I am running because I believe staying in this race will help unite the Democratic Party.
---Hillary Clinton in her op-ed in the NY Daily News,
"Why I Continue To Run", May 25, 2008
But two days ago in her infamous interview, Hillary Clinton
said this:
May 23, 2008:
HRC: .... People have been trying to push me out of this ever since Iowa. There has been this urgency to end this.
Interviewer: Why?
HRC: I don't know.
Interviewer: WHY?
HRC: I don't know. I don't.... I find it curious... because it is... it is unprecedented in history... I don't understand it. And, you know, between my opponent and his camp and some in the media, there has been this urgency to end this. And, you know, historically that makes no sense. So, I find it a bit of a mystery.
Interviewer: You don't buy the party unity argument?
HRC: I don't, because, again, I've been around long enough.
.....
Which is it, Senator Clinton?
Today you are *FOR* party unity, when, just two days ago, you dismissed it out of hand.
Party unity is an unfortunate casualty, it seems, when your ambition and sense of entitlement are involved. What should the American people realize from these and many other of your statements?
The answer is stunningly apparent.