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Obama welcomes Edwards endorsement
By Charles Babington, AP writer | May 15, 2008
Obama gets John Edwards endorsement
Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., right, speaks as he is joined by former Democratic presidential hopeful John Edwards at a rally in Grand Rapids, Mich., Wednesday, May 14, 2008. Edwards endorsed Obama. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. - It would have meant more in February or March, but John Edwards' endorsement of Barack Obama for the Democratic presidential nomination was welcomed nonetheless by a politician eager to turn the page.

Edwards' surprise appearance at a rally Wednesday steered some of the attention away from Hillary Rodham Clinton's landslide win over Obama in Tuesday's West Virginia primary. Despite the victory, the former first lady faces long odds in trying to deny Obama the presidential nomination.

Edwards had been their chief rival from 2007 through last January. But after finishing second to Obama in Iowa, the former North Carolina senator and 2004 vice presidential nominee placed third in the next three contests, then left the race.

Obama and Clinton immediately sought his support, but Edwards stayed mum until Wednesday. The endorsement would have carried more clout had Edwards made it months ago, when the outcome of the Democratic contest was very much in doubt.

"We are here tonight because the Democratic voters have made their choice, and so have I," Edwards said to thunderous applause. He said Obama "stands with me" in a fight to cut poverty in half within 10 years, a claim Obama confirmed moments later.

Edwards told the rally that "we must come together as Democrats" to defeat Republican John McCain in November.

He also praised Clinton.

"We are a stronger party" because of her involvement and "we're going to have a stronger nominee in the fall because of her work," he said.

Then as Edwards sat on stage and watched, Obama gave one of his most animated addresses in days, much of it devoted to fighting poverty. In America, he said, "you should never be homeless, you should never be hungry."

Clinton campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe said in a statement: "We respect John Edwards, but as the voters of West Virginia showed last night, this thing is far from over."

A person close to Edwards, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he wanted to get involved now to begin unifying the party. Edwards and Obama spoke by phone Tuesday night, and Edwards agreed to fly to Grand Rapids the next day.

Edwards didn't even tell many of his former top advisers of his decision because he wanted to inform Clinton personally, said the person close to him. His wife, Elizabeth, who has said she thinks Clinton has the superior health care plan, did not accompany him and is not part of the endorsement.

Obama and Oregon: More in common than "O"

PORTLAND, Ore. - Oregon is fertile ground for Barack Obama, the self-described "change" candidate. The state that has led the way in everything from bike trails to assisted suicide is also the first to vote entirely by mail.

Oregon's 2 million-plus voters began receiving ballots more than two weeks ago, and 22 percent have returned them, according to the secretary of state's office.

The ballots will be tallied May 20 in the Democratic primary between Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Election officials said turnout appears to be strong in Portland, its populous suburbs, and Eugene, home to the University of Oregon. That bodes well for Obama, who has drawn large crowds in stops in those places and who has outperformed Clinton among urban and young voters throughout the primary.

"There's very high intensity and interest, a huge volume of calls, more interest than we ever have seen in a primary election," said Annette Newingham, the county clerk in Lane County, which includes Eugene. Her staff is bracing for turnout that could top 75 percent, she said. That is a figure more often seen in general elections.

Clinton, assisted by her husband, has worked the small-town strategy that was so effective in Pennsylvania. The former president has visited eastern and coastal communities, hoping to counter Obama's strength in more urban areas. Their daughter, Chelsea, went to Corvallis, home of Oregon State University, to make inroads in the college vote.

The New York senator, who is scheduled to return to the state Friday and Saturday, has released a list of Oregon-specific promises. Many are aimed at rural voters: restoring federal payments to timber counties to make up for lost logging revenues; giving the state authority over siting liquefied natural gas terminals; thinning forests choked with young and dead trees.

Portland and its suburbs seem tailor-made for Obama. Residents are liberal-leaning, upwardly mobile, well educated and strongly opposed to the Iraq war. About 45 percent of the statewide Democratic primary vote in recent elections has come from the Portland area.

Obama will not be able to count on the kind of big turnout from black voters that has boosted his vote totals in some southern states. Blacks account for only 1.7 percent of Oregon's population, compared with 12.4 percent nationally, according to the Census Bureau.

Also, the rest of the state is not as young or as hip as Portland. Overall, Oregon's population is slightly older and has a slightly lower income than nationally, 2006 census data shows.

Gov. Ted Kulongoski, who is backing Clinton, said her visits to the state have helped raise her profile with the state's voters.

"I think she did a very good job when she was here, and that did have a leveling effect. I still think he's ahead in the state," Kulongoski said.

Obama's campaign has opened 20 offices across Oregon compared with Clinton's 10 and has drawn on an enthusiastic volunteer corps for weekend canvassing and door-knocking. The campaign claims to have registered 30,000 new Democrats, including former independent and Republican voters.

Obama has done better than Clinton among self-described independents in competitive primaries this year, 54 percent to 40 percent, according to exit polls for The Associated Press.

"Hillary Clinton, she never says uncle, never admits even misspeaking, whereas Obama, when he has had problems, he has tried to address them in a reasonable fashion," said Mary Deckert, a new home sales agent from Corvallis who switched from unaffiliated to Democrat so she could vote for Obama. "And I know people say, you can't just go around the world talking to rogue leaders, but I like the idea that we would have someone who would talk to people with whom we don't necessarily agree."

Clinton has trounced Obama among voters age 65 and over.

Consider Jean Monsebrowten, a substitute teacher from coastal North Bend, who turned out recently to see Bill Clinton. "This used to be a dirty, rotten, little industrial town that I loved," Monsebrowten, 73, said of her hometown. "Now, we sell art. It's been a difficult adjustment — our children all have to leave."

She said she feels Hillary Clinton is "more of a known commodity" than Obama.

"I am concerned about who Obama will bring into his administration," Monsebrowten said. "I don't know who it would be."

Obama's most prominent Oregon supporters include Reps. Earl Blumenauer and David Wu, whose districts are part Portland, part suburbs, and Pete DeFazio, whose district includes Eugene. Rep. Darlene Hooley, whose district includes state capital Salem stretching northward to the Portland suburbs, backs Clinton.

Campaign operatives from both sides say female voters are key. Women are about 56.6 percent of registered Democrats in Oregon and tend to vote more reliably than their male counterparts.

Clinton leads Obama among women 52 percent to 45 percent in Democratic primaries where both have campaigned, according to exit polls. But in last month's AP-Ipsos national poll, the two were virtually even among females — Clinton 44 percent, Obama 42 percent.

Stephen Delmore, an undecided voter from Philomath, a former logging center south of Salem, said he has been watching both Clinton and Obama closely.

"The longer it goes, the more you see what they are truly like under pressure, what kind of people they are," Delmore said. "She seems more stable, but I also like to be inspired, too."

___

Associated Press Writers Brad Cain in Salem and Jeff Barnard in North Bend contributed to this report.


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