Election 2008: Hillary Clinton in the news

MILESTONES FOR WOMEN IN U.S. POLITICS

1848: First women's rights convention is held, in Seneca Falls, N.Y.

LI Republicans praise McCain's choice of Palin

Top Long Island Republicans praised John McCain's vice presidential choice of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin on Friday though some admitted they knew next to nothing about her.

Obama's reversal

MONACA, Pa. - Barack Obama's spokesman fired off a fast criticism of Republican John McCain's new running mate Friday, but the Democratic candidate himself quickly stepped in to offer her congratulations and praise.

For women voters, Palin's gender may be her only draw

DENVER - Hillary Clinton's supporters were clamoring just a week ago to see a woman added to a presidential ticket.

Palin brings excitement, but little experience, to ticket

DAYTON, Ohio - By unexpectedly choosing Sarah Palin as his running mate Friday, Republican John McCain appears to be gambling that the excitement and energy she brings to the ticket will outweigh her obscurity and inexperience.

DNC NOTES

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama may have missed a chance to score bigger with New Yorkers who supported their senator, Hillary Rodham Clinton. Democratic Gov. David A. Paterson says Obama could have overcome disappointment in the New York delegation over Clinton's loss by stopping by to visit or sending a top surrogate. Paterson, who had supported New York Sen. Clinton, says it would have been wise for Obama to try to defuse hurt feelings among New York's Democrats. Paterson made the comments from Denver to Talk 1300 AM radio in Albany. Paterson says he doesn't think Obama made a mistake, but he may have missed an opportunity to win over New Yorkers more quickly.

Crowds awaited Obama with sense of history, excitement

DENVER - Hiawatha Foster, a North Carolina delegate to the Democratic National Convention, already had two flags in her hands ready to wave yesterday afternoon, and an American flag jacket she said she'd worn to other political events.

Obama now needs to target working-class Americans

DENVER

Obama is first African-American presidential nominee

DENVER - In a watershed moment that drew tears of amazement and joy on the convention floor, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama secured a place in history last night, becoming the first African-American presidential nominee of a major party.

Lawyer named as new Nassau County public administrator

A politically connected attorney has been selected as the new $134-000-a-year public administrator of Nassau County, a highly coveted position from which he can appoint lawyers to handle the estates of people who die without leaving a will.

Targeting McCain's "Keating 5" history

DENVER

DNC 2008: THE LI POLS

Question: "Coming from Hillary Rodham Clinton's home state, what goes through your mind as the first African-American major-party nominee moves ahead into his general- election run?"

Rudy, Republicans hammer at Obama's experience

DENVER - Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani appeared a few miles from the convention hall where Barack Obama was to be nominated and cited past statements from Giuliani's twice would-be rival Hillary Rodham Clinton to make his case for Sen. John McCain.

Obama is first African-American presidential nominee

DENVER - In a watershed moment that drew tears of amazement and joy on the convention floor, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama secured a place in history last night, becoming the first African-American presidential nominee of a major party.

Five things Obama's speech needs to accomplish

1 Recognize the historical import of his nomination, with a nod to the 45th anniversary of Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" speech. Obama is often reluctant to talk about his role as a pioneer but people will want to hear something from him about it tonight.

Bill Clinton gives Obama candidacy his blessing

DENVER - Bill Clinton bestowed a potent blessing on his would-be successor last night - telling a fervent convention crowd in blunt terms, "Barack Obama is ready to be president of the United States."

ACROSS PARTY LINES: D'Amato, Biden are friends first

Alfonse D'Amato is one of John McCain's top surrogates in New York, but last night the former New York GOP senator was rooting for Joe Biden to give a rousing speech.

Obama faces a night full of history - and challenge

DENVER - So many Americans thought this moment would never come.

Clinton urges party unity, McCain's defeat

DENVER - Vowing "no way, no how, no McCain," Hillary Rodham Clinton urged divided Democrats last night to come together to elect her primary opponent, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama.

Political conventions are just as fun on TV

I attended my first Democratic Convention in 1980 in New York City, and I went to every single other one for the next 24 years. Thanks to Newsday, I even attended two Republican conventions. And then, as I was about to depart for my 10th convention this weekend, something inside me said, "Don't go!"

New York delegates want a seat at the convention

DENVER

THE REACTION: Pride, support and misty eyes

DENVER - Hillary Rodham Clinton's long-awaited and much-debated first appearance at the Democratic convention won a boisterous cheer from the crowd - and that was just the video.

Clinton supporters protest to honor her failed bid

DENVER - Shouting "Honest Roll Call!" and "Yes We Can!" several hundred of Hillary Rodham Clinton's most loyal supporters took to the streets of Denver yesterday to march in honor of her failed presidential bid.

