WASHINGTON, May 31 (AFP): Hillary Clinton Saturday makes a last stand in her ebbing White House bid, as the Democratic Party tries to defuse a unity-sapping row over voided primary votes in Michigan and Florida.
The legal wranglings of the Democratic National Committee's rules panel in a Washington hotel will mark the latest impropable twist in Clinton's epic coast-to-coast nominating duel with Barack Obama, now drawing to a close.
The former first lady won outlaw elections in both Florida and Michigan, which gatecrashed the party's set-in-stone nominating calendar-but the states were punished and had their nominating convention delegates stripped.
But now she needs both states to count to cut her delegate gap with the overwhelming front- runner Obama, and to claim she won the popular vote nationwide.
The rules committee must decide whether Clinton is right to argue that ignoring the states and cutting their delegates out of August's convention in Denver would disenfranchise 2.3 million people in vital battleground states.
Even in the unlikely event that Clinton gets both delegations seated, she would likely still lag more than 100 delegates behind Obama, after the last primaries, Puerto Rico on Sunday, and Montana and South Dakota Tuesday.
Going into Saturday's meeting, the Clinton campaign has laid out an uncompromising position.
Obama has offered a compromise, and can afford to be generous as he leads every metric of the Democratic race, and would not be affected by suffering a net delegate loss to Clinton over the Michigan and Florida imbroglio. But Obama's campaign manager David Plouffe said on Thursday that his camp was not willing to give all of the delegates to Clinton-not least because his candidate was not even on the ballot in Michigan.
Clinton's camp has not yet said whether they could prolong the marathon Democratic race, and even take their fight all the way to Denver if they do not get what they want this weekend.
Democratic National Committee staff lawyers said in a pre-meeting brief that it is not an option to restore full voting rights to all 210 delegates originally apportioned to Florida, and the 156 given to Michigan.
The meeting is expected to draw busloads of Clinton supporters to protest that the former first lady, who originally backed the punishments handed to Florida and Michigan, is being treated unfairly.