Hillary’s New Math Problem
May 13 in West Virginia is no kinder to Obama, and he loses by double digits, netting Clinton two delegates. Another 60-40 landslide on May 20 in Kentucky nets her 11 more. The same day brings Oregon, a classic Obama state. Ooops! He loses there 52-48. Hillary wins by 10 in Montana and South Dakota on June 3 and the scheduled primary season ends on June 7 in Puerto Rico with another big Viva Clinton! Hillary pulls off a 60-40 landslide, giving her another 11 delegates.
Given that I've put not a thumb but my whole fist on the scale, this fanciful calculation gives Hillary the lead, right? Actually, it makes the score 1,625 to 1,584 for Obama. A margin of 41 pledged delegates may not seem like much, but remember, the chances of Obama losing state after state by 20-point margins are slim to none.
So no matter how you cut it, Obama will almost certainly end the primaries with a pledged delegate lead, courtesy of all those landslides in February. What happens then? Will Democrats come together before the Denver Convention opens in late August?
We know that Hillary is unlikely to quit. This will leave it up to the superdelegates to figure out how to settle on a nominee. With 205 already committed to Obama, he would need another 200 uncommitted superdelegates to get to the magic number of 2025 delegates needed to nominate. But that's only under my crazy pro-Hillary projections. More likely, Obama would need about 50-100 of the approximately 500 uncommitted superdelegates, which shouldn't be too difficult.
But let's say all the weeks of negative feeling have taken a toll. Let's say that Clinton supporters are feeling embittered and inclined to sit on their hands. It's not too hard to imagine prominent superdelegates asking Obama to consider putting Hillary on the ticket.
This might be the wrong move for him. A national security choice like Sen. Jim Webb, former Sen. Sam Nunn or retired Gen. Anthony Zinni could make more sense. But if Obama did ask Clinton, don't assume she would say no just because she has, well, already served as de facto vice president for eight years under her husband. (Sorry, Al).


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Member Comments
Posted By: Buckeye State Scott @ 04/25/2008 1:12:26 PM
Comment: POPULAR VOTE
DON'T COUNT FOR JACK
AND BILL DOES NOT HELP
ASK AL GORE
292 DELEGATES TO VICTORY
GO OBAMA
Posted By: Buckeye State Scott @ 04/25/2008 1:12:08 PM
Comment: POPULAR VOTE
DON'T COUNT FOR JACK
AND BILL DOES NOT HELP
ASK AL GORE
292 DELEGATES TO VICTORY
GO OBAMA
Posted By: TAW0311 @ 03/18/2008 1:19:46 PM
Comment: With the Democrats backed into a no win situation, they will once again snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. I've got no problem with a female president or a black president, but McCain will win easily in Nov. Hillary's crookedness , Obama's inexperience will be their downfall. Hillary rigged the primary season thinking she would have no competition. I am the annoited one so I will set this primary season things up so once I get a lead no one will catch me. Too smart for her own good. To all you Democrats, the sooner you bell the cat the better. But methinks it is already too late for you. You have no chance against McCain. The best you can hope for is Hillary withdraws with grace before she brings the whole party down for a generation. The Republicans are split over who they want to face, not withstanding Rush. Rush, who does not think McCain is conservative enough had nothing bad to say about GWB's unconservative reign. Hypocrite. I think he would secretly love for Hillary to win so he can stay important for the next 8 years trying to tear her down.