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        Clinton calls for gas tax vote, Obama calls it 'shell' game

        (Agencies)
        Updated: 2008-05-03 10:05

        MUNSTER, Ind. - Hillary Rodham Clinton called for a vote Friday in the Democratic-controlled Congress on a summertime suspension of the federal gasoline tax, a plan that Barack Obama dismissed as a political stunt that would cost thousands of construction jobs.


        Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., speaks at a rally at Guilford College in Greensboro, N.C., Friday, May 2, 2008. [Agencies]

        "It's a Shell game. Literally," Obama said to laughter from his campaign audience, adding it would mean little for hard-pressed consumers.

        The Democratic presidential rivals highlighted their differences in ads and speeches across North Carolina and Indiana, two states with primaries Tuesday.

        Related readings:
         Obama, Clinton clash over gas tax as Indiana looms
         Clinton faces tough challenge in Indiana
         Poll: Clinton leads McCain by 9 points
         Dean says either Clinton or Obama must drop out in June

        Polls point toward a particularly close finish in Indiana, which is next door to Obama's home state of Illinois.

        Surveys show him with a dwindling advantage in North Carolina, and Clinton decided to spend all of Friday and Saturday in the state before returning to Indiana for a final push. Both candidates were addressing a fundraiser for the North Carolina Democratic Party Friday night.

        The two primaries have 187 national convention delegates at stake.

        Obama, the front-runner, leads in the overall delegate competition, 1,736.05-1605.5. Clinton won a decisive victory last week in Pennsylvania and is counting on a strong run through the late primaries to persuade convention superdelegates to help her overtake her rival. She picked up the support Friday of Democratic National Committee member Jaime A. Gonzalez Jr., a Texas superdelegate, and two pledged delegates from final results from last week's Pennsylvania primary.

        Jolted by Thursday's defection of Joe Andrew, a former national party chairman, Clinton responded with a letter from seven other former party heads and the family of an eighth.

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