Red-faced Clinton tirade stuns superdelegates behind closed doors RAW STORY

Published: Wednesday April 2, 2008



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Print This Email This A private meeting between Bill Clinton and California superdelegates erupted when the former president was reminded of Bill Richardson's decision to endorse Barack Obama. "It was like someone pulled the pin from a grenade," according to San Francisco Chronicle columnists Phillip Matier and Andrew Ross. "'Five times to my face (Richardson) said that he would never do that,' a red-faced, finger-pointing Clinton erupted," the two write in Wednesday's paper. Clinton "was a far cry" from the "congenial former president" who told fellow delegates to "chill out" over the race between his wife and Illinois Senator Barack Obama. "It was one of the worst political meetings I have ever attended," one superdelegate said.



According to those at the meeting, Clinton - who flew in from Chicago with bags under his eyes - was classic old Bill at first, charming and making small talk with the 15 or so delegates who gathered in a room behind the convention stage.

But as the group moved together for the perfunctory photo, Rachel Binah, a former Richardson delegate who now supports Hillary Clinton, told Bill how "sorry" she was to have heard former Clinton campaign manager James Carville call Richardson a "Judas" for backing Obama.



It was as if someone pulled the pin from a grenade.



"Five times to my face (Richardson) said that he would never do that," a red-faced, finger-pointing Clinton erupted.



The former president then went on a tirade that ran from the media's unfair treatment of Hillary to questions about the fairness of the votes in state caucuses that voted for Obama. It ended with him asking delegates to imagine what the reaction would be if Obama was trailing by just 1 percent and people were telling him to drop out.



"It was very, very intense," said one attendee. "Not at all like the Bill of earlier campaigns."



"It was kind of strange later when he took the stage and told everyone to 'chill out,' " one delegate told us.



"We couldn't help but think he was also talking to himself."

