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< Obama Declares No
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Water district r >
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
May 2008
Is Kerry Pulling for Secretary of State?
Dueling measures on eminent domain fare far differently in poll
Colton: Mayor's competitor raises nearly $30,000
Supervisors linked to SB PAC
Ex-Aide Responds to White House Criticism of Book
Barack Obama 'in excellent health,' his doctor says
Obama Campaign News
Charity: UN Peacekeepers, Aid Workers Abusing Kids
Racism Rampant at Alabama School
McCain Blasts Obama's Stance on Iraq
Democrats look to capture desert district for first time
7 Inland Democrats have eye on GOP seats
Lawsuit: 'Pattern of Discrimination' at Secret Service
Gov. Ed Rendell Clinton 'Very Unlikely' To Win
Democrats Are Advised to Seat Half of 2 States’ Delegations
Scott McClellan attacks Bush in his new book
Obama Campaign News
What's Next For Clinton?
Racism, Security Threats Issues for Obama
Obama Hits McCain on Closed Door Meeting with Bush
McCain offers ideas against nuclear proliferation
Student Group News
Clinton Apologizes for Assassination Remark
Obama Campaign News
The Democratic Party News
GMC student speaks out against Burma's corruption
Will Ageism Dog McCain?
Mccain divorces Pastors, Baggage is Unloaded in Roughest Week He's Had for a While
Governor’s Budget Will Disproportionately Burden Black Community      
Obama Urges Bush Not to Submit Korea Deal to Congress
Obama says he would meet with Cuba's leaders
Debasing Israel, Defaming Obama  
McCain Rejects Pastor John Hagee's Support
Powder from package sends 6 at Pomona post office to hospital
Ex-Klansman + Obama: Strange Political Bedfellows
Rove Subpoenaed in Congressional Probe
McCain: wrong on Iraq
Mail-in ballot requests due May 27
Schwarzenegger defends budget plan
Water district rep requests Alvarez resign in wake of false medal claim
Reaching for Sunshine
Obama Declares Nomination Is ‘Within Reach’
Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton take campaign to Florida
John McCain Campaign News
Obama Campaign News
Obama Warns GOP "Lay Off My Wife"
Obama Draws Huge Crowd in Oregon as Clinton Courts Kentucky
John McCain and Barack Obama: Two visions of the Supreme Court
Seven seek three seats on Loma Linda council
Huckabee Talks About Someone Aiming A Gun At Obama During NRA Speech (VIDEO)
The Jim Penman Muppet Show Sequel
Michelle Obama
Detroit Council Votes to Remove Mayor
Florida and Michigan Can't Save Clinton
Edwards Endorses Obama
June Statewide Primary: Election Staffs In Overdrive      
Edwards: Not Interested in VP, Not Thinking About AG
Bin Laden slams West over Israel, vows to fight on
In the South, a Force to Challenge the G.O.P.
Same-sex marriage ruling adds a volatile new issue to the presidential race
Mailed info widens rift between Assembly candidates
City to regulate parolee homes
Spitzer Hooker Booker Pleads Guilty
Obama Takes Issue With Bush Foreign Policy Speech
Bush Speech Criticized as Attack on Obama
California Supreme Court Overturns Gay Marriage Ban
McCain predicts troops will be out of Iraq by 2013
John McCain Campaign News
Obama Campaign News
Riverside Mayor Ron Loveridge announces re-election bid
Are officials overstepping their bounds?
Hillary Clinton: Anything for the White House  
Efforts to remove Detroit mayor to go to vote
Democrat Wins House Seat in Mississippi
Obama Woos Blue-Collar Voters
L.A. County Sheriff's Department training halted to fix violations
San Bernardino City Attorney Jim Penman " Vote No!"
Jim Penman Has A " Keeping Blacks and Browns " in their Place Mentality
Opponent mounts challenge to powerful San Bernardino city attorney
More Problems For The LAUSD, Superintendent Brewer
Racism alarms Obama's backers
Clinton Wins West Virginia Primary by Wide Margin
Obama Campaign News
Race may hinge on Latinos
Let your voice be heard (Colton Mayor Kelly Chastain)
Dems to Clinton: Don't Say Anything to Hurt Us
Voter ID Battle Shifts to Proof of Citizenship
Hillary Clinton failed to master the female approach,former mentor says
Domestic spying far outpaces terrorism prosecutions
Why is this woman smiling?
The tragic futility of Condoleezza Rice  
Tom Hanks Backs Obama
Clinton's Trump Card: Vote White
Obama Takes a Victory Lap
Jeremiah Wright Pastor or Giant Enemy Crab?
Obama Sets Sights on McCain, Ignores Clinton
Campus Group News
McCain Advisor Accuses Obama of Underhanded Reference to McCain's Age
U.S. sending felons off to war in Iraq  
Sharpton Calls Another NYC Protest
100 Nabbed: San Diego College Drug Ring
Oprah: Knowing Wright from Wrong
5 more superdelegates back Obama
Myanmar generals continue to frustrate humanitarian relief for cyclone
Obama Takes Lead in Superdelegate Tally
Philly Police Beating Caught on TV Video
Clinton Pledges to Fight On Despite Split Primary Result
Clinton dismisses calls to drop out of race
Are the White House hopefuls running for Israel?  
Gilbert Claims lead in Congressional Race      
Inland residents can begin requesting mail-in ballots for June 3 primary election
Black merchants question inspections sweep of barbershops and hair salons in Moreno Valley
Conditions favor incumbents in crowded Inland contests
Turnout Heavy as Polls Close in Indiana
For Obama and Clinton voters, economy dominates
Clinton and Obama Bounce Between NC and Indiana
Barack Obama is pushing a regular-guy image
Democratic Party News
Principal Allegedly Outs Gay Students
Polls: Clinton Closing Gap on Obama
Prison Reforms Are Achieving Success, Numbers Are Down      
Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s Actions are Like “Crabs in a Barrel”      
Clinton May Be Hopeful, but Obama Rolls On
Oxygen-poor ocean zones are growing
Ex student says she told L.A. school official of sex with assistant principal
A Pulpit-and-Pews Gulf on Obama’s Ex-Pastor
Longtime Clinton ally Joe Andrew defects to Barack Obama
« May 2008 Archive
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Subject:  Reaching for Sunshine
Time: 5:00:00 PM EDT
Author:  ddawncrawford71
Mood:  Chillin'


