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Giulliani suffering from cancer
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
WASHINGTON, APRIL 28. There is a sense of disbelief in New York.
The Mayor of the City, Mr. Rudy Giulliani, announced on Thursday
that he has been diagnosed with prostrate cancer which is in the
early stages and one that is treatable. From a political
perspective, the announcement adds more than just an element of
uncertainty in the State's Senate race which all along came down
to between the popular Mayor and the First Lady, Mrs Hillary
Rodham Clinton. Nationally too, the attention was in the New York
Senate race, for it had all the trappings of a down-to-the-
stretch battle.
The speculation in New York is that in the next four weeks things
may change in the sense that Mr. Giulliani will face off with Mrs
Clinton this November after all. This stems from a belief that
getting treated in the very early stages could result in the
Mayor shaking off the illness and getting down to business. But
even if the Mayor is able to beat back his temporary setback, the
big question is whether he would be able to run a sustained
campaign against one of his vigorous opponents. And the battle
for the Senate seat was not going to be easy by any stretch of
imagination.
As a professional opponent, Mrs Clinton did what most would have
done under the circumstances - offering words of comfort to the
Mayor. But the political world of New York State being what it
is, the Conservatives have taken it to heart that their popular
candidate is not totally fit to face the challenge from the
Democrats.
For all the noise made by Conservatives against Mrs Clinton - one
of the first being that she is an ``outsider'' who has no
business contesting in the State - the acknowledgement and the
realisation was that this Senate race was going to be a tough
one.
And no one understood this better than Mr. Giulliani who knew
from the word go that cleaning up the City is one thing and going
after the interests of the State and the challenges of the U.S.
Senate was a totally different ballgame.
Supporters of Mr. Giulliani are confident that he would be back
in the Senate fight but at this point, many concede that there is
uncertainty whether the popular Mayor would be able to pull it
off.
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