Final Pitch For 2012 Olympics
Five Cities, Including NYC, Make Last Pleas Before IOC Vote
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Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., smiles as New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, right, looks on during the NYC2012 bid press conference in Singapore. (AP)
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Aerial view released by Paris City Hall shows the Champs Elysees covered with an athletic track and other sports venues as part of Paris' bid to host the 2012 Olympic Games, Sunday, June 5, 2005. (AP)
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Interactive Athens 2004 Follow the Olympics with photos, medal counts and event facts, plus security details and a history of the Games.
Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero arrived in Singapore on Tuesday, joining Queen Sofia, who arrived earlier. Madrid has moved up in the oddsmakers' calculations, and could prove a serious contender despite some sentiment that its bid comes too soon after the 1992 Olympics in Spain's No. 2 city, Barcelona.
London, Paris and Moscow all have held previous Olympics, but not New York — a fact Clinton said was striking.
"We have lived the Olympics," she said, referring to New York's multinational character. "Now I'd like for us to have a chance to host the Olympics."
Clinton, a potential Democratic presidential candidate, and Bloomberg, a Republican, deflected questions at a news conference about possible political ramifications of the senator's role in the bid campaign.
"This is not a political thing, it's a New York thing," said Bloomberg, asserting that it was important to convince IOC delegates that the bid has bipartisan support.
Though New York's main rivals are sending their countries' top government leaders to Singapore, President Bush is not coming. But Bloomberg said the president "couldn't be happier" that Clinton had made the trip.
"Just the logistics of moving a president around in this day and age, with all the security, really takes away from the focus on the Games," Bloomberg told a news conference. "They become the story and the stars instead of what we are here to do."
Bloomberg was asked if his city's devastating experience with terrorism on Sept. 11, 2001, should be cause for concern among the IOC voters.
"Sadly, we live in a world where every city has a security risk," Bloomberg said. "If you look at all five of these wonderful cities — they've all been subject to terrorism and threats."
Clinton also touched on the events of Sept. 11.
"We're standing here a little less than four years from the time when we were attacked and we're telling you that New York City is the place to bring the 2012 Olympics because people of New York are resilient," she said.
As expected, the IOC's executive board approved a recent revision in the stadium plans for New York City's bid.
Last month, in what initially seemed a huge setback for the bid, state officials rejected a proposed showpiece stadium on Manhattan's West Side. The bid campaign quickly devised an alternative plan to use a less costly stadium in the borough of Queens that eventually would replace Shea Stadium as the home of the New York Mets.
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