Obama and Clinton trade charges in speech flap
By John Whitesides, Political Correspondent
NILES, Ohio (Reuters) - Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton traded charges on Monday over Obama's uncredited use of a friend's lines in a speech, one day before the presidential contenders meet in a critical showdown in Wisconsin.
Pointing toward Tuesday's primary, the two camps battled over a recent Obama speech using words from Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick -- a friend and political ally of Obama. Obama said he should have credited Patrick but dismissed the controversy as no big deal.
Clinton spokesman Howard Wolfson said the use of the lines called into question Obama's rhetoric -- one of the Illinois senator's biggest selling points.
"Senator Obama is running on the strength of his rhetoric and the strength of his promises and, as we have seen in the last couple of days, he's breaking his promises and his rhetoric isn't his own," Wolfson said.
The exchanges came before Tuesday's votes in Wisconsin and Hawaii, which will allocate a combined 94 delegates to the August convention that selects the Democratic presidential nominee in November's election.
Polls show a tight race in Wisconsin as Obama tries to extend his string of eight straight victories in Democratic nominating contests, which have given him a lead in the race for pledged convention delegates.
Obama, who was born in Hawaii, is favored to win in that state.
Republican front-runner John McCain earned the endorsement of former U.S. President George H.W. Bush, the father of the current president, at a Houston meeting. Continued...






