Perfect Game
Obama's 8-0 since Feb. 5, and positioned to rack up two more wins next Tuesday. Meanwhile, McCain bats away Huckabee scare in Virginia.
Before the polls even closed Tuesday night, Sen. Hillary Clinton was moving on. She scrapped a planned campaign stop in the Washington, D.C., area, where she was supposed to make a final pitch for her candidacy in the Potomac Primary, and instead focused on reaching out to voters in the upcoming contests of Wisconsin, Ohio and Texas. At her campaign headquarters in Arlington, Va., she plopped down in a chair, wired herself with a mike and plowed through one satellite interview after another with local TV stations in those three states, according to a pool report. "We're going to work hard and campaign hard in Ohio," she told an interviewer from Youngstown, her voice hoarse and cracking. "I'm absolutely coming to Green Bay," she assured a Wisconsin station. Though she declared herself "very optimistic" and "excited," her uneasiness came through. "I think we have an uphill challenge," she told a Milwaukee anchor, referring to the Wisconsin contest next Tuesday. "I'm the underdog in that race."
Clinton suffered another wave of dispiriting losses against Sen. Barack Obama. He beat her in Virginia 64 to 35 percent, in Maryland 61 to 35 percent and in the District of Columbia 75 to 24 percent, according to incomplete returns. These trouncings give Obama a perfect 8-0 record against Clinton in the primaries and caucuses held since Super Tuesday. He walks away with most of the 171 delegates that were at stake in the Potomac Primary and moves on to next Tuesday's contests--Wisconsin and Hawaii--with a fresh jolt of momentum. He has also ratcheted up the pressure on Clinton to win on March 4 in Ohio and Texas--two states her campaign has repeatedly described as bulwarks. "At this moment, the cynics can no longer say that our hope is false," Obama said at a rally in Madison, Wis., on Tuesday night. "We have now won East and West, North and South and across the heartland of this country that we love." (Clinton declined even to mention the night's results at an event in El Paso, Texas.)
Obama found plenty to celebrate in Tuesday's exit polls. In Virginia--the most closely watched and contested of Tuesday's competitions--it was no surprise that he trounced Clinton among blacks and young voters. What was surprising, and surely worrisome to the Clinton campaign, was that Obama beat her among women, 58 to 42 percent, and pulled nearly even with her among whites, garnering 48 percent compared to her 51. He also defeated her in two other categories that she has usually dominated: lower-income groups and people without a college degree. All of which shows that Obama succeeded in broadening his coalition. (His performance might also serve as a riposte to statements like those from Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, a Clinton supporter, who told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette editorial board last week that some conservative whites in his state "are probably not ready to vote for an African-American candidate.")
Clinton's losses cap a tough run for her campaign. She drew a week of gloomy news coverage stemming from the disclosure that she was forced to loan her campaign $5 million and from the replacement of her campaign manager (on Tuesday, her deputy campaign manager resigned as well). The campaign now confronts naysaying "national media chatter" and "nervous supporters," says one adviser, who declined to be named discussing internal matters. As a result, Clinton has been phoning backers and superdelegates to reassure them that her campaign is righting itself. "She's trying to keep their eye on the ball, which is the long march to delegates," says the adviser. A memo released on Monday by Mark Penn, Clinton's chief strategist, sought to switch the focus of the discussion to Clinton's supposed strength as a candidate against Sen. John McCain in the general election. Among his arguments: that Clinton is battle-tested against the Republican attack machine, and that she can beat him in a debate on national security.
Yet Clinton faces challenging contests next Tuesday in Hawaii and Wisconsin. Obama spent part of his youth in Hawaii and is regarded as a native son. Wisconsin bears some of the characteristics that have helped him win in other states: large pockets of students and an open primary that allows independents to vote. No surprise, then, that Obama headed straight to the university town of Madison on Tuesday night. By contrast, Clinton set off for Texas, where she was scheduled to hold events on Wednesday in McAllen, Robstown and San Antonio--all cities rich with Hispanic voters, who have generally served as a dependable firewall for her this nominating season. From there, she plans to head up to Ohio, where her campaign believes that her economic message will resonate with a large population of working-class voters.
The battle for the Latino vote in Texas will be especially hard-fought. Hispanics make up about 25 percent of eligible voters in the state, and could account for as much as half of those turning out in the Democratic primary. Hoping to tap that potential gold mine of support, Clinton is running Spanish-language ads and deploying a contingent of Hispanic heavy-hitters, including Rep. Silvestre Reyes and Henry Cisneros, the former mayor of San Antonio and a cabinet member in President Bill Clinton's administration. For his part, Obama, who was late in mounting an aggressive Latino outreach effort, is hoping to eat into Clinton's Hispanic base with his own ads and surrogates. On Tuesday night, he demonstrated that he's capable of doing so: according to exit polls, he won the Hispanic vote in Virginia.
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Member Comments
Posted By: dobber @ 02/25/2008 6:44:39 PM
Comment: I take offense to your statement that you are educated insinuating that others are not. I do not have a degree but can tell you that I can run with you any day. Obama is a very pleasant man, gives wonderful speeches and will probably be a great leader someday--but not today. He is not ready. What will he have left to give after your "oh what a feeling" is gone?? Experience, experience is key and he needs more of it. Everyone who supports him is only hanging on words. And yes they are just words. We all have dreams and hopes but that isn't enough. I am considered, according to you, as uneducated because I am voting for Hillary--well, let me tell you something your degree has nothing to do with it. I have a lifetime of education, knowledge and ability to see what is lasting and not "oh, what a feeling he gives me!" If he becomes the president I will be anxious to hear how good you feel down the road. Good luck.
Posted By: bonsmi @ 02/20/2008 7:19:39 PM
Comment: Have those little changes that Obama made as a part of his job made a difference for you and your family or the American public as a whole. Get real people. If you have to pick out things that he did as his job description to say he has experience with health, international policies, the economy, safety, etc., then that is downright stupid. I am glad that you are not running for President. I pray that Obama wins because it is the poorer class like you that will suffer.
Posted By: bonsmi @ 02/20/2008 7:10:59 PM
Comment: What does college educated has to do with anything. Please, common sense will get you by much faster than that piece of crap education that you have.