Hillary Clinton, accused of
exaggerating her experience and reversing policy positions,
risks a widening credibility gap that may undermine her bid for
the Democratic presidential nomination.
The New York senator, who this week admitted to
misrepresenting the danger she confronted in Bosnia, also has
come under fire for allegedly distorting her role in opposing
free trade and the war in Iraq, and overstating her involvement
in bringing peace to Northern Ireland and health insurance to
children.
The debate over these and other statements is fueling
distrust among voters, according to analysts and recent polls. A
Pew Research survey released yesterday showed 30 percent of
white Democrats -- a group Clinton needs in order to win the
remaining primaries -- regard her as a ``phony,'' twice as many
as those who perceive rival Barack Obama that way. In late
February, just 7.8 percent of voters surveyed by Pew described
her as ``untrustworthy.''