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Clinton Is Bracing for a Last Stand

Falls Behind in Delegates, Replaces Aide
By JOSH GERSTEIN, Staff Reporter of the Sun | February 11, 2008

With Senator Clinton racking up a string of recent defeats in the Democratic presidential contest, her campaign manager is departing and being replaced by an aide who served as Mrs. Clinton's chief of staff during her years as first lady in the White House.

The installation of the campaign's new chief, Margaret Williams, and the departure of the former head, Patti Solis Doyle, came as Mrs. Clinton's rival for the nomination, Senator Obama of Illinois, yesterday swept caucuses in the state of Maine. Mr. Obama won 59% of the delegates to the state convention that will select national delegates, while Mrs. Clinton had 41%, with 91% of the precincts reporting. On Saturday, Mr. Obama also prevailed by healthy margins at caucuses in Nebraska, Louisiana, Washington, and the Virgin Islands.

In an e-mail message to colleagues, Ms. Solis Doyle, who moved to Iowa last year to oversee Mrs. Clinton's ultimately unsuccessful effort there, alluded to some exhaustion but made no reference to the campaign's difficulties or the challenges it faces in the coming weeks.

"I have been proud to manage this campaign, and prouder still to call Hillary my friend for more than sixteen years. I know that she will make a great President," Ms. Solis Doyle wrote. "This has already been the longest Presidential campaign in the history of our nation, and one that has required enormous sacrifices from all of us and our families." A campaign spokesman said the aide left of her own accord.

Mrs. Clinton issued a statement praising Ms. Solis Doyle "for an extraordinary job" that put the nomination "within reach." The former first lady said she was "lucky" to have Ms. Williams taking the helm. "I know she will lead our campaign with great skill towards the nomination," the New York senator said.

Beginning on Super Tuesday last week, when the two top Democrats essentially tied in a 22-state showdown, Mrs. Clinton's aides have acknowledged that Mr. Obama was likely to score a series of wins until March 4, when the Clinton campaign believes it can prevail in Ohio and Texas. However, Mrs. Clinton's team may not have expected that Mr. Obama's margins in the February contests could push him out front in the delegate race.

During a conference call with reporters on Wednesday, Mrs. Clinton's communications director, Howard Wolfson, seemed to predict that Mrs. Clinton would maintain her lead in the delegate count, even as Mr. Obama notched some victories this month.

"We think that we are in the pole position because we have a lead overall in delegates. We think it is going to be very difficult for Senator Obama to make up that lead because of the way in which the party allocates its delegates proportionally. So we feel very good about that, but this is going to be a neck and neck contest for the foreseeable future," Mr. Wolfson told reporters. "Senator Obama does enjoy some advantages in the contests in the rest of February but not in a way that should permit to him to overcome our lead in delegates."

By last night, however, Mrs. Clinton's lead in the delegate race already seemed to have evaporated. The CBS News count had Mr. Obama at 1,134 delegates and Mrs. Clinton at 1,131, with 2,025 needed to secure the nomination under current rules. CNN, ABC News, and the Associated Press had Mrs. Clinton narrowly ahead, though it appeared the balance might shift in Mr. Obama's favor after tomorrow's primaries in Maryland, Virginia, and the nation's capital.

In an e-mail last night, Mr. Wolfson said he had not intended to suggest that Mrs. Clinton would remain ahead in the delegate count through February, but only that she would emerge victorious. "I meant overall," he said. "We will be the nominee."

A professor of politics at the University of Virginia, Larry Sabato, said the Illinois senator's showing, particularly in caucus states, has taken the Clinton camp by surprise. "They obviously underestimated how good a month Barack Obama was going to have. They're going to have to try to put a stop to it," the analyst said.

Mr. Sabato said Mrs. Clinton's campaign needs a win in Wisconsin on February 19 to slow or reverse Mr. Obama's momentum. "She will have to make a stand there. They can't wait until March 4th and Texas and Ohio," the professor said.