Punchlines

David Letterman, "Late Show with David Letterman": "The theme of the Democratic convention is 'unity.' Unfortunately, they can't agree on how that works."

James Klurfeld: Hillary Clinton has her supporters' attention

The more I try to understand it, the more I'm baffled by the outright hostility of a segment of Sen. Hillary Clinton's supporters toward Sen. Barack Obama. Some say they are so angry at Obama for winning the Democratic nomination that they'll sit out the election this year or actually vote for Sen. John McCain. Some have vowed to disrupt the Democratic convention inside or outside.

Clinton urges party unity, McCain's defeat

Vowing "no way, no how, no McCain," Hillary Rodham Clinton urged divided Democrats last night to come together to elect her primary opponent, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama.

EAST FARMINGDALE: Airport to get safety funding

Republic Airport will receive an additional $3.95 million for ongoing safety improvements, New York Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Charles Schumer announced yesterday.

DNC NOTES

Former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner, keynoting the Democratic National Convention, said last night that American voters "have one shot to get it right" by electing Barack Obama president to end Republican leadership that is stuck in the past. Warner rebuked President George W. Bush and GOP nominee-to-be John McCain, but his address was hardly a summons to political arms against them. He mentioned McCain's name only twice, and the entrepreneur said he'd learned in the cell phone business that made him millions that a strategy of tearing down the competition doesn't suffice. "I know we're at the Democratic convention, but if an idea works, it really doesn't matter if it has an R or a D next to it," Warner said. "Because this election isn't about liberal versus conservative. It's not about left versus right. It's about the future versus the past." And "in George Bush and John McCain's America, far too many" people don't know whether that future will hold what they need, said Warner, who argued that Obama will change that. - The Associated Press

DNC 2008: TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS

Obama's vice presidential pick, Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, is the main speaker, but he'll have to share the spotlight with former President Bill Clinton. Pundits and commentators are watching to see if Clinton puts aside his issues with the Illinois senator and becomes an Obama loyalist.

DNC 2008: TODAY'S HIGHLIGHT

For supporters of Hillary Rodham Clinton, the Democratic convention was to be her grand party. Tonight, Clinton faces the monumental task of delivering a speech that Obama hopes will persuade her supporters to back her formal rival.

What Hillary must accomplish in Tuesday's speech

DENVER - No speech this week - not even Barack Obama's - will be parsed and pulled apart, combed for sincerity or hesitation, more than Hillary Rodham Clinton's convention address tonight.

DNC NOTES

The FBI is looking into reports in Denver media outlets that a man under investigation for drug and weapons violations may have made threats against Barack Obama, officials said yesterday. "It's premature to say that it was a valid threat or that these folks have the ability to carry it out," said a U.S. government official familiar with the investigation. FBI spokeswoman Kathy Wright confirmed the FBI was investigating the reports but declined to elaborate.

Plan to limit roll call for president

DENVER - Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama have worked out a convention-city deal to limit the divisive roll call for president, a step toward an uneasy alliance of former rivals and their still-bitter supporters.

DNC NOTES

Democrats adopted a platform yesterday that commits to Barack Obama's policy ideas, but also credits his primary rival Hillary Rodham Clinton with putting "18 million cracks in the highest glass ceiling." The phrasing refers to the 18 million votes Clinton got in the primary. The platform reasserts Obama's promise of health care for all, energy rebates to struggling families, pension subsidies, a crackdown on predatory lenders, higher taxes for families earning over $250,000, tax breaks for others, billions for economic stimulus and "direct high-level diplomacy, without preconditions," in the case of Iran.

THE BEST OF SPIN CYCLE

1:24 p.m. - At her Monday news conference at the DNC, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi took a few shots at the journalists fixated on any beef between Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton. When questioned about the reported tensions between the two camps, Pelosi told reporters:

Senators are running the show in Denver

DENVER

Pelosi acknowledges that Democrats aren't united

DENVER - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi acknowledged yesterday that Democrats are not yet united following the bitter primary fight that divided supporters of likely Democratic nominee Barack Obama and rival Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Frustration over Clinton voters' resistance to Obama

DENVER - As she greeted party colleagues and delegates from around the state and country yesterday, Hillary Rodham Clinton encountered rising anxiety and frustration here over the stubborn resistance of many of her primary-season voters to transfer their allegiance to Obama.

Obama still dealing with Clinton factor

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Even as he made his way West to accept his party's nomination in Denver Thursday night, Barack Obama could not shake the Clintons.

