St. Louis Area News
Senator Hillary Clinton visits St. Louis
08:29 AM CST on Monday, December 3, 2007
ST. LOUIS (AP/KMOV) -- Senator Hillary Clinton was in St. Louis to attend fundraisers for her presidential campaign on Sunday.
She appeared at a public fundraiser at the Pageant, a concert venue.
Event organizers said about 1,000 people attended.
Sen. Hillary Clinton and her supporters blasted the Bush administration at a rally to support her presidential campaign.
Former House Democratic leader Dick Gephardt, who ran unsuccessfully for president in 1988 and 2004, told an audience of about 1,300 people that he told Clinton more than a year ago that she had his full support if she ran for president.
"I will be for you, and I will do anything I can to help you, because I've never been this worried about the United States," Gephardt said.
"This president we have now is the worst president we've ever had in the history of the United States," he said.
Gephardt said he wouldn't criticize other candidates, but believed Clinton was the best choice.
"What we need most now is somebody that doesn't need on-the-job training," he said. Gephardt said Clinton has the intellect, the heart and the experience to begin leading on her first day in the White House.
Clinton also did not talk about other presidential candidates in the race, but strongly criticized Bush's leadership. She said the era of "cowboy diplomacy" must end, and said she would work to restore America's leadership role in the world. She said a person cannot lead if no one is following. A president can do a lot, she said, and the wrong president can do a lot of damage.
"I'm not running just to go live in the White House. I've already done that," she said, to loud applause and cheering from the audience. "I'm running to enlist us all again in the great adventure of lifting up our country and being part of something so much bigger than ourselves."
A spokesman for the Republican National Committee, Danny Diaz, said, "Senator Clinton's attacks against Republicans essentially serve as an admission that her plans to grow government and raise taxes are being rejected. No amount of finger pointing or excuse making will give Clinton credibility with Missouri voters."
Clinton, in her remarks, focused on fiscal responsibility and talked about funding her universal health care plan by "repealing tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans."
For the January 3rd Iowa Caucuses, a poll released by the Des Moines Sunday Register shows both races in dead heats.
For the democrats, Barack Obama has 28%, with Hillary Clinton not far behind with 25%.
That poll puts Mike Huckabee and Mitt Romney ahead of the other republican presidential hopefuls.
The Democrat who represents New York was also at a private fundraiser in Ladue on Sunday, where donors are giving more than $2,000 each.
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