Sunday, January 13, 2008

Obama Calls Clinton Allegations “Ludicrous”

Obama Calls Clinton Allegations “Ludicrous”

Senator Barack Obama told reporters on a conference call today that Hillary Clinton’s accusations that his campaign was trying to “deliberately” mislead the public about her comments on Martin Luther King, Jr. were “ludicrous.”The conference call was set up to showcase new endorser, Senator Claire McCaskill (D-MO), but when the call was opened to questions, Obama was asked by a reporter about Clinton’s comments on Meet the Press this morning, during which she spoke further about the Obama camp’s attempt to distort her comments.

Obama responded incredulously, “This is fascinating to me. I mean, I think what we saw this morning is why the American people are tired of Washington politicians and the games they play. But Senator Clinton made an unfortunate remark, an ill-advised remark, about King and Lyndon Johnson. I didn’t make the statement. I haven’t remarked on it and she, I think, offended some folks who felt that somehow diminished King’s role in bringing about the Civil Rights Act. She is free to explain that, but the notion that somehow this is our doing is ludicrous. I have to point out that instead of telling the American people about her positive vision for America, Senator Clinton spent an hour talking about me and my record in a way that was flat out wrong.”

“People were offended at her words and she can explain them however she’d like. However, I think that Congressman Clyburn and other leaders across the country would take great offense at the suggestion that their response was somehow engineered by this campaign,” said Obama spokesman Bill Burton.

...In my opinion, this campaign is like a merry-go-round. Of course candidates are going to talk about each other and their wrong doings, that's how they get people to believe what they're saying. Obama and Clinton are the biggest issue right now in the media and everywhere else for that matter, so no matter what they say about each other it's never really going to be good. The one thing that they might have an advantage of is catching, or noticing something that the other has said that will offend people in some way, in which Obama did. Either way, they both have their tactics and will continue to use them until the finish line is reached.

1 comment:

Mr. Carlson said...

Too bad there's only one more comment , and I don't know who you are, or I could give you credit for this.