Thursday, November 26, 2009

Campaign 2008

Obama Draws Nearer Nomination With Oregon Win

Clinton takes Kentucky by a large margin, but Obama marches toward the majority he needs

Posted May 21, 2008

Two more down and three primaries to go as Barack Obama continues his bumpy journey to the Democratic presidential nomination.

With Tuesday's split decision—a big victory by Obama in Oregon but an even bigger one by Hillary Clinton in Kentucky—Obama maintained his position as front-runner. But he also demonstrated a lack of appeal to important segments of the electorate, such as seniors, rural residents, and white working-class voters. Clinton won each group convincingly, at least in Kentucky.

With the final results for Tuesday still being tabulated, Obama had won a majority of pledged delegates selected by voters in primaries and caucuses and was 50 to 75 delegates short of the overall 2,026 majority needed for the nomination. Only the primaries in Puerto Rico, Montana, and South Dakota remain, but the number of delegates in those states is relatively small. The deciding factor will be the nearly 800 superdelegates—elected Democratic officials and other activists whose votes are not tied to primaries and caucuses. With Obama ahead in pledged delegates from the state-by-state elections, the "supers" have been moving toward him, slowly but surely.

Speaking Tuesday night in Iowa, where he won the first-in-the-nation caucuses at the beginning of the year, Obama said, "It was in this great state where we took the first steps of an unlikely journey to change America." He praised Clinton for "her courage, her commitment to change, and her perseverance" but acted as if he had the nomination locked up. Focusing on Republican candidate John McCain, Obama said, "This year's Republican primary was a contest to see which candidate could out-Bush the other, and that is the contest John McCain won."

McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds said Obama is a "talented political orator" but charged that the Illinois Democrat has displayed "bad judgment" by advocating big tax increases and "unconditional summits with rogue leaders" around the world.

For her part, Clinton refused to give up despite the long odds against her. In Louisville, she said she had won "an important victory" in Kentucky. She won the state by an overall margin of more than 30 percentage points and took 72 percent of the white vote to Obama's 22 percent. Obama won Oregon by 16 points, according to initial returns.

In a sign of serious trouble for Obama in the general election, if he is the nominee, two thirds of Clinton supporters in Kentucky said they would vote Republican or not at all in the fall rather than vote for Obama, according to CNN's exit polls.

Reader Comments

Obama best

Im a New Zealander - and I have followed USA politics with great fervor for the last year, mainly because a man named Obama came on screen and changed the 'helpless' look that Bush and others like him have portrayed with their arrogant "America is Tough" type of bluster. Mcain is no different from what I have seen and heard, and he will not change the way USA looks to me from out here in the Pacific. If I was allowed to vote, I would vote Obama because he is real and he has what it takes to turn around my views about the USA "bully boy " politics of Bush and co!

Obama best

Im a New Zealander - and I have followed USA politics with great fervor for the last year, mainly because a man named Obama came on screen and changed the 'helpless' look that Bush and others like him have portrayed with their arrogant "America is Tough" type of bluster. Mcain is no different from what I have seen and heard, and he will not change the way USA looks to me from out here in the Pacific. If I was allowed to vote, I would vote Obama because he is real and he has what it takes to turn around my views about the USA "bully boy " politics of Bush and co!

election

Obama is the best one I have ever listent to . He will lead us to be better than G.bush takes it . I think Obama will beat MaCe , if win nomination . Obama is the best choice. by the way I am egyption .

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