Ohio's
Columbus Dispatch provides some good reasons to vote for Hillary:
Editorial: March 4 decisions
Ohio has chance to make experience the key factor in presidential race
Sunday, February 10, 2008 3:32 AMThe next president will face a mountain of challenges, including reining in deficit spending, managing U.S. involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, controlling illegal immigration and restraining the spiraling costs of Medicare and Social Security. And that's just the start. The 44th president should have a strong resume of government experience. When the nation's voters go to the polls in November to choose that leader, the major-party candidates should be those who require the least on-the-job training. Of the contenders remaining in the Republican and Democratic races, the most experienced are Republican Sen. John McCain and Democratic Sen. Hillary Clinton.
She has been in the Senate since 2001, winning election in New York as she was reaching the end of her time as the nation's first lady. In addition to what sometimes was characterized as a co-presidency with her husband, during his two terms in office, she was first lady in Arkansas for 12 years. She hopes to become the first woman to win a major-party presidential nomination. While her husband was president, she was one of the most politically involved first ladies in U.S. history. Her activism on a variety of issues earned her the kind of loyalty and opposition usually reserved for presidents.
In the Senate, Clinton serves on the Armed Services, Environmental and Public Works, Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committees as well as the Senate's Special Committee on Aging. Her opponent, Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois, has mounted an impressive campaign for the nomination, but Obama, who was an Illinois state senator before his election to the U.S. Senate in 2004, lacks his rival's experience.
Unlike some years, this year Ohio will be not be an afterthought in the presidential primaries. Though McCain's lead is substantial, the Democratic race remains very close, so the Ohio vote on March 4 could be decisive.
More: http://www.dispatchpolitics.com/live/content/editorials/stories/2008/02/10/Hilljohn.ART_ART_02-10-08_G4_U0996Q0.html?adsec=politics&sid=101