Ferraro Leaves Clinton Campaign After Remarks on Race
By Glenn Thrush, Newsday, Melville, N.Y.
Mar. 13–WASHINGTON — Geraldine Ferraro, the newest member of the 2008 Foot-in-Mouth Club, stepped down from a fundraising role in Hillary Rodham Clinton’s campaign yesterday but refused to recant controversial comments about Barack Obama’s race being a factor in his success.
Last night, Clinton said “I certainly do repudiate” Ferraro’s comments — and added an apology for Bill Clinton’s suggestion that Obama’s South Carolina victory was comparable to Jesse Jackson’s win there in his failed 1984 presidential bid.
“I am sorry if anyone was offended,” she told a gathering of black newspaper publishers. “We can be proud of both Jesse Jackson and Senator Obama.”
Ferraro, the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 1984, sparked a firestorm earlier this week by suggesting Obama’s race had helped propel him to the front of the pack.
“I am stepping down from your finance committee so I can speak for myself and you can continue to speak for yourself about what is at stake in this campaign,” Ferraro wrote to Clinton. “The Obama campaign is attacking me to hurt you. I won’t let that happen.”
Clinton has distanced herself from the remarks. Her staff said Ferraro’s decision to step aside was voluntary.
Earlier in the day, Ferraro said on ABC’s “Good Morning America” that the Obama campaign has cried racism every time a negative comment is made about him.
Ferraro made a similar comment in 1988, when Jesse Jackson was a Democratic primary candidate: “If Jesse Jackson were not black, he wouldn’t be in the race.”
Obama told reporters in Chicago yesterday, “I don’t think that there is a directive in the Clinton campaign, ‘Let’s heighten the racial elements in the campaign.’” He added that Ferraro’s remarks were “wrong-headed” but not racist.
“If you pulled out a handbook of how to weigh your assets and liabilities in a presidential race, I don’t think my name or my skin color would be in the asset column,” he said.
A fiery Clinton, seeking to put the episode behind her, suggested she’d accept new primary elections in Florida and Michigan, rejecting calls by some party officials to stage low-cost caucuses instead. Clinton won both primaries, but the state’s delegates won’t be seated at the August party convention because both states violated rules preventing them from holding their contests before Feb. 5.
Yesterday, Obama’s advisers rejected a plan to use mail-in ballots for a do-over vote.
—–
To see more of Newsday, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.newsday.com
Copyright (c) 2008, Newsday, Melville, N.Y.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.