 
The Note: Reaching for Sunshine
Florida Holds Key to Dem Race, As Obama Stumbles Toward the Nomination

Among the cruel ironies of campaign '08: The candidate who was winning right up until the voting started to count would now be winning again -- if only the voting still counted.

Another lopsided loss -- albeit tempered by a simultaneous victory, and yet another boffo fundraising month -- wasn't the way Sen. Barack Obama wanted to set up his triumphant speech Tuesday night in Des Moines.

Florida
Democratic frontrunner Barack Obama may be stumbling late, but he's stumbling in the direction of the finish line, and superdelegates could be jarred loose by the new delegate threshold crossed by his campaign.
(ABC News Photo Illustration)

Again Obama loses a state in a landslide (35 points) despite his near-coronation. Again it matters just about not at all in terms of the nomination -- yet more than Obamaland wants to concede when it comes to the general election.

So it is with a clearer-than-ever picture of the obstacles before him that Obama, D-Ill., stands ready to claim the Democratic nomination. And it's with disappearing arguments about the match-ups and the math with which Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., continues to try to stand in his way.

This is what the precipice looks like: With Clinton's blowout in Kentucky, and Obama's solid win in Oregon, Obama clinched a majority of pledged delegates, ABC's Karen Travers reports.

He now stands just 70 delegates away from capturing the nomination (and 190 ahead of Clinton), per ABC's delegate count. He can afford to stumble his way past the finish line if he has to: He needs just 23 percent of the outstanding delegates to get to 2,026, ABC's political unit calculates, and he'll almost surely get there June 3, unless the supers move him there sooner.

"Within reach," is how Obama described it in Iowa, mustering all the symbolism a presidential candidacy is capable of in returning to the site of his biggest victory. "The Democratic presidential race is all but over," the AP's Nedra Pickler and Beth Fouhy write. "The only real issue is whether [Obama] and rival Hillary Rodham Clinton leave the race with their futures -- and their party -- intact."

(What does House Speaker Nancy Pelosi -- who said in February there would be "a problem for the party if the verdict would be something different than the public has decided" -- say now? How many supers were math majors?)

