WINTERSET, Iowa, Dec. 8, 2007

Hillary's Campaign Is A Family Affair

Mother And Daughter Join Clinton For Iowa Campaign Events

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(AP)  Three generations of Clinton women hit the trail vowing "change across the generations" as Hillary Rodham Clinton stepped up her pitch to the women voters who could hold the key to Iowa's caucuses, which will launch the presidential nominating season in less than four weeks.

"We're getting close to the caucuses," said Clinton. "I always think it's better to go to the caucuses with a buddy. Today, I've got some buddies with me."

Those "buddies" included 88-year-old mother Dorothy Rodham and 27-year-old daughter Chelsea Clinton, making her first appearance with her mother on the trail in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Opening the swing, Clinton noted that her family is able to care for her mother as she ages.

"I'm fortunate, my mother lives with Bill and me," said Clinton. "Lots of times she has more energy than we do."

Clinton noted that her mother fits the description of women who were born before women got the right to vote, and are now pushing to elect the first woman president.

"She has seen a lot happen and change in our country," said Clinton. "Not everyone is as lucky to have their mother or father or grandparent with them as we are."

Clinton's mother joined her on the campaign trail Friday night, and Chelsea, who works in New York City's financial sector, joined her Saturday morning. Neither spoke at the campaign events, but Chelsea worked a crowd hard as they opened the day.

Clinton used the occasion to trot out a plan to bolster long-term care, including a $3,000 tax credit for caregivers, a doubling of the standard deduction for the elderly and a tax credit for purchasing long-term care insurance. She repeatedly pointed to her ability to care for her own mother as she ages.

"I don't think having my mother with me is a burden, I think it's a joy," said Clinton. "It isn't easy to do and a lot of families don't have a lot of options."

The multigenerational appeal was aimed straight at women voters.

"I'm a proud working daughter," said Clinton. "My family is able to make the decisions we think are right for us and that's what I want for every American family."

Issues of long-term care and building families will be a focus of her presidency, Clinton said.

Clinton is locked in a tight battle with rivals Barack Obama and John Edwards in the race for Iowa's Jan. 3 caucuses, a competition where the stakes are very high. Although the Iowa race is close, Clinton has commanding leads in early voting states like New Hampshire and South Carolina, and some strategists argue that a win in competitive Iowa could propel her toward the nomination.

Racing across the state on a frigid day that threatened snow, the Clinton women went to an elementary school in Williamsburg where Clinton displayed a list prepared by schoolchildren about what the next president should do.

"What does the next president do to help children," Clinton read from the list. "She - I like that, she - could put Band-Aids on children that are hurt."

After ticking off items like "teach us left from right," Clinton concluded the youngsters were on the right track.

"I thought that was a pretty good list," said Clinton. She cast herself as a candidate tested by fire, drawing an implicit difference with Obama, who she calls inexperienced.

"I will wage a winning campaign. The Republicans are not going to walk away from the White House without a fight," said Clinton. "One thing you know about me is they've been after me for 15 years and I'm still here."

While Obama was seeking the spotlight Saturday by bringing in talk show maven Oprah Winfrey, Clinton was fast making her campaign a family business. While her mother and daughter joined her in Iowa, her former president husband campaigned for her in another early voting state, South Carolina, and was headed back to the Iowa on Monday for a swing focused on college campuses.

By focusing on women and long-term care, Clinton was targeting two crucial groups in the state's electorate - women and seniors. More than 60 percent of caucus-goers in the last election cycle were over 50, and the state has one of highest populations in the nation over 85.

That group will be the target of her long-term care plan. Nationally, the over-85 population is expected to grow from 5 million to 21 million by 2050, according to documents provided by the Clinton campaign.

Clinton said the image of her campaign Saturday underscored her multigenerational pitch.

"The reason I am happy they are both here is I'm running for president to make the kind of change that America needs, changes people need no matter what age they are," said Clinton. "We need change across the generations."

© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Add a Comment See all 21 Comments
by mudrose-2009 December 10, 2007 12:18 PM EST
Is her mother or daughter MUTE?
Reply to this comment
by colonieny December 10, 2007 3:48 AM EST
Can anyone at CBS or any media work up enough courage to ask Ms. Hillary about those PARDONS her husband rushed through during his last few hours ? Mark Rich, and assorted drug dealers, big money people and such, some with letters from Hillary own brother ? Or at least ask the other part of this dysfunctional duo ?
I am amazed by the immediate amnesia of the media for selective often major issues, esp involing the Clintons. Doesn''t anyone remember the missing furniture in the White House ?? other scandals of opportunity and greed- how did she make all that money on futures while others lost etc ??? I still do not understand what makes her qualified to be President - Does anyone ?? To me the important thing is to have someone with real experience, and can make a decision, not a waffler. Give me Biden, as a Democrat. He is straight shooter and street smart. Dodd is good too. Hillary ? Come on.
Reply to this comment
by colonieny December 10, 2007 3:34 AM EST

ANOTHER PUFF PIECE

cBS: What a load. .
what happened to HSU ? The guy who was supposedly up to his neck in dirty money, and funneling funny money from ? China ? to Hillary.
Where is the story on that ? Huh ?
Reply to this comment
by prinzowhales December 9, 2007 7:41 PM EST
Hillary! Where is the $2.3 Trillion that Rumsfeld said was missing from Pentagon accounts on 9-10-01? You were in Congress...don''t they have any oversight there? Aren''t you even remotely interested where the money got off to? It has been six years and counting and the Senate and House under Republicans and now Democrats have done precisely nothing! Sounds like old times doesn''t it?--Sounds like their response to the S&L scandal!
Reply to this comment
by prinzowhales December 9, 2007 5:01 PM EST
I only count three...where''s ''Socks''?
Reply to this comment
by tibu987 December 9, 2007 2:31 PM EST
How does having her daughter and mother in her campaign equate into presidential qualifications
How does Hillary''s tenure in the White House as First Lady, and being a senator from a relatively unimportant are equate into the experience she claims to have?

"Who is the more foolish...........the fool or the fool that follows him/her?."

Reply to this comment
by gunownerdan December 9, 2007 12:44 PM EST
Why have we allowed the Bush/Clinton crime families to hijack our government?
Hitlery seems like she''s more of a warmongering neocon than even Bush is.
Sad and dangerous!
Reply to this comment
by neobrian-2009 December 9, 2007 10:36 AM EST
Xbil
I guess you turned senile,or got ''shrub-whacked''...
Reply to this comment
by xlib December 9, 2007 3:52 AM EST
neobrain-Ya know, I have a mug with the saying "friends don''t let friends vote democrat". Isn''t that funny!!
Reply to this comment
by gunownerdan December 9, 2007 3:02 AM EST
Hitlery is just as nasty as her husband, if not worse.
Reply to this comment
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