From The Road
February 19, 2008 11:27 PM

Clinton Supporter Jeered By Antsy Crowd

(CBS)
From CBS News' Fernando Suarez:

YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO -- As the polls were closing in Wisconsin and as early results were showing a victory for Barack Obama, a Clinton supporter here was addressing a crowd at a rally for Hillary Clinton that soon turned into lengthy, angry tirade against Obama, drawing boos from the feisty crowd.

Machinist Union President Thomas Buffenbarger took the stage an hour after Clinton was scheduled to speak (Clinton was running late), and immediately began slamming Obama. "We go with a woman who...is still fighting our battles. That’s our choice. The editor of the Harvard Law Review or a fighter? I have a confession to make, even though our union has endorsed Hillary Clinton and has given and will continue to give her our unwaivering support, I have been moved by Barack Obama’s words: hope, change, yes we can. How can you not be moved by such wonderful, uplifting platitudes so artfully delivered. Watch the junior Senator from Illinois carefully as he deliveres his best lines he cocks his head up, lifts his nose up and turns his ear so he can hear the roars of his adoring crowds. It is a trained thespians move," said Buffenbarger who later continued his attack on Obama for nearly 10 minutes.

Buffenbarger likened Obama to a “shadow boxer” who is all show and no action. He said Obama consistently “walks away from a fight” and even took issue with his young group of supporters.

"The Barack show is playing to rave reviews sold out at college campuses after college campus. Standing room only crowds to hear his silver-tounged orations. Hope, change, yes we can? Give me a break! I’ve got news for all the latte-drinking, Prius-driving, Birkenstock-wearing, trust fund babies crowding in to hear him speak. This guy won’t last a round against the Republican attack machine. He’s a poet, not a fighter."

The crowd grew increasingly hostile toward Buffenbarger, so much so that AFSCME president Gerald McEntee took the stage in hopes of moving Buffenbarger along, who at this point was well into his attacks on Obama. It is unclear whether the crowd’s boos were in response to his negative comments toward Obama or the length of his speech.

When McEntee took the stage he told the crowd his remarks would be brief, the crowd erupted in applause. “I traveled a long way and have a very short speech,” said McEntee, “After listening to this crowd it got shorter and shorter and shorter.” The crowd began cheering louder.

Eventually, Clinton made it to the stage where she gave a spiced up version of her stump speech. She took several jabs at Obama during her remarks. “We gotta get America back to the solutions business…the best words in the world aren’t enough unless you match them with action,” Clinton said.

Clinton, who's campaign released snippets of her speech to the press earlier in the day, focused on the theme that the voters of Ohio have a choice to make in the next round of primaries on March 4. Clinton says that choice is between a candidate with experince who is "ready on day one" and her opponent who's campaign, she argues, amounts to speeches and words.

The mood was strange in the crowd. Clinton seemed to rush through her speech and for the first time in a while she delivered her remarks with the help of a teleprompter. Clinton did not make any mention of Obama’s victory in Wisconsin during her remarks, but the campaign said she and Obama did speak on the telephone earlier today.
Tags:
Clinton
Topics:
Hillary Clinton
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by sjbj2322 February 21, 2008 3:35 AM EST
How many actually comprehended the fact that this was a Hillary supporter addressing a Hillary rally? Over the past six weeks I have had the priviledge of hearing either Hillary or Bill speak on three occasions and Barack on two. At the rally''s for Barack I never once heard a Clinton supporter yelling nasty expletives but at every Clinton rally there have been Obama supporters show up just to create havoc. They were not middle-aged mature citizens expressing a difference of opinion; they were smart mouthed kids only interested in drawing attention to themselves..laughing as they left - not because they wanted to participate in debate or having concerns addressed. They just want attention and Obama''s campaign has given them a sense of entitlement to behave abhorantly. I''m not speaking to all Obama supporters but don''t deny these things are happening unless you''ve been there and seen it for yourself. One of these brats said that the reason he was for Obama was because his name sounds better in a repetitive chant (O Bama, O Bama) than Clinton. Yet he couln''t tell me one thing he agreed with Obama about regarding policy or planning. It made me sick. So I come here were at least there is an effort to have some debate but more times than not it ends up with someone getting ugly here too. So much for the Unity and people actually think that when all is said and done Democrats will come together after this. I don''t think so.
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by samdinista February 20, 2008 9:51 PM EST
The right wing of the Democratic party had better get a clue and quickly. The democratic party has two choices in front of it. Support Obama, win the presidency with a landslide of historical proportion, increase their share of seats in the house and Senate and be able to successfully enact new legislation or support Clinton and either lose the election or squeak out a meaningless and hollow victory with no corresponding increase in Democratic seats and no ability to enact any meaningful change at all. It is absolutely clear to anyone who is not wearing blinders that a Clinton nomination will be the complete and absolute end of the Democratic party, particularly if the convention is thrown by super delegates to Clinton. If that happens, The Dems can kiss the minorty vote good bye forever.
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by truthandfair February 20, 2008 8:33 PM EST
Obama does not inspire me with his Hope, Change, Hope, Change, ..... They are simply campaign slogan. I always wonder about his deals with Tony Rozko, and how he got his super home at $300,000 below asking price. Why he did not stay close to people in Chicago South?
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by geisemann99 February 20, 2008 5:25 PM EST
I am young but not dumb

