Hillary Rodham
Clinton and Barack Obama have become embroiled in racially
tinged disputes as large numbers of black voters prepare to
get their first say in the Democratic presidential
campaign. The candidates and their surrogates are
heating up their rhetoric, and it could prove to be
combustible beyond South Carolina's January 26 primary.
Clinton, on defense over comments that she and her
husband made regarding Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy
and Obama's fitness for the White House, tried to turn
the tables on her top primary rival. She accused his
campaign of looking to score political points by
distorting their words.
Hillary Rodham
Clinton and Barack Obama have become embroiled in racially
tinged disputes as large numbers of black voters prepare to
get their first say in the Democratic presidential
campaign.
The candidates
and their surrogates are heating up their rhetoric, and it
could prove to be combustible beyond South Carolina's
January 26 primary.
Clinton, on
defense over comments that she and her husband made
regarding Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy and Obama's
fitness for the White House, tried to turn the tables
on her top primary rival. She accused his campaign of
looking to score political points by distorting their words.
Hillary Clinton
had said King's dream of racial equality was realized
only when President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, while Bill Clinton said Illinois
senator Obama was telling a ''fairy tale'' about his
opposition to the Iraq war. Black leaders have
criticized their comments, and Obama said Sunday her comment
about King was ''ill-advised.''
Barack Obama
makes stops in Nevada today. John Edwards talks to voters in
South Carolina, while Hillary Clinton campaigns in New York.
(AP)
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