Obama Turns Attention To McCain
Campaign Weighs How To Bring Democratic Primary Campaign To A Close
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Obama-Clinton Ticket Talk
As the Democratic race pushes on, some high-ranking party leaders are calling for an Obama-Clinton ticket. Is it a real possibility? Bob Schieffer and Jeff Greenfield weigh in.
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Can Clinton Hold On?
Sen. Barack Obama is now within 200 delegates of what he needs to clinch a victory. Where does that leave Clinton? Jeff Greenfield analyzes the N.C. and Indiana contests by the numbers.
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Obama's Tar Heel Win
As anticipated, Barack Obama came out on top in North Carolina, but failed to win Indiana. Dean Reynolds reports on a race that has yet to have a clear winner.
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Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., smiles while speaking at a primary election night rally in Raleigh, N.C.,Tuesday, May 6, 2008. (AP)
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Barack Obama
A look at the life and meteoric rise of the president-elect.
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Democratic Campaign Trail
Notable events in the race for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination.
Obama's drive to nail down the party nod was buoyed with a double-digit win in North Carolina and a stronger-than-expected run in Indiana, where he almost overcame rival Hillary Rodham Clinton.
"Hillary Clinton may have gotten what she needed to keep her uphill quest for the Democratic nomination alive - but by the barest of margins," said CBSNews.com senior political editor Vaughn Ververs. (Click here to read Ververs' full analysis.)
Obama was expected to compete for the six remaining Democratic contests but to also turn attention to general election states, aides said.
Likely Republican presidential nominee John McCain has "run free for some time now" because of Democratic preoccupation with the ongoing primary fight, said Obama strategist David Axelrod. "I don't think we're going to spend time solely in primary states," he said. "We have multiple tasks here."
The Illinois senator was enjoying a rare down day in his hometown before returning to Washington, D.C., late Wednesday
He was expected to travel later in the week to Oregon, where he appears to hold the advantage, and then head to the Appalachian coal-states of West Virginia and Kentucky, where Clinton seems to have the edge. (Click here for the full campaign calendar.)
Meanwhile, in an e-mail to supporters soliciting contributions, Obama called his North Carolina showing "a decisive victory."
As for Indiana, "we did much better than all the pundits predicted, despite Republicans changing parties to support Senator Clinton, believing she would be easier for Senator McCain to defeat," Obama wrote. "Now is the time for each one of us to step up and do what we can to close out this primary."
Obama had 1,844 delegates to 1,688 for Clinton in the latest CBS News delegate count. He needs 181 more to secure the nomination. (Click here for the complete state-by-state tally.)
His campaign made broad suggestions that it was time for the 270 remaining unaligned superdelegates who will determine the outcome of the race to get off the fence, claiming the delegate math leaves little path for a Clinton victory.
"We think the Clinton camp has gotten away with a little bit of creating these alternative views of reality," said Obama campaign manager David Plouffe.
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