Obama aide quits in ‘monster’ row
The Scotsman newspaper quoted Ms.Samantha Power( Who is an aide to presidential hope ful Sen Barack Obama) as saying: “She is a monster” speaking off the record “she is stooping to anything” in reference to Mrs. Clinton.”
Ms Power is a Harvard professor who has advised Mr Obama on foreign policy.
Announcing her resignation as an adviser, she said: “Last Monday, I made inexcusable remarks that are at marked variance from my oft-stated admiration for Senator Clinton and from the spirit, tenor, and purpose of the Obama campaign.”
Samantha Power said she had tried to retract the comments
An adviser to Barack Obama has resigned after a Scottish newspaper quoted her calling rival US Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton “a monster”.
Ms Power, who won a Pulitzer Prize in 2003, was speaking to the Scotsman about Mrs Clinton’s campaign strategy in Ohio, a state the New York senator won in Tuesday’s primary elections.
A spokesman for the Obama campaign, Bill Burton, said: “Senator Obama decries such characterisations, which have no place in this campaign.”
Shortly before Ms Power stepped down, advisers to Mrs Clinton had held a conference call with reporters in which they called for her resignation.
Ms Power had already issued an apology and Mr. Obama’s campaign had already condemned her remarks
Comments made by Ms Power about Mr Obama’s Iraq strategy in an interview with the BBC earlier this week have also caused a stir.
Ms Power said the Illinois senator’s position that he would withdraw all troops within 16 months was a “best-case scenario” that he would revisit if he became president.
The Clinton camp criticized her comments as inconsistent with those of Mr Obama on the campaign trail.
“He has attacked me continuously for having no hard exit date, and now we learn he doesn’t have one, in fact he doesn’t have a plan at all,” Mrs Clinton told reporters while campaigning in Mississippi.
Obama campaign manager David Plouffe responded that Mr Obama’s plan to withdraw about two brigades a month if elected was a “rock solid commitment” to US voters.
Senior Democrats fear that weeks of attacks and mudslinging between the two camps could damage the party and cost it support in November’s presidential election.
Democrats fear dueling between the campaigns may hurt the party.
Howard Dean, chairman of the national Democratic Party, has warned that the tone of the campaign “may get nastier” and that the party must seek to prevent that from happening.
DEMOCRATIC DELEGATE RACE
BARACK OBAMA: 1,569
Delegates won on 4 March: 183
States won: 24
HILLARY CLINTON: 1,462
Delegates won on 4 March: 186
States won: 16
Delegates needed to secure nomination:
2,025. Source: AP
1 response so far ↓
1 Judge Walter // Mar 7, 2008 at 6:06 pm
While Senator Obama campaigns on this plan to end the war, his top advisers tell people abroad that he will not rely on his own plan should he become president.
Think about that Obama Girl online.
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