Poll: Nassau voters soured on special districts

SPECIAL DISTRICTS

Janison: Obama, McCain face same voter challenges

Fellow Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain may not be talking shop together these days, but they face a similar problem - partially involving the Clintons - as their presidential nominations approach.

Hillary Clinton dismisses McCain's 'Passed Over' ads

DENVER - Hillary Rodham Clinton plans to formally release her convention delegates to Barack Obama on Wednesday - hoping to ensure a show of party unity this week with concrete proof of her support for Obama's ticket.

TODAY'S PICKS

WORLD'S FUNNIEST COMMERCIALS 2008 (9 p.m., TBS) - Kevin Nealon and Susan Yeagley host this annual look at the wackiest spots from around the globe.

Hillary Clinton's impact on, future in Democratic party is great

You either love her or you hate her. That is the sentiment that wise men and women of political punditry wanted voters to believe about Sen. Hillary Clinton going in to the 2008 presidential cycle.

Clinton backers wish she was picked but praise Biden

For many Hillary Rodham Clinton supporters, hopes of a "Dream Ticket" - marrying Barack Obama's appeal to the young and educated with the New York senator's more working-class constituency - were dashed yesterday.

Hillary's speech at convention carries high stakes

The woman who almost won the Democratic presidential nomination will fly to Fresno, Calif., today, to urge farm workers to vote for the man who beat her. Then she'll fly to her party's convention in Denver, where she headlines an Emily's List unity luncheon Tuesday with her opponent's wife and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who have been anything but allies.

New Obama running mate Biden criticizes McCain

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - At a campaign rally here yesterday, Barack Obama's just-named running mate, Sen. Joe Biden, wasted no time filling his new role on the Democratic ticket - he tore into Republican John McCain, put himself at America's kitchen table and became a passionate cheerleader in chief for Barack Obama.

Obama hopes Biden can fill in the blanks

WASHINGTON - Barack Obama is hoping Joe Biden can be all the things he's not in this campaign.

Janison: Biden? To copy a phrase, Let's get ready to rumble

Oh, great, you might think. Barack Obama, the man who stood up for the power of words, went with a plagiarist.

No surprise in Obama's text message

In a polemic against government secrecy, the late Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan once said they can keep only one or two secrets at once in Washington - and then only for a short period of time. Maybe that was the lesson to be drawn for Sen. Barack Obama's political campaign from his just-ended drumroll over the vice presidency.

WHAT TO WATCH THIS WEEK

MONDAY

THE DELEGATES

Who are they? There are three basic types of delegates to the Democratic convention: pledged delegates, at-large delegates and superdelegates. The pledged delegates were elected during the primary election and the at-large delegates were selected this summer by Obama campaign officials. The pledged and at-large delegates consist primarily of low-level party activists and campaign volunteers. The superdelegates are elected officials - members of Congress, governors, national committee members - and senior officials within the state and national party.

The talk of the Party

SPEECHES The power of words

ON THE TRAIL

The suspicious white powder found in a letter sent to a Colorado campaign office for John McCain is not anthrax or another lethal substance, officials determined Friday. The Colorado National Guard Civil Support Team completed its testing of the powder around 2 a.m. Friday, Guard spokesman Rick Breitenfeldt said. Officials do not know what the powder is, but they determined it was not lethal. Officials said the threatening letter was sent by an inmate at the Arapahoe Detention Center. Arapahoe County Sheriff's officials identified the suspected inmate as Marc Harold Ramsey, 39, incarcerated since September 2007 on investigation of felony menacing, harassment and second-degree assault on a police officer. Ramsey may face federal charges for Thursday's incident, which sent at least 19 people to hospitals for testing.

Clinton wasn't vetted for VP, her aides say

WASHINGTON - With Barack Obama set to break his silence on a running mate Saturday morning, Hillary Rodham Clinton's long-shot hopes dimmed further Friday - as Clinton aides signaled Obama never seriously vetted her for the job.

Obama says he has made his pick for running mate

CHICAGO - Barack Obama says he's decided on a running mate, but he won't say who.

James Klurfeld: Will political drama outstrip Olympics?

Like a lot of you, I've spent most of my evenings the past two weeks, late into the night, watching the summer Olympics from China.

Paterson, Schumer added to Dem's convention lineup

ALBANY - It took a while, but a few New Yorkers are now being added to the speakers' lineup at next week's Democratic convention - first Gov. David A. Paterson, and last night Sen. Charles Schumer.

They're baaaack

Remember Harry and Louise? They were that fictional couple last seen in mid-1990s television ads disparaging Bill and Hillary Clinton's health care reform plan. Their overblown fear of losing choice in doctors and treatment to government bureaucrats was a key element in the successful campaign by insurers and others to derail the sweeping proposal.

