FACTBOX: Profiles of presidential hopefuls
(Reuters) - Leading candidates in the race for the November 2008 presidential election headed into a new round of nominating contests on Saturday with caucuses in Nevada and a Republican primary in South Carolina.
Following are brief profiles of the main contenders:
DEMOCRATS:
HILLARY CLINTON, 60, beat rival Barack Obama on Saturday in Nevada, giving her momentum going into the South Carolina contest next Saturday. Clinton, a senator from New York, would be the first female U.S. president if elected. A former first lady, she has emphasized efforts to insure 47 million Americans without health coverage and criticized opponents for lack of experience. After a disappointing third-place finish in Iowa, Clinton bounced back to a surprise win in New Hampshire. Her once strong lead in national opinion polls has narrowed.
JOHN EDWARDS, 54, is focused on winning the January 26 Democratic primary in South Carolina, the state where he was born and where he won the primary during his unsuccessful 2004 presidential bid. He finished a distant third in Nevada. The former senator from North Carolina was the Democratic nominee for vice president in 2004. He has made combating poverty a major campaign theme and called his vote to authorize military action in Iraq a mistake. Edwards now urges withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. He edged out Clinton for second place in Iowa but came in third in New Hampshire and trails Obama and Clinton in national polls. His wife, Elizabeth, is being treated for a recurrence of cancer.
BARACK OBAMA, 46, hopes to recoup from his Nevada loss with a win in South Carolina where a majority of Democratic voters are black. The first-term Illinois senator, who would be the first black president, won the opening contest in Iowa. Obama gave the keynote address at the 2004 Democratic convention before he was elected to the Senate. He has opposed the Iraq war from the beginning and has tried to cast himself as a Washington outsider. He scored a surprise victory in Iowa and came in second to Clinton in New Hampshire.
REPUBLICANS:
RUDY GIULIANI, 63, was once the party's front-runner but is fighting to stay alive in the coming votes. The former New York mayor, who has made his leadership during the September 11 attacks a centerpiece of his candidacy, did not campaign heavily in the states holding the early contests. He focused instead on the larger states that vote later, particularly Florida. Widely shunned by many conservatives because of his support for abortion rights, gun control and gay rights, he received the endorsement of Christian evangelist Pat Robertson.
MIKE HUCKABEE, 52, a Baptist minister, hopes to win support from the large bloc of evangelicals in Saturday's vote in South Carolina. The bass-playing former Arkansas governor was born in Hope, Arkansas -- the birthplace of Bill Clinton. He won the Iowa caucus thanks to strong support from fellow evangelicals, who admire his religious beliefs and conservative stances on issues like abortion and gay marriage. Known for his wit, he has been criticized for a lack of knowledge on foreign policy.
JOHN MCCAIN, 71, who lost the South Carolina primary in a bitter battle with George W. Bush during his run for president in 2000, hopes to win over the state's sizable population of military veterans on Saturday. The senator from Arizona attended the U.S. Naval Academy and was shot down in 1967 over Vietnam, where he spent 5 1/2 years as a prisoner of war. He would be the oldest first-term president, at 72, if elected. He has been a pro-business conservative and abortion foe while supporting the Iraq war and calling for additional troops to quell the violence. His campaign was running low on cash and hit by a wave of defections this summer but he rebounded with a big win in New Hampshire.
MITT ROMNEY, 60, picked up a win in Nevada on Saturday after a breakthrough victory in Michigan last week. He finished second in both Iowa and New Hampshire. The Harvard-educated former Massachusetts governor was previously a business executive who co-founded the private equity firm Bain Capital. He has appealed to conservatives with his opposition to gay rights and abortion rights, which he once supported. Romney, whose father was once Michigan governor and an auto executive who sought the Republican presidential nomination in 1968, would be the first Mormon president.
(Writing by Deborah Charles, Jeremy Pelofsky, Paul Grant and Andy Sullivan in Washington; Editing by Peter Cooney)
(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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