Clinton, Obama prepare for battle in Wisconsin
By Caren Bohan
MILWAUKEE (Reuters) - John McCain, with little Republican opposition, focused on the November presidential election on Sunday while Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton prepared for their next big fight in Wisconsin.
With eight straight wins under his belt, Obama was hoping to make it two more on Tuesday in Wisconsin and Hawaii, where he was born. Recent polls have him ahead in Wisconsin, but not by much.
"This is something really different that's happening from anything I've seen in politics, and I think that it is going to be a close race," Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle, an Obama supporter, said on "Fox News Sunday." "It's very likely Barack Obama will win."
Bad winter weather forced both Democrats to cancel campaign stops in Wisconsin on Sunday.
Clinton, the New York senator who has seen her big lead in the national polls disappear, called off all scheduled events and instead visited several spots in Milwaukee, where she had spent the night.
"I need your help on Tuesday," she told one family as she mingled with voters at Miss Katie's diner and sat down for a lunch of corned beef hash and eggs. Asked what she thought her chances were in the election, she said, "I'm feeling good today."
Obama, the Illinois senator who would be the first black U.S. president, traveled to North Carolina on Sunday morning to seek former opponent John Edwards' endorsement. Both Obama and Clinton, who already met with Edwards, hope to attract the former North Carolina senator's supporters.
Obama and Edwards, who dropped out of the Democratic race in January, discussed "the state of the campaign and the pressing issues facing American families," said Obama spokesman Bill Burton.
Edwards had emphasized the needs of working people during his candidacy, and Clinton has picked up on his message of economic populism.
'I CAN OUT-CAMPAIGN THEM'
McCain, the Arizona senator and prisoner of war during the Vietnam conflict, has all but clinched the Republican nomination even though his chief rival, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, is still in the race.
In an interview aired on ABC's "This Week" on Sunday, McCain looked ahead to the fall campaign and said he would paint the Democrats as liberal while stressing his conservative credentials.
"I can out-campaign them, and I can out-debate them, and I can out-perform them in what I think my vision for America is more in keeping with the majority of Americans," McCain said.
But McCain has had problems getting the conservative wing of his own party behind him. He said he was making progress toward that end.
"We've got to reunite the party, and we've got to re-energize the party," he said. "And I'm prepared to do that. We've got plenty of time. But I won't waste a day." Continued...






