Obama meets Clinton in private

Likely US Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama met privately with former rival Hillary Clinton yesterday as the party…

Likely US Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama met privately with former rival Hillary Clinton yesterday as the party sought to unite for the general election campaign after a long nomination battle.

"Senator Clinton and Senator Obama met tonight and had a productive discussion about the important work that needs to be done to succeed in November," said a statement issued by the two campaigns.

Mr Obama's campaign spokesman Robert Gibbs told reporters on a flight to Chicago that the Illinois senator met with Mrs Clinton but he declined to disclose the location or details of what they discussed.

Mr Obama had been scheduled to fly back to Chicago last night after a rally in northern Virginia, but skipped the flight and slipped away from the reporters traveling with him in order to meet secretly with Mrs Clinton.

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Critics of Mrs Clinton have accused her of trying to force her way on to the ticket
Critics of Mrs Clinton have accused her of trying to force her way on to the ticket

Mr Gibbs denied media reports that the meeting took place at Mrs Clinton's home in Washington.

As Mr Obama enjoyed his first campaign swing as the likely Democratic presidential nominee, some prominent supporters of Mrs Clinton launched an effort to pressure him to invite her to join his ticket as the No 2 in the general election battle against Republican John McCain.

But Mrs Clinton distanced herself from the push and said the decision on a vice president was his alone to make.

Critics of Mrs Clinton have accused her of trying to force her way on to the ticket. An aide to the New York senator issued a statement trying to dispel that impression.

"While Senator Clinton has made clear throughout this process that she will do whatever she can to elect a Democrat to the White House, she is not seeking the vice presidency, and no one speaks for her but her," said spokesman Phil Singer. "The choice here is Senator Obama's and his alone."

Backers of an Obama-Clinton ticket believe it would be the best way to unify the Democratic Party after the hard-fought, 16-month race between the candidates.

Mr Obama made history on Tuesday when he became the first black to win a US major-party presidential nomination. Mrs Clinton would have been the first woman to do so.

The former first lady did not immediately concede the race but told supporters in a letter on Wednesday she would hold an event on Saturday where she would formally back Obama.

Mr Obama has not tipped his hand about whom he might pick as his running mate and when asked publicly about the option of choosing Mrs Clinton, he has praised her but emphasised his selection process would be deliberative and wide-ranging.

Mrs Clinton was seen as having promoted the idea of her becoming the vice presidential nominee when she told supporters in a conference call on Tuesday that she would be "open" to it if it would help her party win the White House.

Mr Obama told reporters he appreciated the statement from Clinton's aide deferring to him on the running mate choice.

At the northern Virginia rally attended by 10,000 people, Mr Obama shared the media spotlight with someone cited frequently by pundits as a potential running mate: Virginia Senator Jim Webb.

Mr Webb, who had remained neutral as Mr Obama and Mrs Clinton battled for the nomination, gave the Illinois senator an emphatic endorsement as he introduced him.

"I'm honoured to stand alongside this man, a man of great intellect who over the past 16 months has impressed all of us as he stood up to sometimes withering attacks with measured responses, unshakable composure," Mr Webb said.

The decorated Marine veteran of the Vietnam War said Mr Obama "has given all of us confidence in the steadiness that we want to see in a commander in chief."

In his Virginia speech, Obama said he hoped he and Mr McCain could have a respectful debate about policy issues and keep the campaign from getting bogged down by "name-calling" and "scandal-mongering."

The Illinois senator told Mr McCain of that wish when the presumptive Republican nominee called Mr Obama to congratulate him on Wednesday.

"I said that I was looking forward to a civil, substantive debate on the issues. And he agreed," Mr Obama said, adding they discussed Mr McCain's idea of appearing jointly at town-hall style forums. Mr Obama's campaign has said it is open to such formats and the two camps are exchanging views on options.

But Mr Obama did not hold back from attacking Mr McCain. At an event in southwestern Virginia earlier in the day, Mr Obama likened his Republican rival's health care proposals to those of the unpopular President George W. Bush. He said Mr McCain's ideas amounted to "Bush light."

Mr McCain's campaign hit back, deriding Mr Obama's attempts to cast himself as someone who could rise above party divisions.

"Barack Obama has no record of bipartisan success," said Mr McCain's spokesman Tucker Bounds, adding Mr Obama had voted "in lock-step with his party on issues from tax relief to funding of the Iraq war."

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