All this in with the NEW out with the old. Well your ipod is old people why not replace it with something better?

Well if you take a proven design and let it run it will work great.

If you take an unknown design and let it run it will break a lot. Not necessary get to the finish line first.

It could crash and burn in fact.

We are in bad shape people when a company is in bad shape they dont release a design that is not tested. Microsoft can but they are not in bad shape. Putting your eggs in a person who is not proven and going against the Clinton mastermind is very stupid.

This country was not logical and voted for Bush, was a feeling people said( I didn%u2019t) Then this country again will make a mistake and vote for Obama. Use logic for once and vote on logic not to fell good. I know the Obama drug feels good but once re-hab starts it will be a big crash.

When the TelePrompTer gets turned off and obama is faced with decisions in the oval office. I bet the first call he makes is to ask the advice of Bill Clinton
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by mgrathjr February 20, 2008 4:15 PM EST
This just shows how Clinton is more of the same divisive politics and her old guard supporters do not get it. We are tired of being divided into sub categories. We are tired of it being college educated vs. working class. I am a first generation college graduate whose parents never graduated from high school. I have a masters degree earned with sweat and late nights. I am both working class and educated class. The world isn''t as simple as they would like us to believe. There are PhD''s working at Starbucks for minimum wage and machinists making 40 dollars an hour. Tell me who is working class? "Latte drinking, trust fund babies!" Check your demographics jerk. The majority of students in college now are from lower middle class families. They are the children of the men and women in your union, and overwhelmingly they support OBAMA! Why? Because he inspires them to look past racism, ethnic division, financial classism, and religious extremism. It is time we all threw in together and worked to save our dying empire. Clinton and McCain represent the decline of America. We have to repair the damage of 20 years. Now is the time. We have achieved lift off! The only thing in our way are people like you that cannot put aside their petty bias in order to make a better tomorrow for our children. OBAMA 08'' This time I want a smart president!
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by katefranklin February 20, 2008 2:05 PM EST
Who is this Buffenbarger clown, and why didn''t Hillary boot him off the stage in a timely manner? The last thing Hillary needs is this tool running his mouth against young Obama''s supporters on her stage. Talk about lacking in substance.
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by memekiller February 20, 2008 2:03 PM EST
Dems didn''t take too kindly to Clinton''s previous attacks, and they didn''t like Obama''s followers sounding like the Clinton-haters on talk radio. Dems, by-and-large, like both, and don''t want to see either smeared. They want to save their ammunition for the Republicans.
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by hillaryis44 February 20, 2008 12:11 PM EST
30 years of experience and all they can think of is to go negative? We are supposed to mistake that for leadership?
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by truthspeake2 February 20, 2008 12:01 PM EST
When all is finally said and done, these idiotic Hillary supporters will have to look no further than the closet mirror at whom to blame for their loss. Sometimes I really wonder if they aren''t Republicans in Democrats clothing!
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by b-easy63 February 20, 2008 11:52 AM EST
Hilary and those who are campaigning with and for her--just don''t get it--by attacking him--you alienate even your own base--we want change--tell us why Hilary is not the status quo and why she is planning to work with us not baby us, coddle us or smother us. Tell us what her solutions are--because NONE of the candidates can say they are not in the speech business--until they are President--speeches are pretty much all that they have. As for her work of 35 years--that is great. But the fact is--some people are born Generals and some are born foot soldiers--if you applaud yourself for being a foot soldier for 35 years, don''t be surprised if people think that is your place and you should remain a foot soldier for 35 MORE years.
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