother and daughter of the late president, the Clinton campaign on Sunday issued a statement of support from Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, a former lieutenant governor in Maryland and a daughter of Robert F. Kennedy.

“I respect Caroline and Teddy’s decision, but I have made a different choice,” Ms. Townsend said in her statement, adding: “At this moment when so much is at stake at home and overseas, I urge our fellow Americans to support Hillary Clinton. That is why my brother Bobby, my sister Kerry, and I are supporting Hillary Clinton.”

But two years ago, Ms. Townsend’s mother, Ethel Kennedy, referred to Mr. Obama in an interview as “our next president” and likened him to her late husband.

Brian Knowlton contributed reporting from Washington and Carl Hulse from Birmingham, Ala.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/28/us/politics/28cnd-dems.html?_r=1&ref=us&oref=slogin
 
<font size="5"><center>
Kennedy Calls Obama </font size><font size="6">
‘New Generation of Leadership’ </font size></center>



28kennedy4-600.jpg

Barack Obama with Edward Kennedy, Caroline Kennedy and Patrick Kennedy at a rally at
American University in Washington D.C. on Monday.


By JEFF ZELENY
Published: January 28, 2008

WASHINGTON — Senator Edward M. Kennedy implored Americans on Monday to “reject the counsels of doubt and calculation,” as he extended his endorsement and placed the aura of his family’s name around the presidential candidacy of Senator Barack Obama.

“It is time again for a new generation of leadership,” Mr. Kennedy said, speaking over a crowd of cheering supporters here at American University. “It is time now for Barack Obama.”

Mr. Kennedy promised to campaign aggressively for Mr. Obama, a strong endorsement from a veteran Democratic leader that might influence some in the party’s liberal Democratic base torn between Mr. Obama and Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton.

“We, too, want a president who appeals to the hopes of those who still believe in the American dream and those around the world who still believe in the American ideal and who can lift our spirits and make us believe again,” Mr. Kennedy said. “I’ve found that candidate and I think you have, too.”

He praised Mrs. Clinton and the third Democratic candidate, John Edwards. “They are my friends, they are my friends, they have been my colleagues in the Senate,” Mr. Kennedy said. “Whoever is our nominee will have my enthusiastic support.”

But he said one candidate had risen above the rest. “He understands what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called the fierce urgency of now,” said Mr. Kennedy, who was joined on stage by his niece, Caroline Kennedy, and her cousin, Representative Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island, who are also backing Mr. Obama.

“I stand here today with a great deal of humility,” Mr. Obama said after Mr. Kennedy’s endorsement. “I know what your support means. I know the cherished place the Kennedy family holds in the hearts of the American people.”

In a 20-minute address, Mr. Kennedy spoke effusively of Mr. Obama, who has served with him in the Senate for three years. He hailed his ability to transcend race in America, saying Mr. Obama’s candidacy could set the nation on a new course of reconciliation.

Mr. Kennedy, who associates said had grown furious at the tone of the presidential campaign, including the words and actions of former President Bill Clinton, said Mr. Obama would usher in a new era of politics. His speech was filled with references to his distaste for the bitterness and lack of bipartisanship that has infiltrated Washington.

“He will be a president who refuses to be trapped in the patterns of the past,” Mr. Kennedy said. “He is a leader who sees the world clearly without being cynical. He is a fighter who cares passionately about the causes he believes in, without demonizing those who hold a different view.”

Mr. Kennedy, whose endorsement was aggressively pursued by all the Democratic candidates, praised Mr. Obama’s ability to motivate a new generation of leaders. Not since his brothers, Mr. Kennedy said, has he seen a politician possess the ability to inspire.

“With Barack Obama, there is a new national leader who has given America a different kind of campaign — not just about himself, but about all of us,” Mr. Kennedy said. “A campaign about the country we will become, if we can rise above the old politics that parses us into separate groups and puts us at odds with one another.”

Mr. Kennedy is expected to head west with Mr. Obama, followed by appearances in the Northeast. Strategists see him bolstering Mr. Obama’s credibility and helping him firm up support from unions and Hispanics, as well as the party base.

Mrs. Clinton and her allies had pressed Senator Kennedy to remain neutral in the Democratic race, as he traditionally has done. Instead, the endorsement gave Mr. Obama the Kennedy charisma and connections before the 22-state showdown for the Democratic nomination on Feb. 5.

Mr. Kennedy, who called Mr. Clinton Sunday to tell him of his decision, remained uncertain of his decision as late as the middle of last week. But, according to allies, when he learned that his niece’s endorsement would appear as an Op-Ed piece in The New York Times on Sunday, he decided to bolster that with his own public embrace of the campaign at a joint rally at American University.

