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Hillary Clinton Links Giuliani to Right Wing

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From Associated Press

Hillary Rodham Clinton said Monday that Rudolph W. Giuliani is tapping into a network of right-wing, non-New Yorkers to help pile up his fund-raising lead in their Senate contest.

The first lady said the Republican New York mayor is utilizing a “broad national network of people who are opposed to what I would do in the Senate.”

“He is playing on their fears and sending out these direct-mail requests and people that are seeing them are responding to it,” said Mrs. Clinton, who has raised $12 million to Giuliani’s $19 million. “I don’t think it’s very complicated.”

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Giuliani’s fund-raising letters are “more in line with the right wing of America than the mainstream of New Yorkers,” Mrs. Clinton said.

Giuliani campaign manager Bruce Teitelbaum responded: “Mrs. Clinton is obviously disappointed in her campaign and its ability to attract more support, so now she’s reverting to that old Clinton ruse of blaming the vast right-wing conspiracy.”

Also Monday, Mrs. Clinton said life on the campaign trail has been harder than she expected.

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“I’m having a great time, but I’m also seeing how hard it is” to be a candidate, the first lady told an audience of about 100 people at a community forum in the village of Coxsackie, just south of Albany.

“I’m almost embarrassed to think back--all the times that I would say to my husband, ‘Well, you could have said this differently, or you could have done that.’ Now, I would like to take all those words back because it’s very tough for both men and women,” she said.

Mrs. Clinton also repeated her support for gun licensing, a position shared by Giuliani.

She attacked the National Rifle Assn. for being stuck on a “theological view” about gun control, but she also warned against “people on the other extreme who want to take everybody’s guns away.”

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“I’ve gone hunting,” she said. “I don’t have anything against guns if guns are used by responsible people.”

Meanwhile, Rep. Rick Lazio (R-N.Y.), who over the weekend reignited talk of entering the race, said Monday that the contest between Mrs. Clinton and Giuliani is shaping up as a personality-driven “food fight.”

Lazio said he offers voters a clear alternative.

“I am not trying to be difficult, I am not trying to be defiant,” he said. “I am simply trying to be what I think is a good public servant and good Republican in saying I think we have had a wake-up call.”

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