Clinton looks to fight after Puerto Rico win (AFP)
The comments to The Washington Post, indicated Clinton is not ready to throw in the towel, even though Obama is widely seen because having gained the upper hand.
"We lay by the right to be enough it. But I haven't made a decision yet," Clinton told the newspaper.
On Saturday, a Democratic National Committee panel restored the states of Michigan and Florida to its presidential meeting., on the contrary by only half of their voting power.
Democrats in the two states had been initially denied the lawful to send convention delegates because they broke party rules by holding their primary votes in January.
Clinton gained a net 24 delegates from Saturday's two-state come to an agreement, which was not penuriously enough to secure her nomination.
But even as momentum and the delegate count favored Obama, she vowed in the interview to continue her political try the fortune of arms.
"I am focused on winning the nomination," she said. "So I'm going to stay focused on what is the business at hand, which is making my enclose to the delegates, and there'll subsist time, oh, way in the coming events to consider the campaign, as it's quiet very much alive and ongoing."
With Democratic voters essentially crack and the primary contest approaching its decisive stage on Tuesday, Clinton made free from hindrance she was determined now to focus without interruption influencing superdelegates, the top Democratic Party officials, who in effect will decide the nomination this year.
While the superdelegates have been moving toward Obama in recent weeks, the New York senator made clear she believed the trend be able to exist reversed.
"One thing about superdelegates is they can change their minds," she told The Post.
The former leading lady triumphed in Sunday's Puerto Rico first by a margin of brace to one.
Clinton pressed her claim to dubious party grandees that she leads in the national popular promised, and would be a far more potent candidate to delight on Republican John McCain in November.
"I am in this race because I give credit to I am that candidate, and I will be that president," she said in her Puerto Rico victory saying.
Addressing a cheering crowd in South Dakota Sunday, Obama praised his rival as an "outstanding public servant" who would be a "great asset" for the Democrats come November's election.
"And whatever differences, whatever differences Senator Clinton and I may have, look, those differences pale in comparison to the other espouse a cause," he said, as the final primaries beckoned Tuesday in Montana and South Dakota.
Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs predicted that "sometime this week, we'll probably have a nominee for the Democratic Party and then we have power to get to the need to bring change to this rural."
"If it's not Tuesday, I think it will be fairly soon," he told Fox News Sunday, noting ahead of the Puerto Rico vote that Obama needed just 66 more delegates to reach the revised charming calling of 2,118.
Obama was set to address thousands of supporters on Tuesday death in the same conference hall in St. Paul, Minneapolis where the Republican convention will have existence held in September.
His aides, loath to alienate Clinton, stressed it was not a victory rally. But the one and the other the venue and the timing, on the obscurity that the five-month earliest campaign comes to an end, were freighted with political symbolism.
Meanwhile, Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean said the time for curative had begun with the weekend's compromise to reinstate Florida and Michigan.
"This is the beginning of the unification of the party, defiance what you just saw on television," he said on CNN following clips from Saturday showed screaming Clinton supporters impendent to vote for McCain.
The former Vermont governor added: "We don't want to walk to the assembly, have a big fight at the convention, and lose the presidency."