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One going down, and one to go! [MORE]

Henry 

Feb 11, 2008 06:03

The sins of Bubba have ended in defeat for his wife, she cannot recover. Sadly Obama is the choice [MORE]

Ron 

Feb 11, 2008 22:28

I think Senator Clinton is on shaky ground and she is losing her balance. The phenomenal wave of Senator Obama's... [MORE]

PrimeTimeMom 

Feb 11, 2008 23:43

Hillary's, Bill's, backers' Clinton machine would NEVER let a faithful servant go... unless it was to her/his/their benefit. Absolut power... [MORE]

John Underwood 

Feb 11, 2008 23:44

Fellow Obama supporters, the cynics we have proved wrong...but it isn't over yet! FIGHT LIKE WE ARE LOSING(we are down... [MORE]

Chris 

Feb 11, 2008 06:39

A movement alright, one with no substance a lot of platitudes and gibberish. What does it all mean, is it... [MORE]

Suzanne Wolf 

Feb 11, 2008 21:42

...please stand aside and let a new generation of hope and dreams rise to the forefront of American politics. It... [MORE]

Salvador Diaz 

Feb 12, 2008 00:05

So, according to the "current rules," it takes 2,025 delegates to win the Democrat nomination? Look for the Clintons to... [MORE]

Frank Tyrrell 

Feb 11, 2008 06:54

Only accept responsibility for for winning. When you are loosing, look for a scape goat, in this case Patti Doyle. [MORE]

Hank Fields 

Feb 11, 2008 07:23

Clinton's campaign is crumbling, unable to stem the Obama tide. It's time for drastic measures on the eve of the... [MORE]

gilbi 

Feb 11, 2008 07:41

Maggie Williams - name sounds familiar - something about missing files, covering for the First Lady, things like that? Loyal... [MORE]

jim brown 

Feb 11, 2008 20:07

Hopefully the folks in D C-Maryland-Virginia-see her for what she is and come out in masses and vote against her.... [MORE]

Pat 

Feb 11, 2008 21:30

A telling moment in Hillary's run when in the heat of the last strech before the campaign peaks Hillary choses... [MORE]

dan reily 

Feb 11, 2008 07:47

I think it would be interesting if Barak became the nominee simply because it would essentially be telling Hillary that... [MORE]

Reese 

Feb 11, 2008 19:10

Isn't it a guilty pleasure to watch her flailing in this frantic downward spiral, giving us a prolonged look into... [MORE]

Tam 

Feb 11, 2008 22:37

Swept in all 5 contests this weekend says a lot. HRC knows that she is in trouble heading into Tuesdays... [MORE]

Sean 

Feb 11, 2008 07:57

Yes, with this change we keep hope that the great movement towards a just and Socialist Society will not fade.... [MORE]

Ken 

Feb 11, 2008 07:57

Hillary is falling like a rock in the polls. Crying only helped a little so now she complains about the... [MORE]

Marvin 

Feb 11, 2008 08:01

More reporting by Mr. Gerstein would be appreciated. He might do one on the actual designations of national convention delegates... [MORE]

stella barnhill 

Feb 11, 2008 08:07

Funny, but Hillary C loses five primaries in a row and people still call her viable... If Obama had lost... [MORE]

David G. 

Feb 11, 2008 08:08

While Barak Obama is forging forward with a great campaign, Hillary keeps reorganizing her staff......and you expect this woman to... [MORE]

Dan 

Feb 11, 2008 08:10

Obama, is doing great among college kids, the far left and blacks. These have appointed him the new Kennedy! However... [MORE]

John Stein 

Feb 11, 2008 08:10

Wofson: "We will be the nominee???" Hillary when Bill was president: "We are the president???" Lovely, just lovely. Fire everyone from the staff... [MORE]

Darrel 

Feb 11, 2008 08:12

I think it's time for Hillary to start looking for those cookie recipes. It's over! [MORE]

naragonl 

Feb 11, 2008 08:12

The problem with the Clinton campaign isn't Clinton's campaign chief. It is the candidate herself. Hillary Clinton is not likeable.... [MORE]

Patrick Curry 

Feb 11, 2008 08:16

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