Ole Hillary Swallows Her Pride

Posted on June 20th, 2008 - By Bossip Staff

Categories: Barack Obama, Bolitics, News

Posted by Bossip Staff

As fate would have it, Hillary has become Barack’s official cheerleader:

Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama is scheduled to campaign for the first time next week with former rival Hillary Clinton. Obama’s campaign Friday announced the two senators will campaign together June 27, but released no further details.

We gotta give the old bag an A for effort. Hillary Clinton pulled so many dirty little tricks during her campaign – she made it painfully obvious how desperate she was to win the nomination. Now, the time has come for Hillary to suck it up and do her best to present a united front in the face of the Republicans – but you know she’s salty than a mutha!

Source

  • num1dominicano

    1

  • ray ray

    respect for Hillary!

  • mojojojo195

    IT AINT HAPPENING

  • Lush-Us Lipps

    This should be very interesting! I’m staying tuned!

  • http://www.blackgirlworld.blogspot.com cutie pie

    Yea well I’m not convinced and neither should obama…keep that chick away from all sharp objects and explosives cause I don’t trust her after that assasination comment

  • AMBER

    That’s good I’m glad they are joining forces. Yes We Can!!!

  • Natasha

    I am glad she is supporting him! As much negativity that came out of this she needs to work hard to turn that around!!!

  • Steel

    Hell yeah she’s pissed. whats that saying if looks could kill.

    The have mccain on video saying he ‘Didn’t love america until he was deprived of her company’. He stated this more than on a single occassion and they are try to put a differnt spin on it.

    Maybe now all the racist SOBs will get of Mrs. Obama back

  • http://www.blackgirlworld.blogspot.com cutie pie

    (itz daddy nicca) wow that’s very nasty

  • Slide Like A Fresh Pair of Gators (fka Keepin’ It Real – D’Original)

    I still don’t trust her, after ALL that she just did…

    Naw, I’ve seen her type before and I just don’t have any faith in her shiesty a$$ – Sorry

  • FR – Just Living In London!

    This was always gonna happen, Obama, will be president, Hilary will be VP, that was written ages ago, just don’t expect to much to change!

    I’m all for hope and it will be a great thing to have a black president, but I we all know america doesn’t elect presidents they select ‘em!

    Bang!

  • RU$$

    If looks could Kill! :o

  • I GOT OBAMA RAMA

    I AGREE WITH CUTIE PIE. THAT TRICK IS SHADY.

    YAHH YAHH TRICK.

  • http://myspace.com/afiya00 Afiya

    Who asked her… *rolls eyes*

    I guess Obama figured he’d keep his ememy closer…the snake!

  • whatever

    i bet hillary spits instead of swallowing it! obama would be stupid to put that witch on the ticket with him. she’ll poison him or have someone to shoot down his plane!

  • Hannibal

    Thats right ladies, remember, its a mans world!

  • http://www.mypsace.com/sbenitez Santana Caress

    she looks like an evil, scheming witch. I dont trust her ass!

  • jah1usa

    she wants to be supreme court justice

  • Dawn

    One mo thing—that avatar on prettygirl’s comment says it all for me regarding H.C.

  • Steel

    She will not be on the ticket. he has already hire that hispanic woman that Hillary fired as her campain manager to lead his VP’s campain. That alone tells you he is not going to choose her.

  • Sydney

    This is totally unrelated, but I wanted to share this latest chapter in the Scott McClellan drama:

    Former presidential spokesman Scott McClellan on Friday said President Bush has lost the public’s trust by failing to open up about his administration’s mistakes and backtracking on a promise be up front about the leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame’s identity.

    “This White House promised or assured the American people that at some point when this was behind us they would talk publicly about it. And they have refused to,” McClellan told the House Judiciary Committee. “And that’s why I think more than any other reason we are here today and the suspicion still remains.”

    Also, from what has been reported, I think there is little to no chance that Hills will wind up on the ticket. The primary women contenders for the job, I believe, are Kathleen Sebelius and Janet Napolitano. I think Obama’s camp knows it would politically imprudent to choose Hillary. I see their campaigning together as more of a show as a united Democratic front for November, and it may help to smooth over the residual negative feelings remaining among many Clinton supporters whom Obama still has to woo. And Hillary still has campaign bills to pay.

  • Til You Do Right By Me….

    Dang, that Banchee’s looking at Barack like she hates him. Ease up Hill!!

  • INOCENTbiSTANDR

    She’s not even an option as far as being on the ticket come November. He knows exactly what he’s doing. He has to win over her supporters and in order to achieve that, they have to believe that she’s is all for OBAMA in ’08. But as we can tell in this picture, she clearly is not.

    YES WE CAN, YES WE DID, & YES WE WILL!!

  • INOCENTbiSTANDR

    @ Marsh

    I feel the same way girl. He got a certain swagga that just turns me on.

  • Ms Sharmaine

    Hi”lair”y about Hi”lair”y that the bottom line! She has no other objective. The Clinton’s have been use to being a powerhouse and now they have no clue what to do next.

