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Clinton Campaigns With Family, GOP Voter

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[December 22, 2007]  CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -- Democratic Hillary Rodham Clinton got by with a little help from her friends - Republican ones - and family on Friday.

The presidential candidate, in a tight race with rival Barack Obama in the first primary state, was joined by her mother, Dorothy Rodham, and her daughter, Chelsea, as she appealed to female voters at the start of a two-day campaign swing.

Rodham and the younger Clinton didn't address the crowd, but state Senate President Sylvia Larsen did.

"I know about glass ceilings," said Larsen, only the third woman to lead the state legislative branch. Larsen said Clinton represented the United States on international trips, worked for children and families and was a major player in her husband's administration.

"As first lady, she was both a strategist and an idealist," Larsen said.

Clinton planned to tell New Hampshire voters how she reached across party lines and produced results - echoing television ads already on the air. She also dispatched supporters to vouch for her record and soften the sometimes harsh public caricature that has frustrated her campaign.

"This is a person who can reach common ground and never compromise her principles," New Yorker Jeff Volk said, telling the story of being stuck in New Orleans when Hurricane Katrina hit and how Clinton helped him.

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"I met one of the most caring, compassionate and informed people I have ever met in my entire life," said Volk, a Republican who has given the maximum of $2,300 to Clinton's campaign and $5,000 to Clinton's political action committee in 2007.

Clinton, standing at Volk's shoulder, said only through bipartisan work can "a sense of fear and fatalism coming from the White House" be erased.

"A lot of the problems that we face in America are not Democratic or Republican problems. They are American problems and I want us to start acting like Americans again," she said. "I want us to roll up our sleeves and solve our problems."

Clinton leads Obama, 42 percent to 25 percent among women in the latest CNN-WMUR poll conducted by the University of New Hampshire. She leads overall in that poll, 38 percent to 26 percent, but trails slightly among independents. A day earlier, Obama met with a small group of New Hampshire independents to build his slight edge there.

A separate poll, released Friday from USA Today and Gallup, showed both Clinton and Obama at 32 percent general support each.

[Associated Press; By PHILIP ELLIOTT]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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