Honolulu AdvertiserDemocrats need Barack Obama's vision, leadership
Conventional wisdom suggests that once Democrats pick their nominee, it will be easy for the party to rally behind the winner against the presumptive GOP presidential candidate, John McCain. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, both strong candidates, aren't far apart on key national issues, and Democrats have eight years of deprivation uniting them in their zeal to reclaim the White House.
But while they might find the November decision easy, many of the party faithful are struggling over the more immediate choice: Which U.S. senator should become the Democratic standard-bearer?
For tomorrow's party caucus, when Hawai'i Democrats have a rare chance to influence the final outcome of the primary-election campaign, The Honolulu Advertiser endorses Barack Obama, recognizing his ideas and policies as being most closely aligned with the needs of the country.
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It is, in fact, the critical aspect of leadership required at times like these, when only a more unified nation can find its way through the difficulties ahead.
The party needs to acknowledge the clarion call that's resonated through the past weeks of the presidential campaign. It needs Barack Obama.
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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080217/OPINION01/802170328/1105/OPINION01Fort Worth Star TelegramTexas voters have two remarkable candidates from which to choose in the March 4 Democratic presidential primary. Regardless of the outcome of this state's vote and those across the nation, history will be made.
Both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama represent change, but in decidedly different ways.
Supportive politicians, pundits and writers of letters to newspaper editors have defined that difference as transitional vs. transformative. Clinton is the former; Obama the latter.
Right now, America needs transformation.
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Yes, we know, hope is not a strategy. But it can get people working together to find one.
The Star-Telegram recommends Barack Obama in the Democratic primary for president.
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http://www.star-telegram.com/225/story/477630.htmlCorpus Christi Caller Times"Obama offers Democrats inspirational leadership"
Democrats are watching one of the most exciting presidential nominating contest in years unfold in a series of state primaries across the nation. The two Democrats left in the race, Sens. Hillary Ridgan Clinton of New York and Barack Obama of Illinois, now bring their campaigns to Texas. This is a memorable moment for Texans whose voices have been irrelevant in past presidential primary elections. But in this March 4 primary, Texas Democrats have a chance to make history.
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Voting for Obama takes courage. He is three years removed from the Illinois state senate. He has never served in the military, nor has Clinton. Obama has never led an organization with as many moving parts as the White House. But experience means little if it is only about remembering the old hates. And it takes courage to break from the old political civil wars. Many Democrats, like many Republicans, find it easier and more comforting to vilify political opponents and nurse grudges than to take the bold step of reaching across political lines to find solutions wherever they may be found. Nominating the Illinois senator offers Americans a chance to transcend the old politics. The Editorial Board endorses Sen. Barack Obama because it believes that he offers the kind of inspirational leadership the country is hungry for.
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http://www.caller.com/news/2008/feb/17/obama-offers-democrats-inspirational-leadership