    Another website reported that when Chelesy “Bubble-face” was asked would she vote for Barak she did not respond. I assume that she did not answer for a reason. Chel will probably answer if her mom was the VP.

    All in all the old hag is full of shyte and I will not vote if she’s on the ticket!

  • Zina {The original princess}

    I see hate on her face in this pic.

  • Ahhhhhhhhh

    Ahhhhhh,ummmmmm…Hillary comes from a long line of Republikkkans (father, grandfater, etc.) Her father tried and tried to get Bill to convert to their party but he refused. She just happened to marry a Democrat. That Repug line still runs in her veins. That’s why she was jocking McShame over Obama.

  • Nurse GiGi

    ^^^interesting

  • Bayo

    I know it’s a political move to show unity in the party, but I’m concern with her suspension of her nomination and not terminating it. If something were to happen before the convention, the next to be consider would be the remaining nominee. I read alot of information regarding NEW WORLD ORDER, and it was said the President around 2010 would be the one who enforce the NWO into a destructive level, I believe HRC would fit this more so than BO. So, I feel she still can’t be counted out.

  • http://DeeWA2008.blogspot.com DNR87

    I realize how tempting it is to nuzzle, but we are judged by the company we keep.

  • http://DeeWA2008.blogspot.com DNR87

    I realize how tempting it is to nuzzle, but we are judged by the company we keep.

  • Ahhhhhhhhh

    @ PRTTYBRWNGIRL, WHO POSTED AT 5:43 PM, OBAMA IS NOT TAKING MONEY FROM LOBBYISTS. He will be accepting money from private individuals, like people who has been sending him small amounts, instead of taking it from public organizations; because if he take public finances they will control how much he’s able to spend. He never agreed to McCain’s request for him to take from the public organizations. McCain wanted him to agree to this because he knows that it would limit Obama’s spending, which would outshine him.

    READ THE ARTICLE BELOW FROM THE HUFFPOST FOR YOURSELF:

    He will be the first candidate ever to rely on private donations to finance his general election campaign, a not unanticipated but controversial move that will give him an enormous advantage over John McCain beginning in August when the general election finance rules take effect. In accepting public financing, the McCain campaign alone — not the Republican party and not special interest groups or so-called 527s — will be limited to spending $85 million between the convention and Election Day. The Obama campaign, by rejecting public financing, will be able to spend as much money as it can raise — and some estimates put that figure as high as $300 million.

    “This was not an easy decision,” Obama, tells his supporters.

    I support a robust system of public financing of elections. But the public financing system as it stands today is broken and we face opponents who have become masters at gaming this broken system… I am asking you to try to do something that has never been done before… to declare our independence from a broken system and run the type of campaign that reflects the grass roots values that have already changed our politics and brought us this far.

    The conventional wisdom has long been that Obama would massively outraise John McCain and bury him during the general election campaign with advertisements and a ground campaign in all 50 states that would expand the electoral map, testing McCain’s vulnerability in states like Texas, Montana and Georgia, which are not expected to vote Democratic but might, and so will force McCain to defend his turf with resources he could be spending elsewhere.

    Indeed, Obama’s prodigious fundraising ability terrifies Republicans. If the more than 1.5 million donors who have contributed to Obama’s primary campaign give just $100 to his general election effort, that already represents more than $150 million — and you can be sure that many will donate much more. Some are already mentioning the possibility of Obama raising more than $300 million just for the general election, a stunning sum to be able to spend in just over two months. With McCain assured of choosing public financing, the mere $85 million he will have to spend in the same time period would make it hard for him to survive the Democratic onslaught in key swing states.

    But as the general election is kicking into high gear, it is unclear just how significant Obama’s advantage will be. In fact, there are a number of question marks about both campaigns’ fundraising plans and abilities.

    McCain and the FEC

    The Republican’s fundraising has been at times too anemic and the GOP base is too disgruntled for him to take the risk of forgoing public financing — and the fact that no candidate has done so until now underscores the extent of the gamble. The fact is, however, that McCain may well be excluded from accepting public financing. The FEC needs to approve his request and for now that committee still does not have a quorum to take any such decision. The Senate stalemate over new appointments that was at the origin of this situation got partly resolved mid-May, but there still have been no new votes on appointments.

    Another question is whether the FEC might attempt to punish the McCain campaign for not using public funds in the primary despite using the promise of doing so to secure grants from banks at the end of 2007 (more details about this controversy here). McCain took advantage of the FEC’s inability to rule on the matter because it lacked a quorum to spend money over the limits that are allowed for candidates who accept public financing.

    The RNC

    Campaign money is flooding to the RNC. Keeping up with tradition, the national Republican party is massively outraising its Democratic counterpart. The RNC finished the month of May with more than $40 million in the bank compared to more than $4 million for the DNC. Since most of the RNC’s funds help the Republican nominee in a presidential year, this is giving the Republicans hope that they will remain roughly on par with the Obama campaign. Their calculation is that the current cash-in-hand of the respective campaigns added to that of the DNC and RNC has the two parties at the same level.

