Senator Barack Obama of Illinois made some headway in building a coalition of support among Democrats in Tuesday’s cross-country sprint of primaries. He won the support of many white men, a group that had voted for John Edwards of North Carolina before Mr. Edwards dropped out of the race last ...
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| Banned Progressive Philadelphia, PA ![]()
| MSNBC: Obama made inroads but fell short, Clinton's reliable coalition stands firm
An objective news report of what every objective person watching the race knows: Obama had polling leads in many states he did not win, and was closer in states he he lost RealClearPolitics - Opinion, News, Analysis, Videos and Polls The media was swept up in the huge crowds, and looked at polls showing for quite some time that Obama had made California a tie or taknen the lead...same in other state...he would win not only all the swing states, with California as the most important, but dig into huge chunks of New York and New Jersey Reality was, Hillary stood her ground in her strong spots, and won important battle ground primaries (AZ, CA, MA, etc)...she was not expected by the media at large to do so well, however they didn't think she would win these important primaries, yet lose similiar states that had a caucus...had every state been a primary the trends seems to be Obama would have been knocked out f the race However, the caucuses saved him, but did they do some damage to Clinton as some here would believe...Hillary's camp thought Feb 5th would effectively end the nomination, that did not happen, therefor they are hurting, but they are not bleeding because Obama's camp had played up their huge crowds and support and it fell flat into significant losses So the battle has ended 1) What are the results? 2) How are the campaigns holding up? 1) There are facts and questionable facts The fact as I've seen from every news outlet (NBC News last night, go to their website and watch the netcast, CNN et al) is that Hillary Clinton won the popular vote, and as the above article notes, she won people much more likely to turn out, and much much less likely to consider McCain...just because someone choose Obama to run for the democratic nomination does mean they have ruled out Obama...but the Hillary voter (i think we know from a poll on this board) is 100% voting democratic, So Clinton won more and reliable voters on Super Tuesday The other method to measure success is delegates, however because of the extremely complicated rules, you may see some places giving Obama a 2/5 lead, however I see many professionals looking at the results and having Clinton ahead by 95-180+ delegates ABC News: Politics Index Election Guide 2008 - Presidential Election - Politics Because of the nature of the rules, much like we won't know who won the delegate count in NV until the convention, similiarly we won't know who won EXACTLY what delegates until the convention, the consensus is that Hillary, at least with superdelegates has the lead (some say she has a good lead even without them, but that's not the consensus as MSNBC and others disagree) So in the face of huge Obama momentum that was sweeping the country, including states I mentioned before, she outperformed the polls, which were expected to be lowballing Obama in the first place, she she outperformed at two levels She has the delegate lead and won the popular vote 2) Many are taking glee in news stories about Clinton staffers going without pay, and Obama crushing her in money...the story is all over, downhill downhill, she'll never have the money to compete, this is going to be a slow painful death, even if by some chance I cared that she has a delegate lead and won the popular vote Well, unfortunately for the gloaters, Hillary Clinton raised $3 million just yesterday, and looks on her way to raise $6 million or more by this weekend Democrat Taylor Marsh Broadcasts Live Talk Radio and Blogs Politics I don't know what you think people need to compete, but that kind of fundraising is certainly more than enough Also, with Obama facing easy ground soon, you can no longer honestly talk about "Hillary losing her lead" or anything related to some sort of firm front-runner status, despite anything you or I may say, Super Tuesday was declared a tie, and with Obama winning the early states, in the media's eyes, he's the won who "has the election to lose" and it is true that if he uses his larger warchest wisely and sweeps all these upcoming primaries/caucuses, builds huge momenutm, he should be able to beat her in the March 4th states, and get a lead of 120+ delegates...and if he can show polls that he will maintain such a lead, than it's all up to the superdelegates...and with 120+ lead, that means even if FL and MI were seated, he'd still have more pledged delegates, which means the superdelegates should side with him and give him the nominations. The path is clear for Obama, and his way seems relatively easy...while Clinton has huge natural obstacles, such as primaries that favor Obama, and then a long wait inbetween those expected Obama-victories and states she can make a comeback with... Obama has a clear path to the nomination and more money, Hillary does not, you can not in any sense call Obama an underdog, although his campaign will spin that to make his victories seem more sensational Hillary has a good reason to stay on, and it's not pride...still her campaign has the concrete issues needed to win big general elcetion matchups, and more importantly, Obama's voters are unreliable, those huge crowds that dwarfed everyone, even beating out Hillary, many times by significant margins, simply did not turn out to the polls...Democrats (in general) do not want this to be a roll of the dice on whether Obama's crowds will fail to showup, again, in November | ||||
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| Give me liberty or give me death! libertarian Lake Stevens, WA ![]()
| lol @ spin | ||||
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| | #3 | ||||
| Never, never, never give up Conservative Party High Point, NC ![]()
| This part of the story is BIG and ignored and/or by Hitlery fanatics.
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| Banned Progressive Philadelphia, PA ![]()
| I actually pointed out places that had Obama winning the delegate count... ![]() So you: 1) Didn't read the post 2) Made assumptions 3) Also managed tie HRC supporters in with Nazis Anything else you'd like to do in this thread? | ||||
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| | #5 | ||||
| Banned Progressive Philadelphia, PA ![]()
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| | #6 | ||||
| Never, never, never give up Conservative Party High Point, NC ![]()
| Originally Posted by Thorgrim Do you think I was talking about you? Not everything is about you buddy!
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| | #7 | ||||
| Banned Progressive Philadelphia, PA ![]()
| Originally Posted by Stylerod Okay so you have some links to Hillary supporters who don't acknowledge that any news site has Obama with a delegate lead?
And no, people saying "Hillary in delegate lead" does not count because they are correct, the overwhelming majority of, if not all, news organizations have her with the delegate lead, some with superdelegates, some without Some calculations give her something of a 300+ delegate lead, this is not anything that will be determined quickly, if ever | ||||
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| | #8 | ||||
| He puts the "weak" in Weekly Rader . . . Democrat ![]()
| For those who think Senator Obama fell short, I wonder how much is Obama and how much is the American electorate. I ask in part because I wonder how much race could have affected his performance in certain states. I'm particularly interested in the incredibly sharp distinction between Kansas and Oklahoma--two very similar states in almost every way, except in terms of racial histories. My question, then, which I write about in Tuesday's post on The Weekly Rader is, to what degree is our racial past the political present? | ||||
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| | #9 | ||||
| Yeah, that guy. Progressive Oregon ![]()
| In other news Hillary pulled a Romney and loaned 5 million dollars to her own campaign. Buying votes ftw. | ||||
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