Clinton seeks to cast herself as underdog vs Obama
By Caren Bohan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Sen. Hillary Clinton, viewed last year as virtually unstoppable in her bid to become the U.S. Democratic presidential nominee, is now seeking to portray herself as the underdog against rival Sen. Barack Obama.
The Clinton campaign has labeled the Illinois senator the "establishment" candidate as she tries to wrest from him the message of a vow to bring change to Washington.
But political analysts saw some irony in the New York senator's effort to seek the status of a challenger to the establishment, given that she has been a household name since her husband, Bill Clinton, ran for president in 1992.
On the day after the February 5 "Super Tuesday" nominating contests where the two Democrats fought to a draw, Clinton aides said the former first lady had faced an uphill battle in some states because of Obama's fundraising prowess and the slew of high-profile endorsements he had racked up.
"Senator Obama, really in the last couple of weeks ran an establishment campaign based on endorsements while he's saying that he was in fact a change candidate," said Clinton campaign strategist Mark Penn, listing the endorsement of Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy, a senior figure in the party, as one of several advantages Obama had.
Clinton, 60, who would be the first woman U.S. president, also made the point on the campaign trail in Maine on Saturday. "He has increasingly relied on big endorsements and celebrities to sort of attach himself to, to get the kind of validation that comes from that sort of endorsement," she said.
Later, Obama cruised to decisive wins in Louisiana, Nebraska and Washington state to gain momentum in a deadlocked, state-by-state fight with Clinton for the nomination to take on the Republican nominee in November's election.
His campaign scoffed at the notion that Obama, who would be the first black U.S. president, was an establishment candidate, saying he had grass-roots support and much of his campaign cash has come from small donors who have flocked to his Web site. Continued...