    This is part of the reason Obama is opting out of public financing. He can raise more then McCain and keep control of the funds.

    In any case, there are a few problems with the RNC analysis. For one, the reason Obama does not have that significant a cash-in-hand advantage over McCain right now is that he has been spending massively to defeat Clinton (spending that will incidentally come in handy in the fall since a lot of it consisted of ads in states like PA, OR and even MT, which Obama will attempt to win in the fall). McCain would be looking at a deficit that would surpass $100 million — potentially even $200 million. There is very little the RNC could do to keep the McCain campaign afloat under this scenario.

    Obama and public financing

    The final question mark has been answered today. Obama has made the bold move of eschewing public financing, a move the Mccain camp has been dreading and trying to pressure Obama not to take. Indeed, the McCain campaign has long been demanding Obama to respect what they call his “pledge” to take public financing if McCain took public financing. Obama had taken no such pledge but had said that he would “aggressively pursue an agreement.” The GOP thought they had him committed, however, and that he would look like a flip-flopper if he reneged. But in the last few months it has become increasingly obvious how big a financial advantage Obama would have without public financing, and today he took the option off the table.

    Obama said he would accept public financing if a deal could be struck in which the RNC would curb its spending. “I won’t disarm unilaterally,” he added. The RNC’s massive financial advantage over the DNC would mean that Republicans would have much more money to spend if both campaigns limited themselves to $85 million. Entering a binding agreement to not spend more than his opponent would have constitute a wasted opportunity for Obama and his amazing grassroots fundraising operation, no matter what deal he could have made with the RNC to curb its spending

  • justmoi

    I just hope that Hilary Clinton dropped her silly demand that Obama pay for her campaign. If she is willing to offer true support to Obama then good for her.

  • first lady

    obama and michelle watch out for billarys and her army of white & black devils alike and remebmer puerto rico: yes you can 08′

  • Capital Peach

    Whoa, if looks could kill in this picture….

  • Martina

    The photo is probably doctored. I am amazed at the lynch mob mentality among the Obama supporters.

    I am an African American who is a Hillary supporter. This site demonstrates how full of hatred many Obama supporters are. It doesn’t matter that their candidate has no substance. It doesn’t matter that he DIDN’T really win in the popular vote. He doesn’t matter that he has acted no differently than other Washington politicians. His actions belies all he claims he stands for. Yet, Obamites have convinced themselves that he will be the next president. That may well be but he has some major hurdles to overcome first. WHether you will admit it or not, the man coasted in on the strength of media bias, unrepresentative caucases and the black vote. These will not take him to the White House in the fall. Remember, there was no landslide victory and even if you don’t accept that she won the popular vote—she garnered at least half.

    Remember, Hillary supporters are angry about the way she was treated and the viciousness demonstrated here justifies their anger. You need our votes. Grow up, start acting like the Christians most of you probably claim to be. The hatefest against Hillary Clinton, the more substantive candidate needs to stop. It is shameful to treat someone with her track record this way. It brings no value to the process and will no help your candidate win. It says more about the ignorance of the horde. It is a sad thing.

  • Anywhoo

    Martina:

    I don’t want to cyberbeef with you, but girl, you are so off the chain on this. Obama supporters don’t hate Hillary, but it was the company she kept: Geraldine Ferraro, Andrew Young, Bob Johnson, even her husband to some extent. They pushed many blacks over to Obama. Remember Blacks were not Obama’s constituency, until these people opened their mouths. Obama didn’t show his ass, her people did.

    Your arguments don’t make sense. The popular vote vs. the no. of delegates was settled by the Constitution. It is called the electoral college. It is why the Republicans stole FL in 2000 and OH in 2004. As for the black vote, we are only 13% of the population in America. Many of our men can’t vote in a majority of states due to convictions. So to “blame” the black vote for Obama’s success makes no sense. Further, your candidate forgot her midwestern roots. She decided to rely on Madison Ave., name brand (Clinton) and East Coast/Hollywood money. Her website was not sophisticated and youth-appealed as Obama’s. As for the media — sure there was bias, but it wasn’t about gender, it was about age and Hillary started it by voting for that war.

    The primaray was Hillary’s to lose and she did just that.

  • crazychris

    i hope barak and hilary clinton end up in bed somewhere boy that would be a scandal she can finally pay bill back for humiliating her.

  • vgeezy

    She is realy salty in that picture….LOL

  • um no

    Her ol salty self…lol

  • buttafly

    LMAO at this pic of Hillary. She looks salty than a mutha******. LOL

  • Dee Mur

    It’s time to forget the past, and move forward. It is about winning the election. Let us not be naive, campaigns are dirty. Everyone wants to win, but now we must focus on defeating John McCain. It is not about Hilary now. If Hilary can help Obama win the

    pesidency,then so be it.

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