Pelosi Says Women Won't Suffer a `Step Back' If Clinton Loses
By Laura Litvan
May 22 (Bloomberg) -- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said women
won't suffer a ``step back'' if Democrat Hillary Clinton loses
her presidential bid, and rejected the idea of sexism in the
presidential campaign.
Clinton, 60, a New York senator, is ``bigger than all of
it'' and has shown ``courage,'' Pelosi, a California Democrat,
said in an interview with Judy Woodruff broadcast on the PBS
NewsHour last night.
``A woman is down to the wire in contention for the
presidential nominee,'' Pelosi said. ``You know she still may
win this -- but whatever the outcome, new ground has been
broken, and it won't be left broken. It will be built upon.''
Pelosi, 68, said the Democrats' delegate-selection process,
not the popular vote, will determine whether Illinois Senator
Barack Obama or Clinton wins the party's nomination this year.
``The person who has the most delegates becomes the nominee
of the party,'' Pelosi said. ``It's not been about the popular
vote.''
Clinton, who trails Obama in delegates, is pressing for
consideration of popular votes in Florida and Michigan, which
she won after the Democratic National Committee stripped the
states of their delegates as punishment for moving up their
primaries in violation of party rules. Clinton contends that she
would hold a popular-vote lead if the two states' results were
counted.
Pelosi said in the interview that delegates from both
states will ultimately be seated at the Democrats' national
convention in Denver in August under a system that will be
accepted by both candidates.
Racial Divisions
``It will be done in a way that I think is signed off on by
both of the candidates, Senator Clinton and Senator Obama, each
of the states, Michigan and Florida, and also by the Democratic
National Committee,'' Pelosi said.
Pelosi said she isn't concerned about racial divisions that
appear to be reflected in votes in some primary states, and that
the outcome of the Oregon primary -- where Obama overwhelmingly
won white voters -- provided further evidence that the Illinois
senator can appeal to both black and white voters.
``Should he become the nominee of our party with the
message of change and what that change means for working
families in America, I think those same people will see that
their interests are served by a Democratic president,'' Pelosi
said. ``It needs to be attended to, but I don't think it's a
worry.''
Kentucky and Oregon
Clinton and Obama split the May 20 primaries, with Clinton
winning Kentucky by 36 percentage points and Obama capturing
Oregon by 17 points.
Obama has 1,962 delegates, according to an Associated Press
tally, putting him 64 delegates shy of the 2,026 needed to
clinch the nomination. The results from yesterday's primaries
left Clinton with 1,779 delegates, or 247 short.
Obama also continues to pick up superdelegates. He's gotten
eight so far this week, including West Virginia Senator Robert
Byrd on May 19 and Connecticut Representative Joseph Courtney
yesterday. That brings his superdelegate tally to 308.5 compared
with Clinton's 280.5. In the past two weeks, he has outpaced
Clinton in such endorsements by better than 10 to 1.
Pelosi predicted that Democrats will win the White House
because of the contrast between the Democratic nominee and
presumptive Republican presidential standard-bearer John McCain,
an Arizona senator.
She reiterated her skepticism about Obama and Clinton
running on the same ticket.
``In all honesty, I do think it is not likely,'' Pelosi
said.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Laura Litvan in Washington at
llitvan@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: May 22, 2008 00:01 EDT