Obama set to announce VP; Clinton a long shot

WASHINGTON - Barack Obama is poised to announce his running mate any day now, and all signs say it won't be Hillary Rodham Clinton - even though Clinton told supporters on Long Island just last week that she'd take the job if offered, two Democratic sources said.

Plan to allow PBA officials plane-ticket upgrades knocked

LEVY AIDES WALK

Ellis Henican: Hillary needs to act the part

Friend or foe? Hillary Rodham Clinton keeps 'em guessing right to the convention floor.

Mom fears worst as son is stranded in war-torn Georgia

RATHER than letting her son stay home in Middle Island and play computer games, Marina Tsartsidze sent him to Tbilisi, Georgia, to enjoy the summer with his grandparents.

ON THE TRAIL

John McCain's presidential campaign had no comment yesterday about a controversial book that attacks Barack Obama and many say is riddled with errors. Jerome Corsi's book, "The Obama Nation," depicts the Democratic candidate as a dangerous, radical figure filled with "black rage." The Obama campaign and its allies have criticized the book, citing dozens of assertions that they say are inaccurate. Corsi has espoused a number of unorthodox views, including claims that the federal government was untruthful about what caused New York's Twin Towers to collapse after being struck by hijacked jets on Sept. 11, 2001. Some independent groups, including Catholics United, also have called on McCain to condemn Corsi's book. McCain campaign spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan said the campaign had no comment.

Airlines to cut baggage fees for military travel

WASHINGTON - Many of the nation's largest airlines have begun giving military personnel on official travel a pass on expensive baggage fees when they carry heavy duffel bags stuffed with combat gear.

Deal gives Clinton roll call vote at convention

WASHINGTON - Hillary Rodham Clinton's die-hard supporters yesterday got their wish - her name will be placed in nomination at the party convention this month, a move Barack Obama hopes will win over her 18 million voters.

Despite reports, Clinton will not be keynote speaker

WASHINGTON - Hillary Rodham Clinton will not be the keynote speaker at the Democratic National Convention later this month after all.

Intruder kills Democratic superdelegate in Arkansas

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - A man barged into the Arkansas Democratic headquarters yesterday and fatally shot the state party chairman before speeding off in his pickup. Police shot and killed the suspect after a 30-mile chase.

Homeland Security might close Plum Island center

The Department of Homeland Security has ruled out keeping the Plum Island Animal Disease Center open to continue its current research if a proposed National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility is built in another state.

Does shock jock hate speech lead to violence?

On July 27 a man walked into the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church in Knoxville and opened fire, killing two people and seriously wounding seven others.

Memos show Clinton turmoil

WASHINGTON - In a fresh postmortem on Hillary Rodham Clinton's presidential bid, newly published staff memos and e-mails reveal a campaign hobbled by internal rivalries, faulty planning, bloated spending - and perhaps most important, Clinton's own failure to make the hard decisions.

DID HE CHEAT HILL?

Clinton aide says

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton would be the Democratic presidential nominee if John Edwards had been caught in his lie about an extramarital affair and forced out of the race last year, insists a top Clinton campaign aide.

ON THE TRAIL

John McCain won't eclipse the enormous fundraising advantage his Democratic rival has built in New Jersey, but he is hoping to narrow the gap a little when he and his wife visit the Garden State today. McCain will attend a private fundraiser in Bergen County, while his wife seeks votes in Monmouth County. The presumptive GOP presidential nominee plans to make an evening campaign swing through Teaneck, while wife Cindy attends a money-raising luncheon and makes campaign stops in Republican-friendly Monmouth. Today marks McCain's sixth visit to New Jersey since he declared his candidacy for the Republican nomination.

Hillaryto headline her own night at convention

HONOLULU - Hillary Rodham Clinton will headline her own night at the Democratic National Convention, Barack Obama's campaign announced yesterday in a nod to her strong second-place showing in the party's presidential primary.

Shame-filled Edwards admits affair with video producer

WASHINGTON - Former presidential candidate John Edwards, who won nationwide praise and sympathy as he campaigned side-by-side with his cancer-stricken wife, Elizabeth, admitted in shame Friday he'd had an extramarital affair with a woman who produced videos for his campaign.

Clinton tells rally she wants Obama to win White House

LAS VEGAS - Hillary Rodham Clinton told an exuberant crowd Friday she wants Barack Obama to win the White House, even though he dashed her own presidential dreams - and she wants her supporters to vote that way, too.

Clinton may seek roll-call vote at Dems' convention

WASHINGTON - Egged on by die-hard supporters, Hillary Rodham Clinton is giving every indication that she will not go quietly or meekly into the Democratic National Convention in Denver later this month.