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This election holds special meaning for so many:
Rejecting a personal entreaty from President Bill Clinton, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) plans to endorse Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) for president in a joint appearance on Monday, Democratic sources said.
Did you know there was a personal entreaty from Bill Clinton? I didn't. Here's how the endorsement helps Obama:
Democrats said the endorsement will help Obama with traditional Democratic groups where Clinton has been strong -- union households, Hispanics and downscale workers.
Also, the nod by the most experienced member of the Senate adds significant standing to Obama, who is working to prove he has the experience necessary to be president.
And here's how it hurts the Clintons:
The announcement stunned Senate colleagues, who had expected Kennedy to remain neutral until the increasingly vitriolic nominating contest with Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) settled out.
"This is the biggest Democratic endorsement Obama could possibly get short of Bill Clinton," said a high-level Democrat.
Here's how much it mattered to the Clintons:
The Clinton campaign launched a last-ditch effort over the last few days to stop Kennedy's move, orchestrating a flood of phone calls to Kennedy from sources ranging from union chiefs to his Massachusetts constituents.
The former president also called Kennedy in a vain attempt to keep him out of the race, a source familiar with the conversation said.
And here's why it hurt the Clintons:
During his two terms in the White House, President Clinton made repeated overtures to the Kennedy family. So the senator's rejection of his wife is at least as embarrassing as her 28-point loss in the South Carolina primary on Saturday.
And finally, here's what it meant to some who were close to the Kennedy brothers:
Old hands to President Kennedy and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy came out for Obama, in part because he reminded them of the charismatic brothers. One of the former advisers, Harris Wofford, said Obama "touches my soul."
"For me, no one has done that since John, Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King," Wofford said in December. "I waited a long time to have that feeling."
Some other Kennedy family members do support Hillary.
This has to be tough all around. It's obviously a very emotional issue for a lot of people, for good reason.
For so many, this election really hits home. And that can hurt.
UPDATE: Toni Morrison, who famously dubbed Bill Clinton the nation's "first black president", endorses Obama
Tagged as: clinton, morrison, obama, kennedy
GottaLaff is a regular blogger for Cliff Schecter's Blog
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