Clinton Campaigns In New Hampshire
Questions Focus on Her 2002 Iraq Vote
washingtonpost.com staff writer
Sunday, February 11, 2007; Page A05
BERLIN, N.H., Feb. 10 -- Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y) faced tough questions over her 2002 vote to authorize the war in Iraq during a town hall gathering Saturday in this small mill city tucked away in the far northeastern reaches of the state.
The response to Clinton's visit to New Hampshire, her first since 1996, was typified by Roger Tilton.
Tilton, a financial consultant from Nashua who had risen at 4 a.m. to make the drive north, asked Clinton to apologize for her vote. She refused -- reiterating her stance that "I have taken responsibility for my vote."
Tilton was unmoved. "Until she says it was a mistake, she won't get my vote," he said.
The exchange highlighted the challenge Clinton faces in her still-new candidacy for president. She must convince Democratic primary voters, who tend to be strongly opposed to the war in Iraq, that her pragmatic approach to ending the conflict is the right one.
Complicating that task is that her two main rivals for the Democratic nomination -- Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) and former senator John Edwards (N.C.) -- have spoken out strongly against the war. In his formal announcement of his bid for president Saturday, Obama mentioned his proposal to withdraw U.S. combat troops from Iraq by March 2008.
Despite the pointed questioning on Iraq, Clinton remained the poised front-runner that state and national polls make her out to be. She deftly answered questions on rising college tuition, immigration and the situation in Darfur. On health-care reform, which Clinton unsuccessfully tackled as first lady, she was unbowed about the need to expand coverage.
"I am going to be right back up on that horse of universal health-care coverage, and we are going to ride," she promised.
The crowds that gathered to hear Clinton were considerable. Hundreds packed the Berlin City Hall on a frigid morning for the chance to see and hear her; thousands more lined the wooden bleachers at Concord High School in the state capital later in the day.
For many it was their first in-person exposure to Clinton, and there was considerable curiosity about how she would handle the back-and-forth repartee on which New Hampshire voters pride themselves.
"I'd like to like her," said Nathaniel Gurien of North Conway. "Now that she is running, she has to show us what she's made of."
Much of Clinton's rhetoric was aimed doing just that -- she cast herself as an ordinary woman who has lived an extraordinary life. She described her upbringing in a "middle-class family in the middle of America in the middle of the last century" and asked the audience to help her avoid gaining weight while in the state and stopping too often at Dunkin' Donuts.



