Clinton: Election Win Provides
Chance for Unity
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Former President Clinton
speaks at a rally in Baltimore's Fells Point, with Rep.
Elijah Cummings at his shoulder.
(CNS photo by Emily Haile)
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By Emily Haile and Leticia Linn
Capital News Service
Thursday, Oct. 19, 2006
BALTIMORE - Former President Clinton did more than rally Democrats
Thursday — he put out a call for national unity should the
party retake control of the House and Senate.
Clinton, in town on behalf of Democratic Senate candidate Ben
Cardin and other Democrats, urged voters to reach out and work
against, not all Republicans, but the party's "most extreme
right-wing section" that has controlled the country for the past
six years.
"We've got a chance to really be more than just Democrats
beating Republicans," said Clinton. "We've got a chance to get
this country together again."
Before stepping onstage, Clinton lent his celebrity status to
a fundraising reception for Cardin, with a base donation of
$5,000. Fewer than 50 people attended, according to Cardin
Press Secretary Oren Shur.
His appearance was the most recent in a long line of
heavy-weight politicians to raise money for Maryland Democrats
in the past three weeks, including Sens. Barack Obama, D-Ill.,
Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., and John Kerry, D-Mass.
A beaming Cardin sang the ex-president's praises before the
200-some people at the Frederick Douglas Isaac Myers Maritime
Park in Fells Point.
"Mr. President, we miss you in the White House!" said Cardin,
as Clinton stood with the top candidates on the Democratic
ticket from Maryland: Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley, running
for governor; Delegate Anthony Brown, candidate for lieutenant
governor; Attorney General candidate Doug Gansler and
Comptroller candidate Peter Franchot.
Clinton described Cardin as "an old-fashioned politician in
public service (who) . . . actually believes that people can get
together to talk out their differences and do things that's good
for everybody."
In contrast, he said, the current administration is divisive,
paralyzed and "self-defeating."
The crowd showed its dismay when Clinton said he was
"speaking as somebody who can't run for anything anymore," but
who has spent the last six years pounding the pavement.
In his travels, he has learned that Democrats have become
both the progressive and the conciliatory party, he said.
"We represent now both strains. That's why nine Iraq War
veterans, an ex-CIA agent, an ex-FBI agent and a three-star
admiral (are) running for Congress as Democrats," he said.
"That's why when I leave Maryland, I'm going to Virginia to
campaign for President Reagan's Navy secretary, who's running as
a Democrat."
He was referring to Jim Webb, who is trying to
unseat Republican Sen. George Allen.
The Republican Party's main weapon, Clinton said, has been
ideology, and with ideology, "facts become irrelevant."
"They govern by assertion and attack." It will take an
"old-fashioned politician" like Ben Cardin to resolve issues in
a bipartisan, logical way that benefits everyone, he said.
He closed his remarks by urging the audience to "go find
somebody who's not an active Democrat and try to get them to
vote."
When he finished his speech,
he stepped into the open arms of the crowd, shaking hands,
smiling for photos and giving autographs.
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