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Clinton opens up seven-point poll lead over rival



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Published Date: 21 March 2008
FOR the first time in weeks, Hillary Clinton has moved into a significant lead over her rival Barack Obama in the race for the Democratic party nomination, according to a Gallup poll.
The national survey of 1,209 Democratic voters gave the New York senator a 49 per cent to 42 per cent edge over Mr Obama. The poll, carried out between 14-18 March, has a 3 per cent margin of error.

Gallup said it was the first statistically
significant lead for Mrs Clinton since just after the Super Tuesday primaries in early February. The two candidates have largely been locked in a statistical tie since then, with Mr Obama last holding a lead over Clinton in a poll on 11-13 March.

New polling data also showed the Republican nominee John McCain leading Mrs Clinton by a slender 48 to 45 per cent margin, with the Illinois senator slightly further behind, at 47 per cent to 43 per cent.

The two Democrats crossed swords on the fifth anniversary of the start of the Iraq war. Mr Obama, who opposed the invasion, said Mrs Clinton, who voted for it, could not be trusted to end the conflict. "Ask yourself," he told a campaign crowd, "who do you trust to end a war: someone who opposed the war from the beginning or someone who started opposing it when they started preparing a run for president?"

The Clinton campaign quickly fired back that the opposite was true.

"The reality is that Senator Obama took practically no action to end the war until he started his White House run, while Senator Clinton has been a consistent critic of Iraq for many years," a campaign spokesman said.





The full article contains 293 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Snuffy Ivy,

Aberdeen 21/03/2008 02:37:41
Where's the news in one loser being ahead of another loser?
2

Liberal for life,

Dunblane 21/03/2008 08:29:34
~1 - The Democrats will win the presidency - who that will be is questionable but nevertheless the next US president will be a Democrat, not a Republican.
3

Doh,

21/03/2008 09:17:28
#2

I hope so but i am not so certain,
Hilary also stinks of New Labour.
4

Irn-Bruce,

Edinburgh 21/03/2008 10:08:43
Why is this story in the "UK" section?
5

jaybs,

NEWTON 22/03/2008 10:06:59
Mark Penn who is Hillary's main spokesman shouted out loud about this poll, but sadly it was taken before Barack Obama's historic speech and the following day in this Daily Poll, Hillary was down to a lead of 5 points and then yesterday it was further down t0 2 points (with a 3 point error)

Hillary and her team are so arrogant, she got off to such a good start and then once she started to lose one after another Primary she had to turn the debate into a personal attack of lies and smears against Obama instead of policy, but after Bill's attitude to the American Public in his last days in office what more should we expect.

 

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