Trying to dilute the impact of the twin endorsements by the brother and daughter of the late president, the Clinton campaign on Sunday issued a statement of support from Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, a former lieutenant governor in Maryland and a daughter of Robert F. Kennedy.

“I respect Caroline and Teddy’s decision, but I have made a different choice,” Ms. Townsend said in her statement, adding: “At this moment when so much is at stake at home and overseas, I urge our fellow Americans to support Hillary Clinton. That is why my brother Bobby, my sister Kerry, and I are supporting Hillary Clinton.”

But two years ago, Ms. Townsend’s mother, Ethel Kennedy, referred to Mr. Obama in an interview as “our next president” and likened him to her late husband.


Brian Knowlton contributed reporting from Washington and Carl Hulse from Birmingham, Ala.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/28/us/politics/28cnd-dems.html?_r=1&ref=us&oref=slogin


These niccas work fast. I respect the Clinton's hustle...
 
Did you hear the Obama acceptance speech of Kennedy's endorsement? It was very gracious and straight up outstanding.

-VG
 
Yeah, yeah, I know how it feels. I've been saying the same thing but you keep branding me something different. Guess it comes with the territory, huh?

QueEx


My point is that most of the vitriol spewed toward Hillary is just rhetoric. The same unsubstantiated shit used to try to diminish Bill Clinton’s presidency. Don’t get me wrong, they play tough. It’s that the Lee Atwater and Karl Rove clones are pissed that the first democrat in 30 years plays as tough as they do. And I would still take the 8 years under Bill Clinton, despite his cave in to NAFTA and GATT, his lack of support for Lani Guinier and sexual indiscretions over the 8 years GW has given us. If Obama is not the nominee, I will still favor any of the other democratic candidates or a third party over any of the republic nominees.
 
My point is that most of the vitriol spewed toward Hillary is just rhetoric. The same unsubstantiated shit used to try to diminish Bill Clinton’s presidency. Don’t get me wrong, they play tough. It’s that the Lee Atwater and Karl Rove clones are pissed that the first democrat in 30 years plays as tough as they do. And I would still take the 8 years under Bill Clinton, despite his cave in to NAFTA and GATT, his lack of support for Lani Guinier and sexual indiscretions over the 8 years GW has given us. If Obama is not the nominee, I will still favor any of the other democratic candidates or a third party over any of the republic nominees.

I don't know; I just don't know.

If you've noticed, I have never been in GW's corner, though in fairness, I haven't been one to jump him when I think he is right and I have said he was right when I thought it so, but those occassions have rarely presented themselves.

On the other hand, when I start to look around at alternatives should Barack not make the playoffs:

- I have defended Bill Clinton in the past and I still don't think who sucked his dick or where he got it sucked was the public's business. It was a national embarrasment for him and for the nation when, in my opinion, republicans stooped shit-low in its quest to reclaim the presidency. Nevertheless, I have long been suspect of that crazy wife of his and I am no less suspect now just because Bill is still playing national-suck-up-to-her in the wake of the infamous blow-job, that is, Bill's Post Blow-Job Era behavior, especially as it affects our community, has substantially diminished Hillary's chances of ever getting my vote.

- I think Romney could present an interesting choice, especially if he plans to pass legislation making the Mormon concept of multiple wives apply outside of Mormon conclaves; but Warren Jeffs has about fucked that up, hasn't he ? lol

- After that, though, I don't have the feel for an alternative candidate.​
I guess I better find one though. Barack is certainly not a shoo in. Any ideas? - and please, no space cowboys, neo or pseudo-evangelists, or people from either political extreme: left or right.

Hell, I've about eliminated everyone. :lol:

QueEx
 
NY NOW Is On The RAG Over Kennedy Backing Obama

January 29, 2008
Women's group slams Kennedy for 'betrayal'
Posted: 09:54 AM ET


WASHINGTON (CNN) – Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy is under heavy fire from a state chapter of the National Organization for Women for his decision to back Barack Obama over Hillary Clinton.

In a sharply critical statement, the New York state chapter of NOW took aim at Kennedy Monday for what it called an "ultimate betrayal," and suggested the Massachusetts Democrat "can't or won't" handle the idea of Clinton becoming President of the United States.

"Sen. Kennedy’s endorsement of Hillary Clinton’s opponent in the Democratic presidential primary campaign has really hit women hard," said the statement. "Women have forgiven Kennedy, stuck up for him, stood by him, hushed the fact that he was late in his support of Title IX, the ERA, the Family Leave and Medical Act to name a few."

