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Clinton hits Obama with ad questioning experience

HOUSTON
Fri Feb 29, 2008 5:50pm EST

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HOUSTON (Reuters) - U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton questioned rival Barack Obama's experience in handling a national security crisis on Friday as polls showed her losing ground to Obama before Tuesday's contests in Texas and Ohio.

Barack Obama

The Clinton campaign released a new television ad for airing in Texas, which along with Ohio are crucial to her chances of reversing a string of losses to Obama. It shows children sleeping peacefully in bed as a narrator says:

"It's 3 a.m. and your children are safe and asleep. But there's a phone in the White House and it's ringing. Something's happening in the world. Your vote will decide who answers that call."

The Clinton campaign hoped the new ad would convince voters she would be ready to act swiftly and decisively in case of another September 11-type crisis in the United States.

Clinton, a New York senator and former first lady once considered the favorite to win her party's presidential nomination, needs to win Texas and Ohio by wide margins next Tuesday or face the end of her candidacy.

Her struggling campaign got an important morale boost with the news she had raised $35 million in campaign contributions in February, which was the most she had taken in in one month by far. Obama aides said he did not plan to release his fund-raising total until it is due March 20 but maintained the Illinois senator had continued to out-raise in February.

Obama struck back hard at Clinton over the ad in remarks to veterans at a town hall meeting at an American Legion post in Houston. He said the ad raised a legitimate question, which he said had been answered by her 2002 Senate vote to authorize use of force in Iraq, which he said exposed poor judgment.

"I will never see the threat of terrorism as a way to scare up votes, because it's a threat that should rally this country around our common enemies. That's the judgment we need at 3 a.m.," he said.

To further blunt her attack, Obama said he had received backing from Sen. John Rockefeller, a West Virginia Democrat who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee. "Barack Obama is the most qualified person -- Democrat or Republican -- to lead our country in the face of enormous challenges," he said.

OBAMA LEADS IN TEXAS; OHIO CLOSE

Clinton has repeatedly tried to question Obama's experience but the first-term Illinois senator, who would be the first black president, has ridden a wave of support with a call for sweeping change in Washington.

At an appearance in Waco, Texas, on Friday, Clinton said Obama was "missing in action" in the Senate on key national security issues including a vote on labeling an Iranian military group a terrorist organization, and failing to hold hearings as head of a Senate subcommittee on foreign policy.

A Reuters/C-SPAN/Houston Chronicle poll released on Friday said Obama holds a slight lead in Texas, 48 percent to 42 percent, over Clinton, who would be the first woman president.

He trails Clinton 44 percent to 42 percent in Ohio -- well within the poll's margin of error of 3.8 percentage points. He had been losing to her in Ohio by double digits.

In the Republican race, front-runner John McCain holds commanding leads over his last major rival, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee. McCain, an Arizona senator, has built an unassailable advantage in delegates who will pick the nominee at the Republican Party convention in September.

But McCain spent Friday tried to distance himself from evangelical leader John Hagee, whose endorsement he embraced on Wednesday despite the pastor's controversial views about the Catholic Church.

"In no way did I intend for his endorsement to suggest that I in turn agree with all of Pastor Hagee's views, which I obviously do not," McCain said in a statement. Hagee wrote a book that claimed Adolph Hitler and the Catholic Church joined in a conspiracy to destroy Jews.

Conservative Sen. Sam Brownback issued a statement supporting McCain. "John McCain would never do anything to insult any citizen on the basis of their religious beliefs," he said.

The poll, conducted by Zogby International, found McCain with big double-digit margins over Huckabee in Texas and Ohio.

(Additional reporting by John Whitesides, Deborah Charles; writing by Steve Holland; editing by Doina Chiacu)

(To read more about the U.S. political campaign, visit Reuters "Tales from the Trail: 2008" online at blogs.reuters.com/trail08/)



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