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Saturday, June 07, 2008

Hillary Clinton Endorses Obama Gives Full Support

This was an excellent speech, and it was thrilling to see her specifically reject the racial division that her campaign cynically sought to exploit. A home run.

CNN: Clinton endorses Obama, calls for party unity

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York announced Saturday she was suspending her presidential campaign, saying in a speech to her supporters, "I will continue to stand strong with you every time, every place and every way that I can."

Sen. Hillary Cllinton thanks her supporters during a speech in which she endorsed Sen. Barack Obama.

She urged the cheering crowd to support Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, presumptive Democratic nominee, in his bid for the White House, saying they should "take our energy, our passion and our strength and do all we can to help elect Barack Obama ... I ask all of you to join me in working as hard for Barack Obama as you have for me."

1 Comments:

Anonymous Marie said...

Unity between Hillary and Obama supporters will never be achieved unless the individuals at hand are willing to find the inner peace with which healing takes place. Eric Kampmann has a super nondenominational daily devotional that IF READ by political supportors, all of whom are comsumed (including myself) with this election..... will resolve to inner peace & healing. Hillary has taken the first step, but UNITY will only follow after some peaceful meditations. READ ON!!

4:03 PM  

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Subscribe with Bloglines "I think this movement is, at its heart, a religious one, not in the narrow my line to God gives me all the right answers on lots of issues sense, but in a powerful, converging and unifying sense. Perhaps the time of claiming exclusive religious certainty that polarizes and vilifies is waning, finally, and a new movement stirs -- a recognition that at the heart of our faith (and, much to our surprise, we find it at the heart of virtually all faiths) is the simple claim that God is gently but surely guiding us to live lives of compassion and solidarity." ELCA Bishop Peter Rogness