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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Clinton gets a little husbandly help


Former President Bill Clinton joins U.S. Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., during a rally at the Iowa state fairgrounds.Associated Press
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Dan Balz and Anne E. Kornblut Washington Post

DES MOINES, Iowa — Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton rolled out the ultimate campaign surrogate Monday night, sharing a stage with her husband, Bill Clinton, as one of the world’s best-known women sought to reintroduce herself to the voters of Iowa.

The former president came to offer validation for his wife, and his appearance underscored the campaign’s determination to deal with what has become a nagging problem in a state that could be crucial in determining who wins the Democratic nomination: Hillary Clinton leads in national polls, but she has been struggling in the state with the first caucuses of the nomination process.

Bill Clinton’s message was short and simple. “In 2008,” he said, “I will celebrate my 40th year as a voter, and in those 40 years … she is by a long stretch the best qualified non-incumbent I have ever had a chance to vote for in my entire life.”

The Clintons arrived an hour after the scheduled start of their rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds, but they received a warm welcome — he wearing a bright-yellow shirt and she a pastel jacket.

After ticking through Hillary Clinton’s record as a young lawyer, first lady of Arkansas, first lady during his two terms in the White House and now as a second-term senator from New York, her husband said: “Here’s the second thing I want to say that she really can’t say for herself: You will never have anybody in the White House who cares more about how every decision she makes and every problem she faces affects you and the people you know and care about.”

Following her husband to the microphone, Hillary Clinton retold her life story — from her upbringing in Chicago to Wellesley to Yale Law School — before slipping into what has become her standard stump speech, promising to improve domestic policy and end the war in Iraq.

She took note of the day’s most notable events, lambasting President Bush for commuting the sentence of I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby even though the couple faced criticism themselves over Bill Clinton’s pardon of financier Marc Rich.

Although Hillary Clinton at one time argued that she would run entirely on her own merits, she did not hesitate Monday night to turn to her husband’s record, and she said she would take full advantage of his popularity along the campaign trail.

Reaching toward her husband, seated nearby, she said she would “have some good help along the way” as she ran.