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Nation has become polarized, Bill Clinton warns

PHILADELPHIA - Former President Bill Clinton warned yesterday that the country is becoming increasingly polarized despite the historic nature of the Democratic primary.

Speaking at the National Governors Association's semiannual meeting, Clinton noted on the one hand, following the early stages of the Democratic primary, "the surviving candidates were an African-American man and a woman." But this achievement was overshadowed by a growing distance between Americans, Clinton said.

"Underneath this apparent accommodation to our diversity, we are in fact hunkering down in communities of like-mindedness, and it affects our ability to manage difference," Clinton said, developing his 44-minute speech from themes he said he drew from a new book, "The Big Sort," by Bill Bishop.

He cited statistics compiled by Bishop that found in the 1976 presidential election, only 20 percent of the nation's counties voted for Jimmy Carter or President Gerald Ford by more than a 20 percent margin. By contrast, 48 percent of the nation's counties in 2004 voted for John Kerry or President George W. Bush by more than 20 points, Clinton said.

"We were sorting ourselves out by choosing to live with people that we agree with," Clinton said.

Clinton has often meshed big-picture admonitions with new books whose ideas he admires.

He drew similar conclusions in 2000 following the publication of Robert Putnam's "Bowling Alone," on the decline of civic engagement in the United States.

Among approximately two dozen active governors in attendance yesterday were some of the 11 who backed presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama over Hillary Rodham Clinton.

After weeks of not speaking to each other, Obama last month reached out to Bill Clinton and asked him for help winning the White House. Clinton had portrayed Obama as too inexperienced to be president.

Clinton concluded his speech by reminding governors, who are marking the association's centennial, that the issues they face today are similar to problems President Teddy Roosevelt grappled with a century ago - inequality among rich and poor, immigration and energy policy.

If those issues are dealt with, "We're about to go into the most exciting period of human history," Clinton said. "If we don't, in the words of President Roosevelt, dark will be the future," he said. "I'm betting on light - I hope you are, too."

Related topic galleries: Elections, The White House, Bill Clinton, Regional Authority, Government, Executive Branch, Jimmy Carter

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