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2008
race for the White House begins
Reuters/Composite/Files
Top row (L-R) Republican Sen. John McCain, Democratic
Sen. Hillary Clinton and Democratic Sen. Evan Bayh. Bottom row (L-R)
former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, Democratic Senator Barack Obama
and Democratic Sen. John Kerry. All are seen as potential contenders
for the 2008 presidential election.
By
Carlos
Hamann
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com 11 09 06
The end of the 2006 congressional elections marked the start of the
2008 race for the White House on Wednesday, with Democrat Hillary Clinton
and Republicans John McCain and Rudolph Giuliani as the front-runners.
No major candidates have officially announced plans to run for their
party's nomination, but with the opposition Democrats now in control
of the US House of Representatives and the balance in the Senate still
undetermined, putative hopefuls are positioning themselves for a 2008
White House bid to succeed President George W. Bush, who is limited
to two, consecutive four-year terms.
"We believe in our country, and we're going to take it back, starting
tonight!" Clinton told supporters in New York late Tuesday, following
her re-election as senator for New York.
Asked repeatedly whether she will make a bid for the White House, the
former US first lady, 59, has been non-committal.
"Obviously people are talking about whether or not I will or should
run for president, and I'm flattered by that, but I have made no decisions,"
she said recently.
Clinton is married to the party's most popular figure, former president
Bill Clinton, who is widely seen as a master political strategist. But
her candidacy would also raise memories of the less-savory aspects of
her husband's 1993-2001 presidency, including the Monica Lewinsky sex
scandal.
Hillary Clinton has a substantial lead in early polls for her party's
nomination: An October 27 CNN poll showed she has 38 percent support
among Democrats, 11 points ahead of her nearest rival, Illinois Senator
Barack Obama.
Clinton had enjoyed a 28 percent lead among Democrats before Obama,
born to a Kenyan father and a white mother from Kansas, announced in
late October that he was considering a White House run.
In recent weeks, the charismatic Obama, 45, has been traveling the country
supporting Democratic candidates for Congress and hawking his second
book, "The Audacity of Hope."
However, the two leading Democrats are running against history: No US
senator has been elected president since John F. Kennedy in 1960.
On the Republican side, the same CNN poll showed Giuliani, 62, who served
as mayor of New York during the September 11, 2001 attacks, leading
his party's nomination with 29 percent, followed closely by McCain,
a senator from Arizona, with 27 percent.
Giuliani's hopes were buoyed by a WNBC/Marist poll released October
4 that showed he would beat Clinton in a head-to-head race for the US
presidency.
The poll found that 49 percent of voters would back the man dubbed 'America's
Mayor' against 42 percent for Clinton. Nine percent were undecided.
"Democrats seem to support (Clinton) as their main candidate for
president -- she's way ahead of anybody else -- and it seems like Republicans
are just waiting for her to be the candidate so they can vote against
her," Giuliani told the New York Daily News in August.
But to be nominated Giuliani would first have to defeat McCain, a straight-talking
politician whose name is often linked to the noun "maverick."
"This is a wake-up call for the Republican Party," said McCain,
commenting on Tuesday's results.
McCain has been in the national spotlight since 1973, when he was released
after more than five years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. He failed
in his 2000 bid for the Republican Party's presidential nomination against
Bush.
If elected, McCain, now 70, would become the oldest US president to
take office, beating Ronald Reagan, who was 69 when he took the job
in 1981.
Democratic dark horse candidates include:
- Senator John Kerry, the 2004 candidate, who may have seen his hopes
dashed after seen as a slight against US troops in Iraq. Kerry, 62,
apologized for his "botched joke," but the remarks were aired
for days on television.
- Former vice president and 2000 Democratic presidential hopeful Al
Gore, 58, who has made warning about the effects of global warming his
main cause. Gore says he is not interested in the job.
- Kerry's 2004 running mate, former senator John Edwards, 53. The ex-senator
has been heading a research center studying poverty at the University
of North Carolina and has delivered speeches in states important for
the nomination, such as New Hampshire and Iowa.
- New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, 59, former US ambassador to the
United Nations and former energy secretary under president Clinton.
Richardson, who is Hispanic, could tap into one of the country's fastest-growing
segment of new voters.
"Historically governors have done well in seeking the White House,"
Richardson said Wednesday on television network MSNBC, adding that he
would take a decision on running in January.
Other possible Republican candidates include:
- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, 51, who polled second (behind
Giuliani and ahead of McCain) in a September 20 WNBC/Marist poll among
Republicans. Rice seems to enjoy the speculation in interviews but has
made no indication that she wants the job.
- Newt Gingrich, 63, who led the 1994 Republican Party takeover of the
House of Representatives and served as speaker. Gingrich, however, remains
a divisive figure who may have little national support.
AFP
08 2137 GMT 11 06
Copyright©
2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.
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