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www.shoppingdotcom.co.uk The eight Democrat presidential candidates have urged George Bush not to veto a new bill setting a timetable for a US withdrawal from Iraq.
In the first televised debate in what will become a frenetic campaign to win the party's nomination to contest the Republican candidate for the White House next year, Iraq dominated the Democrat hopefuls' discussions.
The bill they were referring to, passed by both the House of Representatives and Congress, says that US troops should begin to leave the Middle Eastern country in October this year, with withdrawal to be completed by March 2008.
In last night's 90-minute debate in South Carolina – which will be the first state to hold its primary election next year – strict 60-second limits on answers and a ban on follow-up questions restricted the candidates to any serious attacks and allowed them to sidestep potentially hazardous issues.
"If this president does not get us out of Iraq, when I am president, I will," Mrs Clinton, who leads opinion polls ahead of Mr Obama, responded.
"We have given the Iraqi people the chance to have freedom, to have their own country. It is up to them to decide whether or not they're going to take that chance."
Illinois senator Mr Oboma said he was "proud" to have opposed the war from the start, but referring to Mr Bush's expected veto he insisted that the US was now "one signature away from ending this war".
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