Clinton-Obama feud is set aside, mostly, as former president helps raise campaign money

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NEW YORK—There were charges of racism, sexism and disrespect. There were hurt feelings and angry outbursts. Friendships were frayed and tens of millions of dollars were spent.

But the great Obama-Clinton war of 2008 appeared to be little more than a distant memory on Monday when President Barack Obama and former President Bill Clinton took the stage to raise big money for Obama’s re-election campaign.

It’s a Washington ritual—burying the hatchet. And it has rarely been practiced so publicly. Four years after the primary that divided the Democratic Party, Hillary Rodham Clinton is the face of the Obama’s foreign policy and Bill Clinton has become a frequent and reliable political ally.

For the most part. Behind the smiles, backslaps and golf, the hatchet is not forgotten. Things remain complicated.

Just last week, Bill Clinton undermined a key Obama campaign theme when he said presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney had a “sterling” business career. The Obama campaign portrays Romney as a job-killing tycoon.

The next day, the men landed on opposite sides of a Democratic primary race for Congress in New Jersey.

Yet, Obama and Clinton have had moments of surprising comity. In 2010, Clinton showed up at the White House to help sell a tax deal reviled by many congressional Democrats. Obama let him take over the briefing room.

More recently, Clinton praised Obama’s foreign policy chops in a campaign video.

The joint appearances Monday were the second of their three planned fundraising outings for Obama’s re-election — and the first before television cameras.

Speaking at the Upper East Side home of a hedge-fund executive, Clinton said a Romney presidency would be “calamitous for our country and the world,” and Obama had the “right economic policy and the right political approach.”

Mixing Obama campaign talking points with some of his own, Clinton branded Romney as the nominee of the “Republican Congress” and said he’s proposing “Europe’s economic policies.”

“Their economic policy is austerity and unemployment now, and then a long-term budget that would explode the debt when the economy recovers so the interest rates would be so high, nobody would be able to do anything,” Clinton said.

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