Obama and Clinton appeal for unity

Reuters/Jim Young

Reuters/Jim Young

Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have taken the first step toward healing the wounds of their bruising presidential nominating fight with a joint appearance tday in the New Hampshire town of Unity.

The former rivals embraced, lavished praise on each other and vowed to bring the Democratic Party together for the November election fight against Republican John McCain.

"Today we are coming together for the same goal - to elect Barack Obama the next president of the United States," Ms Clinton told the crowd of about 3,000.

"We have gone toe-to-toe in this hard-fought primary, but today and every day going forward we stand shoulder-to-shoulder for the ideals we share and the values we cherish," she said.

The joint appearance in a rural field outside an elementary school in the symbolically named New Hampshire town of Unity was the first time the two shared a stage in public since Obama clinched the Democratic nomination earlier this month.

The Illinois senator has trod cautiously in courting Clinton and her millions of supporters, many still angry about the outcome of their epic 16-month campaign struggle.

"We've made history together," said Obama, who would be the first black U.S. president. Clinton was vying to be the first woman US president. Mr Obama said she had served as an inspiration to millions of women and his own two daughters.

"We shattered barriers that have stood firm since the founding of this nation," he said.

He noted the town of Unity had split its votes evenly during the January 8th New Hampshire primary, with 107 votes for Mr Obama and 107 for Ms Clinton.

"Now we look at them as 214 votes for change in America," Mr Obama said.

He told reporters earlier this week he hoped the joint appearance in New Hampshire signalled an active role for the New York senator in his White House race.

Mr Clinton, who entered the race in January 2007 a heavy favourite, battled Mr Obama to the end of voting on June 3rd in a race that embittered some of her supporters -- particularly some of the women who formed her core constituency.

Whether Mr Obama can win over all of those supporters remains unclear, but many public opinion polls show him solidifying his Democratic backing in recent weeks and moving out to a clear national lead on Mr McCain.

Ms Clinton, who returned to her Senate duties in Washington this week for the first time since dropping out of the Democratic race on June 7th, offered strong praise for Obama.

"I've had a front row seat to his candidacy," she said. I've seen his strength and determination, his grace and his grit."

Ms Clinton introduced Mr Obama to her top fundraisers at a private meeting in Washington on Thursday night. Obama already had asked his big donors to help her pay off more than $10 million she owes to campaign debtors.

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