"The Democratic Party has never denied the nomination to the person who won the most pledged delegates in all the contests," ABC's George Stephanopoulos reported Wednesday on "Good Morning America." "And the superdelegates are not going to do that for the first time, with the first African-American candidate to reach that milestone. There would be a revolution if they did. So unless some kind of lightning strikes, Sen. Obama is the nominee."

Obama's delegate edge is now an "all but insurmountable advantage," Adam Nagourney and Jeff Zeleny write in The New York Times. "Even as Mr. Obama moved closer to making history as the first black presidential nominee, he stopped short of declaring victory in the Democratic race, part of a carefully calibrated effort in the remaining weeks of the contest to avoid appearing disrespectful to Mrs. Clinton and alienating her supporters. Instead, he offered lavish praise for his rival over 16 months."

Next up: "He was planning a vigorous schedule of travel to general election states and a voter registration drive focusing on black voters to offset any losses among whites. Aides said he was considering delivering another speech to deal with damage in the primary because of attacks on his relationship with his former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., as well as on his patriotism," Nagourney and Zeleny report.

 

And this: "Barack Obama is quietly planning to take over the Democratic National Committee and assemble a multistate team for the general election, the latest sign that he is putting rival Hillary Rodham Clinton and the nomination fight behind him," the AP's Pickler writes.

Your possible new DNC chief: Paul Tewes, "one of the leading architects of Obama's success in the marathon Democratic primary race," Pickler reports. (What ever happened to not declaring victory prematurely?)

First, Florida: The Sunshine State is oddly critical to both Obama and Clinton at this point -- far more important than any of the three jurisdictions still to vote. Obama needs Florida as he pivots to the fall in a key state he's almost entirely ignored, and Clinton needs it as she grasps that last sliver of electoral possibility -- getting those disputed delegations seated and settled (in her favor).

"The Sunshine State's election results remain both in limbo and capable of changing the shape of the race," The Hill's Sam Youngman writes.

Not good to start off the general election with Florida painted red: "Obama must overcome real challenges to win Florida's 27 electoral votes, and his tentative schedule seems to acknowledge that, as he's reaching out to key demographics," Adam C. Smith writes in the St. Petersburg Times.

"In the Iowa contest, he transformed the electorate by mobilizing new and younger voters, a tactic that helped him win in unexpected states and has brought him to the cusp of the nomination," Peter Wallsten reports in the Los Angeles Times. "Now, with a three-day swing through Florida, Obama begins his effort to organize his way to victory in November. Nowhere will that be more daunting than Florida, a Republican-leaning battleground state where Obama has not appeared in public for many months." In case Obama needed the reminder of what's ahead, the voters once again spoke loudly on that subject.

"Kentucky voters ignored the persistent notion that U.S. Sen. Barack Obama will be the Democratic presidential nominee," Ryan Alessi writes in the Lexington Herald-Leader.

"The nominee's challenge will be to make peace with his or her foes' ardent supporters -- a feat that could be difficult for Sen. Obama, judging by the racial polarization and intensity of voters registered by exit polls," Jackie Calmes writes in The Wall Street Journal. "In Kentucky, seven in 10 whites said they voted for Sen. Clinton Tuesday, and just four in 10 said they would vote for Sen. Obama in November if he is the nominee against Sen. McCain. Seven in 10 Obama voters said they would back Sen. Clinton if she won the nomination."

You could take race out of the sample -- Kentucky and Oregon are both overwhelmingly white -- and still see the socioeconomic and cultural splits that have long defined the campaign.

"It doesn't take a political scientist to see that Oregon and Kentucky look alike in color, but not much else. Or to see that race isn't the only fault line in this Democratic presidential campaign," Jim Tankersley writes in the Chicago Tribune. "But the fact remains that demographically similar voters made very different choices in each state; a PhD in Oregon and a PhD in Kentucky didn't see this race the same."

"His 50-point loss among Kentucky whites was second only to his losing margin among whites in Arkansas," ABC Polling Director Gary Langer writes. "Working-class (i.e. less educated) whites, consistently a better Clinton group, especially in Southern states, were far more dominant in Kentucky than in Oregon. They accounted for two-thirds of white voters in Kentucky, and backed Clinton by 4-1."



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