June 18, 2009 6:21 PM

Clinton: "No Way. No How. No McCain"

(CBS/AP)  Hillary Rodham Clinton summoned millions of voters who supported her in the primaries to send Barack Obama to the White House Tuesday night, declaring in a Democratic National Convention speech that the man who defeated her "is my candidate and he must be our president."

"We don't have a moment to lose or a vote to spare," the former first lady added in her prime time address. ( | Text)

The packed convention floor became a sea of white "Hillary" signs as the New York senator strode to the podium.

While her remarks included a full-throated endorsement of Obama, she did not indicate whether she would have her name placed in nomination or seek a formal roll call of the states when the nomination is awarded by delegates on Wednesday night.

Calling herself a "proud supporter of Barack Obama, she dismissed Republican John McCain with a few choice words.

"No way. No how. No McCain," she said, prompting the hall to erupt in cheers. "We don't need four more years... of the last eight years."

"Hillary Clinton did just about everything she needed to do in this speech to help heal what divisions remain in this party," said CBSNews.com senior poltical editor Vaughn Ververs. "She was unequivocal in her support for Obama and critical in her assessment of John McCain and the Republican Party. Barack Obama couldn't have wanted much more." (Read Ververs' analysis of Clinton's speech)

Like other failed candidates at conventions past, Clinton recalled her own quest for the White House.

"You taught me so much, you made me laugh and... you even made me cry," she said to supporters in the Pepsi Center and millions more watching on nationwide television.

"You allowed me to become part of your lives, and you became part of mine."

Clinton attempted to reach out to those voters who supported her in the primaries but are not sold on Obama. In a CBS News/New York Times poll conducted earlier this month, more than 40 percent of Clinton supporters said they would vote for McCain or were undecided.

"I want you to ask yourselves: Were you in this campaign just for me?" she said. She urged them instead to remember Marines who have served their country, single mothers, families barely getting by on minimum wage and other struggling Americans.

"You haven't worked so hard over the last 18 months, or endured the last eight years, to suffer through more failed leadership,"

Despite some delegates' lingering resentment over Clinton's loss, party chairman Howard Dean said earlier the convention was determined to make Obama the nation's 44th president. "There is not a unity problem. If anyone doubts that, wait till you see Hillary Clinton's speech," he said earlier Tuesday.

Meanwhile, fellow Democrats who spoke to the convention delegates ripped into McCain as indifferent to the working class and cozy with big oil.

"If he's the answer, then the question must be ridiculous," New York Gov. David Paterson said of the Republican presidential candidate.

By contrast, Obama will "appeal to us not as Republicans or Democrats, but first and foremost as Americans," former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner said in the convention's keynote address. "We need leaders who see our common ground as sacred ground." ( | Text)

"Call the roll!" urged Ted Sorensen, a party elder eager to propel Obama toward the White House as the first black president.

Not yet. Obama's formal nomination was set for Wednesday night.

In contrast to many of Tuesday's earlier speeches delivered out of prime time, Warner's remarks dwelt more on a vision of the post-partisan possibilities of an Obama administration than on criticism of McCain and President Bush.

"I know we're at the Democratic National Convention, but if an idea works, it really doesn't matter if it has an 'R' or 'D' next to it," he said.

As keynoter, Warner's task was the same one that Obama - then an Illinois state lawmaker running for the U.S. Senate - used four years ago to launch his astonishing ascent in national politics.

(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Obama, meanwhile, campaigned in Missouri Tuesday, slowly making his way toward the convention city - and wasting no opportunity to continue the attack on his opponent, reported CBS News' Maria Gavrilovic.

"I just don't think he gets it. He is out of touch. I don't think he realizes what ordinary American families are going through," Obama said at an overhaul base for American Airlines in Kansas City, Mo. (Read more on Obama's remarks)

It was more of that sentiment - much more - as a parade of speakers criticized McCain at the convention several hundred miles away.

Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said the Republican has voted against "real sex education, voted against affordable family planning. And if elected, John McCain has vowed to appoint Supreme Court justices who will overturn Roe v. Wade," she said, referring to the landmark 1973 case that affirmed women's right to abortion.

Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland focused on economic issues. "While families are losing sleep tonight trying to figure out some way to make their paycheck stretch through one more day, John McCain is sleeping better than ever," he said, recalling that McCain had recently said Americans were better off because of President Bush's policies.


© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 2429 Comments
by cleever2 August 29, 2008 4:29 PM EDT
www.nowaynohownobama.com
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by cleever2 August 29, 2008 4:28 PM EDT
Hillary had a great sound bite/slogan but it flows much better with Obama...www.nowaynohownobama.com
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by mandylou4u August 28, 2008 3:23 PM EDT
Just a last thought: Obama is not African American, he is half white half black. The news outlets like to call him African American because it''s more controversial.
Reply to this comment
by jackdems August 28, 2008 12:08 AM EDT
Somebody want to tell Obama that were in America, its called freedom of speech!

%u201CHaving failed in its attempts to get our legal, factual and fully-supported ad off the air, Barack Obama%u2019s campaign now wants to put our donors in prison for exercising their right to free speech," said Ed Martin, American Issues Project%u2019s president. %u201CThese over-the-top bullying tactics are reminiscent of the kind of censorship one would see in a Stalinist dictatorship, with the only difference being that those guys generally had to wait until they were in power to throw people who disagreed with them into jail.%u201D

In addition to two letters sent to the Department of Justice asking the government to investigate American Issues Project, its officers, board of directors, and donors, the Obama campaign has been contacting stations running American Issues Project%u2019s ad in an unsuccessful attempt to compel them to pull the spot.

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by alanrobisch August 27, 2008 11:07 PM EDT
Neither will rants about southern white trailor trash or calling other Americans fascists as so many liberal posters do on this site.


Posted by realpatriot1 at 07:41 PM : Aug 27, 2008
+ report abus

Amen I came here originally to exchange ideas but as you have said it becomes often attacks that are meaningless and just an attempt to hurt or insult another person
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by misha128-2009 August 27, 2008 10:49 PM EDT
Posted by realpatriot1 at 07:41 PM

The vast majority of those that use the word fascist in their posts do not understand the meaning of the word and I have seen in from both sides.
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by realpatriot1 August 27, 2008 10:41 PM EDT
Minuteman-5,

I don''t disagree about the intolerance of the left but it isn''t just the left.

I''ve been called a traitor, an American hater, a fake Christian, a wuss, and just about every other name imaginable just because I had a different opinion about what was best for America.

I wasn''t brought up to take that kind of *** laying down and I''m sure you weren''t either. It feeds upon itself and soon the conversations regress from respectful disagreements to personal and ugly pissing contests. I''ve been sucked in quite a bit more than i''m proud of and I''m certain that most of those on both the left and the right fell that way at times.

That''s why it''s nice when every once in awhile we can disagree without being disagreeable.

Try to understand that there are people like myself who honestly believe as much as you do that the candidate and agenda that we support is what will best help the country and it will be easier to feel the same about you.

It doesn''t help when a candidate who promised to run a respectful campaign says that Democrats would rather lose a war than lose an election-that''s not the kind of leadership that''s going to heal the nation''s wounds. Neither will rants about southern white trailor trash or calling other Americans fascists as so many liberal posters do on this site.

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by forevertru-2009 August 27, 2008 10:28 PM EDT
Obama 8=====)~~~~O: The Democratic Party
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by misha128-2009 August 27, 2008 10:24 PM EDT
I''ll be interested in seeing how open minded the Republicans are when John McCain chooses Joe Lieberman for his VP.
Reply to this comment
by forevertru-2009 August 27, 2008 9:54 PM EDT
NOW IT GETS NASTY....REAL NASTY!
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