April 28, 2008

AP Poll: Clinton LEADS McCain, doing better than Obama! Hillary Clinton is by FAR the STRONGEST Presidential Candidate...

I happened to be reading Yasmin Boland's astrological website based in Australia or New Zealand, I'm not really sure. She posted this article released today by the Associated Press. The World is watching this United States Presidential campaign very closely. Why do you think people from other countries care so much, you ask? Because the next chosen President-elect will significantly impact not only the United States, but the rest of the World for BETTER or for worse!

We need to elect a President who shows strength, tenacity as well as compassion. Someone who has a BACKBONE to stand up and do the RIGHT thing for ALL of the people of this great nation and the rest of the World. We need to elect a President who doesn't RUN AWAY from issues but meets them HEAD ON! We REALLY TRULY NEED to elect a President who can and WILL steer this great ship away or through the coming INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC storm SAFELY ~ we will ALL soon be facing. The global financial credit crisis that has been unfolding will NOT discriminate. Are we prepared to withstand a category 10+ Severe Cyclonic Economic Storm???

By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer 1 hour, 7 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - Hillary Rodham Clinton now leads John McCain by 9 points in a head-to-head presidential matchup, according to an Associated Press-Ipsos poll that bolsters her argument that she is more electable than Democratic rival Barack Obama.

Obama and Republican McCain are running about even.

The survey released Monday gives the New York senator and former first lady a fresh talking point as she works to raise much-needed campaign cash and persuade pivotal undecided superdelegates to side with her in the drawn-out Democratic primary fight.

Helped by independents, young people and seniors, Clinton gained ground this month in a hypothetical match with Sen. McCain, the GOP nominee-in-waiting. She now leads McCain, 50 percent to 41 percent, while Obama remains virtually tied with McCain, 46 percent to 44 percent.

Also on Monday, the head of the Republicans' House campaign committee said the party would rather face Obama in November because the GOP believes Clinton would be more of a threat to McCain among moderate voters.

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