By ADAM NAGOURNEY
Senator Barack Obama heads into the general election with obvious advantages: He is a Democratic candidate running in a sour atmosphere for Republicans, in a contest where voters are hungry for change and coming out of a campaign in which he filled arena after arena with supporters.
Yet while he would like to shift his attention fully to the onslaught already coming from Senator John McCain and the Republicans, Mr. Obama still has problems in his own party that may overshadow everything else until he addresses them: How to repair relations with Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and her supporters and whether to offer her a spot on the ticket.
Mrs. Clinton used her final hours of the long primary season to make clear that she would be open to being Mr. Obama’s running mate. If there was ever any hope in Democratic circles that she would let Mr.
Obama off the hook with an evasion or a flat declaration of no interest, Mrs. Clinton dashed it on Tuesday.
Like her husband, Mrs. Clinton has a way of becoming the center of attention even when the spotlight is supposed to be trained elsewhere, a reality that Mr. Obama will no doubt continue to confront no matter how he proceeds. It was hardly a surprise that Mr. Obama lavished praise on Mrs. Clinton and her accomplishments in his remarks Tuesday night.
Has anyone asked Michelle Obama what she thinks about an Obama/Clinton ticket? I mean, Hillary has said some very unflattering things about Michelle's hubby. How about Angry Bill? Do the Obama people really want to have him around after all the disgustingly racist things he has said throughout the campaign?
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