Candidates race against clock

Sun Feb 3, 2008 12:47am EST
 
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By Ellen Wulfhorst

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Democratic presidential rivals Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama took their neck-and-neck battle to the U.S. West on Saturday while John McCain projected an air of inevitability about winning the Republican nomination ahead of crucial Super Tuesday voting.

Candidates crisscrossed the country to woo voters in the countdown toward the multi-state primaries and caucuses on February 5 that will go a long way toward establishing clear front-runners in both political parties.

Campaigning in Nashville, Tennessee, Arizona Sen. McCain told supporters he did not want to appear overconfident but was "guardedly optimistic" about Tuesday's voting.

"I assume I will be the nominee of the party," he said.

McCain's chief rival for the Republican nomination, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, said he was banking on a groundswell of conservative fear at the prospect of the more moderate McCain winning the nomination which he predicted would keep him in the race beyond Tuesday.

Speaking to reporters on a flight to Minneapolis, Romney admitted he was not the front-runner three days before Tuesday's showdown but that the past two days had seen the race crystallize.

"I don't think it's going to be over on Tuesday night," Romney said. I wish it were over in my favor, I hope it's not over against me," he said.

In incomplete results on Saturday from Maine's Republican caucus, Romney led McCain by 53 percent to 22 percent.

Speaking in Birmingham, Alabama, McCain played down concern some conservatives might oppose him, saying, "I can unite the party," he said. "I'm the most electable -- any poll will show you that -- against Senator Obama and Senator Clinton."

Leading in the polls in major states to vote on Tuesday, including California, New York and New Jersey, the Arizona senator was stopping in the capitals of Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia to argue his case.

McCain was sufficiently assured of his advantage over Romney to announce he will campaign on Monday in Massachusetts.

ROMNEY AT FUNERAL

Romney detoured earlier on Saturday from the campaign trail to attend the funeral of Mormon church leader Gordon Hinckley in Salt Lake City, drawing attention to his faith, viewed with skepticism by some conservative evangelicals.

If elected, Romney would be the first Mormon president.

Romney told reporters he would be making decisions in coming days about reassigning his staff in states where primaries were already over, but said no decisions had been made about downsizing his campaign.  Continued...

 
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