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Another woman enters the ring of 2008 electoral circus

September 03, 2008|By RON SMITH

Like nearly every other person, I was surprised when Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain selected Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin to be his running mate. I'll bet she was pretty surprised herself when the call came from the old gent. Then came the news that one of the Palin daughters was pregnant. She's 17, and we are told she is going to keep the baby and will marry the young man who impregnated her. Now that's living the pro-life way. What fun. All of this adds yet more spice to the wonderful circus that is the 2008 American presidential race.

Who could have written this script, say, two years ago? At that time, Sen. Hillary Clinton was thought to be the unstoppable candidate, sure to be the Democratic nominee. She had the name and she had the fame. There was a problem, to be sure. The senator from New York, according to numerous polls, is heartily disliked by millions of Americans. But Sen. Barack Obama? Oh, yeah. He's the skinny black guy from Illinois who spoke so well at the 2004 convention. He thinks he can be president? You've got to be kidding

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The joke, as we now know, turned out to be on Mrs. Clinton, as Mr. Obama and his brain trust outplayed the Clinton team from the outset, parlaying early success in caucus states into enough primary wins to eke out a narrow but definitive edge in delegates to the nominating convention in Denver.

Speaking of which, was there anything more side-splitting than the Clintons delivering their speeches in support of Mr. Obama? One would need a heart of stone not to laugh at the notion that either member of the nation's former first couple have anything but anger bubbling up in their brains when forced to eat separate slices of humble pie on national television, knowing they were this close to realizing a triumphant return to the White House.

Their speeches were good, particularly Mrs. Clinton's - that lady sure can deliver the goods when it comes to political stemwinders - but to think she's not bitter about being nipped at the wire by a newcomer out of nowhere is to deny the nature of such things. Then came the Nuremberg-like gathering of tens of thousands of enthusiasts outdoors at the Denver Broncos' Invesco Field to listen to Mr. Obama's acceptance speech. It was a spectacle bound to make the candidate's horde of media groupies swoon. And swoon they did, led by the man conservatives love to hate, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann, who may have reached the point of loving Barack Obama more than he's hating President Bush.

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