Clinton battles to keep New Hampshire from Obama

Sun Jan 6, 2008 5:34pm EST
 
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By Ellen Wulfhorst and Jason Szep

NASHUA, New Hampshire (Reuters) - Democrat Hillary Clinton, her back against the wall in New Hampshire, battled to keep the state from swinging to rival Barack Obama on Sunday by accusing him of talking about change but failing to get results.

In the hotly contested Republican race, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney tried to raise doubts about Arizona Sen. John McCain, who is threatening him in the state ahead of its vote on Tuesday.

The race was taking a negative turn on both sides in a state that is vital to efforts by Clinton and Romney to revitalize their campaigns after disappointing showings last Thursday in Iowa.

New Hampshire's primary is the next battleground in the state-by-state process of choosing Republican and Democratic candidates for November's election to replace President George W. Bush.

Clinton, a New York senator and former first lady trying to be the first woman U.S. president, launched a new get-tough strategy, a day after a debate in which she sounded frustrated that while Obama talks about changing the United States, she believes she has actually carried out change.

"It is about how we bring about change by making sure we nominate and elect a doer and not a talker, that we begin to separate out rhetoric from reality," Clinton told a large, enthusiastic crowd in Nashua.

Accusing Illinois Sen. Obama and former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards of not showing leadership on a litany of issues, she said, "That's not change," and the crowd joined in with her.

"That's not change," they yelled.  Continued...

 
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