May 2, 2008
Bill Clinton stumps in Morgantown
Former president says wife Hillary is 'change-maker'
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Wendy Alke, a 57-year-old Morgantown attorney, doesn't fit in either of those categories but says she's followed Clinton's career long before she was first lady.

"She's always exhibited caring and compassion for those who are in need, including children," said Alke, who dismissed critics who say Clinton is difficult to like.

"Because she's a woman, she has different hurdles she has to overcome," she said, adding that Clinton has to be careful at times to not be perceived as weak.

"She's doing what every woman in this society in the working world has to do. She gets up in the morning and she does the best she can."

About 40 miles southwest of Morgantown, Anne Sedlock enthusiastically shouted "woman power." She was among a crowd of several hundred who gathered around a home on Mulberry Street in Clarksburg, its front porch draped with red, white and blue bunting.

"I'm here for Hillary," said Clarksburg area resident Mary Jo Short, who was holding a small American flag. She says she wants a president committed to ending the war in Iraq and doing something about the economy.

In Clarksburg, Clinton contrasted his wife's appeal to working-class people with the elitists he says support Obama. He made the same comparison two months when he last campaigned in West Virginia, calling his wife's critics in the party "glitterati" and "elites."

"The great divide in this country is not by race or even income, it's by those who think they are better than everyone else and think they should play by a different set of rules," he said in Clarksburg. "In West Virginia and Arkansas, we know that when we see it."

Clinton said his wife's primary challenger has "got so much money and it's a different electorate. It's a little more upscale and modern ... than those poor people in Texas and Ohio."

He said an unnamed Obama supporter suggested the former president was being sent to small towns where he couldn't do any damage and was going to bring "Wal-Mart greeters to the polls."

"He thought he was insulting me, but I think he gave me a darn good idea."

Clinton also touched on the economy and health care, saying his wife would work hard to develop clean coal technology. He said Hillary Clinton is the only candidate with short-term and long-term solutions for rising gas prices - a summer-long national gas tax holiday and charging fees on oil companies with windfall profits.

While the plan has been criticized as political pandering, Bill Clinton says working families understand the need for immediate relief.

He also said a win in West Virginia would show the country that the Democratic voters are behind his wife, despite what some might think.

"If the public is for you, it's hard for the politicians to stop you," he said.

Clinton stumped for his wife in Parkersburg, Chesapeake and Beckley in March and spoke at the Democrats' annual Jefferson-Jackson Dinner in Charleston in October.

Both Hillary Clinton and Obama made campaign stops in West Virginia in March.

West Virginia's primary is May 13.

AP writer Tom Breen contributed to this report from Clarksburg.

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