"And now the greatest betrayal! We are repaid with his abandonment!" the statement continues. "He’s picked the new guy over us. He’s joined the list of progressive white men who can’t or won’t handle the prospect of a woman president who is Hillary Clinton."

After months on the sidelines, Kennedy formally endorsed Obama Monday during a speech at American University, despite reported pleas from the Clinton campaign that he remain neutral. He hailed the Illinois senator for his potential to be a “president who appeals to the hopes of those who still believe in the American dream."

Kennedy also praised Clinton and John Edwards in his speech, saying that “whoever is our nominee will have my enthusiastic support."

But the NOW state chapter suggested Monday Kennedy's decision was a larger representation of society’s ongoing disrespect for women's rights.

"This latest move by Kennedy is so telling about the status of and respect for women’s rights, women’s voices, women’s equality, women’s authority and our ability – indeed, our obligation — to promote and earn and deserve and elect, unabashedly, a president that is the first woman after centuries of men who ‘know what’s best for us.’”

Meanwhile, the national chapter of NOW sought to distance itself from the state chapter’s comments, issuing a statement Monday evening that praised Kennedy's record with respect to women's rights.

"Though the National Organization for Women Political Action Committee has proudly endorsed Sen. Hillary Clinton for president, we respect Sen. Kennedy's endorsement," NOW President Kim Gandy said. "We continue to encourage women everywhere to express their opinions and exercise their right to vote."

Kennedy's office has not returned CNN's request for comment.
 
Re: NY NOW Is On The RAG Over Kennedy Backing Obama

:lol::lol::lol::lol:

They should have sent an open letter to Hillary telling her to put a lid on Bill...
 
Re: NY NOW Is On The RAG Over Kennedy Backing Obama

Hypocrisy at its finest........

Al & Jesse can't open their mouth, BO can't make it seem like he is a "black candidate", blacks are being stereotyped as voting for BO because he is black but.............

it's not a problem for Billary???


:smh::smh::smh:
 
Re: NY NOW Is On The RAG Over Kennedy Backing Obama

Man.............
Check this shit out


"Sen. Kennedy’s endorsement of Hillary Clinton’s opponent in the Democratic presidential primary campaign has really hit women hard," said the statement. "Women have forgiven Kennedy, stuck up for him, stood by him, hushed the fact that he was late in his support of Title IX, the ERA, the Family Leave and Medical Act to name a few."

"And now the greatest betrayal! We are repaid with his abandonment!" the statement continues. "He’s picked the new guy over us. He’s joined the list of progressive white men who can’t or won’t handle the prospect of a woman president who is Hillary Clinton."

:lol: Is it me or do these bitches sound like a chick who's husband bounced on her after 15 years of marriage or some shit? Does anyone edit their bullshit?
These dykes are rockin strapons, smoking cigars and wearing berets n shit :lol:


But the NOW state chapter suggested Monday Kennedy's decision was a larger representation of society’s ongoing disrespect for women's rights.

"This latest move by Kennedy is so telling about the status of and respect for women’s rights, women’s voices, women’s equality, women’s authority and our ability – indeed, our obligation — to promote and earn and deserve and elect, unabashedly, a president that is the first woman after centuries of men who ‘know what’s best for us.’”

:hmm:

Will anyone use the same argument to accuse NOW of being racist for being opposed to a black man becoming president?


Open letter to Hillary? Shit they probably had the lesbian drop squad waiting for the okay to take Bill out of the picture.


Hillary inspired me to come up with a new sexist saying - "In front of every successful woman is a strong man" :lol:
 
Re: NY NOW Is On The RAG Over Kennedy Backing Obama

Fuck em. They didn't have shit to say when bill was fucking over his wife. No protest, no holding back donations, no pussy lockdowns, not a damn thing to protect a woman from those bad, evil men.

Now they want to talk shit about the evils of men? GTFOH. This selective outrage is embarrassing.

-VG
 
Re: NY NOW Is On The RAG Over Kennedy Backing Obama

^^^^^ What they said . . .

QueEx
 
Ted Kennedy's endorsement will have a marginal effect at most. It is doubtful that he along with Kerry and Deval Patrick will be able to deliver Massachusetts. Mayor Menino of Boston and other local politicians control the party apparatus and is solidly behind Clinton.

I will say that Kennedy knows a thing or 2 about fracturing the democratic party since he challenged the incumbent Democrat Jimmy Carter for the nomination in 1980 causing democrats to be divided and lose to Reagan. There were other reasons also but a united party would have mitigated one reason, John Andersons third party campaign, with would have been enough to put Carter over the top. Reagan won in a squeaker and could have easily been defeated.

With all that said this endorsement will get Obama some good press for a couple days and maybe a few points in the polls but nothing more.
 
Back
Top