Hopefuls Make Final Pre-Super Tuesday Push
Candidates Look To Drive Last Minute Votes Before Contests In More Than 20 States
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Play CBS Video Video A Sprint To Super Tuesday The remaining presidential candidates are battling for frontrunner status as they prepare for Super Tuesday, when 24 states will vote for a nominee. Gwen Belton reports from New York.
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Video Home Stretch To Super Tuesday Karen Brown reports on the presidential candidates as they campaign on the last day before the big Super Tuesday showdown.
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Video Super Tuesday Stakes High Jeff Greenfield speaks with Harry Smith about what the presidential candidates from each party are up against during the Super Tuesday primary elections.
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Republican presidential hopeful, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., center, speaks during a campaign rally in Faneuil Hall, in Boston, Mass., Monday, Feb. 4, 2008, one day ahead of the Super Tuesday primary elections. (AP)
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Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., listens during a roundtable discussion at the Yale Child Study Center in New Haven, Conn., Monday, Feb. 4, 2008. (AP)
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Photo Essay John McCain Some call him a hero, some a maverick. Will Americans call him Mr. President?
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Photo Essay Hillary Clinton A look at a life and career full of firsts.
"We're going to hand the liberals in our party a little surprise," boasted Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, predicting he would score an upset in delegate-rich California.
McCain projected confidence Monday, not only about wrapping up the nomination but about next November's general election as well. "I can lead this nation and motivate all Americans to serve a cause greater than their self-interest," he said while campaigning at a fire station in New Jersey.
Unwilling to leave anything to chance, both men hastily rearranged their schedules to make one more late stop in California, the largest state, with 170 delegates.
After months on the road, the wear on the candidates was showing, and the schedules strained human endurance.
Clinton's voice was raspy, and at one stop, she struggled to control her coughing.
Romney had breakfast in Tennessee, was in Georgia at lunchtime, was touching down in Oklahoma at the dinner hour and was scheduled to arrive in California for a rally just before midnight local time.
All before flying through the night so he could attend the West Virginia state convention on Tuesday morning.
The Democrats were spending unprecedented amounts of money on television advertising. Records showed Obama and Clinton each spent $1.3 million last Wednesday and have been increasing their purchases in the days since.
Obama spent about $250,000 to run a 30-second ad during the Super Bowl in selected, less expensive regions. Clinton bought one hour of time on the Hallmark Channel for Monday evening to air a live town hall meeting from New York.
The prize in each race was a huge cache of delegates on the biggest primary-season day ever.
In all, there are 1,023 delegates to the Republican National Convention at stake in primaries in 15 states, caucuses in five and the West Virginia state convention.
Several award all their delegates to the winner, and McCain was favored in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware and his home state of Arizona, with 251 delegates combined.
Romney hoped to counter with victories in Utah and West Virginia, as well as in a string of caucuses in Western and Midwestern states.
But his task in several Southern and border states - Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma and Missouri - is complicated by the presence of Mike Huckabee on the ballot.
The former Arkansas governor was in Tennessee, where he said that Wal-Mart Republicans knew long before Wall Street that the economy was headed for trouble. "They were paying more for their fuel and more for their health care and their kids' education, but their paychecks weren't going up enough to cover all those things that were costing more," he said.
In sheer numbers, Democrats have more at stake than Republicans - 15 primaries, and caucuses in seven states plus American Samoa, and 1,681 delegates.
They also lack a clear front-runner in the historic race between Clinton, who is trying to become the first woman to sit in the White House, and Obama, seeking to become the first black commander in chief.
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