Starting Gate: Win Adds Up For Obama -- For Now

(AP / CBS)
To the extent the final outcome is in doubt, the race has now come down to a dispute about mathematical computations. But the numbers aren’t adding up for Hillary Clinton, and barring a totally unexpected and dramatic reversal of fortune, she’s not going to persuade those superdelegates that two plus two somehow equals five.
With just three more contests to go on the calendar, Obama has now wrapped up the majority of the pledged delegates at stake, according to the CBS News delegate count and is less than 80 total delegates away from securing the 2,026 total delegates needed to claim the nomination.
Clinton, who seems to turn into a better candidate the longer her odds become, showed no inclination to even acknowledge the situation. She continues to argue that Obama’s math will change with the eventual inclusion of the disputed delegates in Florida and Michigan and points to her calculations to claim the popular vote lead.
Wherever the mathematical calculations fall in the end, Obama made it more crystal clear than ever that his focus is now on running a general election campaign. Appearing in Iowa rather than the site of his Oregon win, Obama wanted to symbolically wrap up this primary campaign where it began on January 3rd. As he and his campaign have done in recent weeks, Obama was careful to praise Clinton and avoid any hint that he wants her to exit.
But Obama spent his time laying out the driving theme of his launch into the fall campaign - change. “Change is coming to America,” Obama proclaimed, on issues from health care to taxes, education and the war in Iraq. “It is more of the same versus change,” is how he defined the choice between himself and John McCain. “It is the past versus the future. It has been asked and answered by generations before us, and now it is our turn to choose.”
Change may be what Obama wants to talk about but as the results in Kentucky made clear is there is no change in what is a clear problem for the front-runner. Just as in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio before, voters in the Bluegrass state delivered a message that must worry even the most enthusiastic Obama supporters.
Just a glance at who voted for Clinton in Kentucky and in what numbers: 72 percent of white voters; 70 percent of those with no college degree; 67 percent of those with incomes of $50,000 or less; 67 percent-plus of those voters over age 50; 240,000 more total votes. In a 35-point win, those margins are going to be large. In fact, Clinton won the majority of votes in nearly every single category measured by the exit polls. But it’s that coalition of women, whites, lower-educated, lower-income and older voters that have clung to Clinton even as the pundits declare her campaign over.
It’s a coalition she did best with in Oregon as well, but not nearly in the numbers she’s shown in the Rust Belt states she’s dominated. More telling - and chilling for those Democrats plotting general election stories - is what has become evident in those states surrounding the Ohio River Valley.
In Kentucky, 77 percent of those voting for Clinton said they would be dissatisfied with Obama as the Democratic nominee while just 21 percent said they would be satisfied. Forty-nine percent of Obama voters in Kentucky said they would be dissatisfied with Clinton as the nominee while 47 percent would be satisfied.
More worrisome, just 33 percent of Clinton voters in the Bluegrass State said they would back Obama in a general election. Forty two percent said they would support Republican John McCain and 23 percent said they would not vote in the fall. Seventy one percent of Obama voters said they would back Clinton in the fall should she win the nomination. Those are striking number and larger than were reported in West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio but the trend has held throughout a crucial region of the country for November’s vote.
In Oregon, however, a majority of voters supporting both candidates said they would be satisfied with the other as the nominee. Fifty eight percent of Clinton voters there would be satisfied with Obama and 55 percent of his voters said they would be satisfied with Clinton. Sixty eight percent of Clinton’s supporters in Oregon said they would support Obama in the fall while 80 percent of his voters said they would back Clinton as the nominee.
Questions about those two very different results - whether a matter of race, economic outlook or fond memories of the Clinton presidency - will continue to dog Obama well into the fall campaign regardless of how unified the party becomes. Kentucky and West Virginia may not be crucial to Democrats in the general election but Pennsylvania and Ohio are.
The math may all be on Obama’s side in his quest for the Democratic nomination which is just within his grasp. But the equations will become much more complicated for the general election. (Note: This analysis was published earlier on CBSNews.com.)
Hillary, Barrack and John Edwards signed a pledge saying they will "not campaign or participate" ON THAT BASIS, Obama removed his name from Michigan. When it was clear that Hillary would not follow thru on her pledge, he left his name in Florida. Still, millions of voters stayed home because they were told the election would not count.
It was fitting that Obama made his speech last night in Iowa...one of the "whitest" states in the country-- and the place that gave notice to the world that he was a serious contender.
We can win without the racist vote. And while it may take another generation make racism a thing of the past, we will look back on this election as one of the most defining moments in our nation''s history, and begin healing of the wounds that have been with us since 1968.
It''s time to move on-- and once Hillary is finally out of the race, those with a true love of this country will unify. Those with selfish, narrow views will not. But in the end...McCain will be handed a "reality check" for the Republican party, and the horrible mess this administration has left our country.
voting for BHObama have not dealt
schools controled by black gangs,
lived with high crime rates and
social services overrun from
black women with 5 children by
different black men and never
married. It is easy to call others
racist when you have no social
experience of day to day life
in a 30% black state.
I have to agree with you. In the lillywhite worlds of Iowa, Wisconsin, Oregon etc. they can bend over backwards to accommodate the black candidate to show how educated and politically correct they are because they don''t have to live with the results in their "latta liberal world".
Do you really think that it''s only black women who have 5 different children from 5 different fathers?!? Are you that ignorant??
Hey, I got an idea! You can come here, to California! We have schools "controled" by Black, Asian and Mexican gangs! You can have the big three running your schools!!! Unfortunately for you, there are no Klan meetings here, though. :( Too bad.
It''s your types that are the problem with this country. Look, you two. We''re all in this together, guys. We''re all AMERICANS! Black, white, brown, pink, yellow, red, blue. Get over your white is right philosophies and realize that we need to solve problems, not *** about them. It does no one any good to point racist fingers and complain about who is getting what and why. If it''s mostly black AMERICANS getting assistance from the government where you live, then so be it. That''s what the programs are there for. If it''s mostly white or brown or yellow or whatever, then so be it. Let''s FIX America, not divide it.
Obama is an unsuitable candidate to beat McCain. Worse to be President.
Hillary By far would win.
Obama best go for fund raising every day he out spent everyone and could barely get half of the democrats. He will need a billion to come close in Nov if he is on the ballot.
-
by bevkczunedright
May 23, 2008 12:58 AM PDT
- Everyone keeps talking about Rev Wright. Well did you know that the same Rev Wright was the pastor the Clintons invited to the White House to counsel them during the Monica Lewinski scandal. Bill even asked that terrible Rev Wright forgive him. Open your mind to the possibility of a better Washington DC. Hillary tells me that he has made no promises to no particular person or persons. How can one be specific when charting a new frontier. Come on people. Have the guts to say whats really on your minds. It would serve to educate the rest of the world about the fact that racism is still alive and well in the United States. If you have your way, there is no way that a black man and his wife and children are going to live in the White House unless he/she is cleaning it. Be ashamed.
-
Reply to this comment
-
See all 12 Comments