LOS ANGELES, Feb. 3 (Xinhua) -- Former U.S. President
Bill Clinton visited three Los Angeles-area churches on Sunday to drum up
support for his wife Hillary's presidential bid.
Clinton's visit was widely seen as an attempt to dispel national press reports that these visits were aimed at repairing frayed relations with African-American voters.
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Former U.S. president Bill Clinton kisses his wife, New York Senator and Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Rodham Clinton during a rally Jan. 25, 2008. (Xinhua/AFPPhoto) Photo Gallery>>> |
At the City of Refuge Church in Gardena, Clinton told
parishioners "I'm not against anybody," referring to Barack Obama but not
mentioning him by name.
"I waited my whole life to vote for an African
American for president, I waited my whole life to voter for a woman for
president, and sometimes I look up to the sky and say 'God, you're playing with
my mind again,'" Clinton said.
A spokesman for Hillary's presidential campaign
disputed reports in the Washington Post and on CNN that Bill Clinton went to
several of the largest local African-American congregations to explain remarks
that he made in South Carolina, that had angered some black voters.
Clinton spokesman Luis Vizcaino said that for Bill
Clinton, "going to black churches on a Sunday three days before an election is
nothing unusual."
"The Clintons have always attended black churches,
the Clintons have decades of relationships and of good relations with the
African-American community," Vizcaino said.
Hillary's California spokesman downplayed reports in
East Coast media that Los Angeles Congresswoman Diane Watson had brought Clinton
to her South Los Angeles district to explain what happened in South Carolina.
A Washington Post Internet report on Sunday quoted
Watson as saying "there will be no need for any kind of letter" from Clinton to
black parishioners, a letter she said Friday was being drafted.
Watson reportedly called the Post to assert that Bill
Clinton does not need to mend fences with black voters but would campaign "in
true Bill Clinton fashion -- personally and verbally."
Bill Clinton is accused by some of using the "race
card" by pointing out that Jesse Jackson won the South Carolina Democratic
presidential primaries in 1984 and 1988, a comment interpreted as equating
Barack Obama with Jackson, who was viewed as an unelectable candidate,
especially among white voters.
Obama beat Hillary in South Carolina with 55 percent
of the vote to her 27 percent.