Clinton has taken Kentucky and Obama is right there in Oregon.
The Democratic race for nomination is still very much alive ??? and most likely to be decided by superdelegates ??? as CNN points out clearly
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/05/20/primary.wrap/index.html
If you???re tired of waiting around for those super delegates to make a decision already, go to LobbyDelegates.com and push them to support Clinton or Obama
If you haven't done so yet, please write a message to each of your state's superdelegates at http://www.lobbydelegates.com
Obama Supporters:
Sending a note to current Obama supporters lets them know it's appreciated, sending a note to current Clinton supporters can hopefully sway them to change their vote to Obama, and sending a note to the uncommitted folks will hopefully sway them to vote for Obama. It's that easy...
Clinton Supporters too ???. !
It takes a moment, but what's a few minutes now worth to get Clinton in office?! Those are really worth !
Sending a note to current Clinton supporters lets them know it's appreciated, sending a note to current Obama supporters can hopefully sway them to change their vote to Clinton, and sending a note to the uncommitted folks will hopefully sway them to vote for Clinton. It's that easy...
Ready, But Are We Willing?
We may have arrived at the point where race, even as it remains a potent factor, is not the only or most important one.
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Hillary Clinton was "too hard" and Barack Obama "too black." Thus proclaimed my new friend at Jillian's sports bar in Columbia, S.C., at what was to have been a celebration of John Edwards's victory in the primary there. So unless Edwards somehow secured the nomination, she was considering sitting out in November. Not that she had anything against Obama, she said, but the country was "not ready" for a black president. The woman, who'd been drinking heavily, then fell off her seat, ending our political discussion. A few days later, Edwards announced he was stepping aside "so that history can blaze its path."
What path history will blaze is unclear. That Obama seems poised to become the Democratic nominee is certainly evidence we've arrived at a redefining moment in this nation's evolution. But that's not to say race has ceased to be of consequence.
Hillary Clinton made that point in a widely criticized interview, boasting she had a stronger base of support than Obama among "hardworking Americans, white Americans." (She said she was misunderstood.) Clinton is not alone in suggesting that Obama has a blue-collar, white-voter problem. Frank Newport, editor in chief of the Gallup poll, agrees that Clinton does better among whites than Obama does—but more because of Clinton's appeal to white women than because Obama alienates blue-collar whites. "In general, Obama and Clinton perform … the same among non-Hispanic white men when pitted against presumptive Republican nominee John McCain," observes Newport.
For years, most Americans have told pollsters they were prepared to put race aside when voting for a president. Some 94 percent of Americans (up from 53 percent in 1967) tell Gallup they would vote for a black candidate. But it's impossible to know what to make of that, since respondents routinely lie to pollsters when asked any permutation of "Are you racially biased?" And that sort of racial litmus test makes less sense today than it once did. In the old days, when Southern governors were declaring allegiance to racial segregation, it was useful classifying Americans by whether they were racist. We are a different America today, one in which race interacts in a complicated way with other factors—age, gender, education, accent, religion, wealth—to determine how we feel about people and their place. It's harder than ever to tease out a purely racial effect.
Timothy Egan recently argued in a New York Times blog that "Obama doesn't have a white working class problem so much as a regional problem, in a place [Appalachia] where Democrats won't win anyway." The fact is, we don't know where Democrats will win this year, or how much of a problem Obama has with voters of various colors and classes in states likely to be in play.
Some states will go predictably along party lines. Other states, particularly in the South, have been problematic for Democrats ever since Lyndon Johnson, taking up the anthem of the civil-rights movement, declared, "We shall overcome." Two Southerners—Carter in 1976, Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996—put the South back into play. Obama may be able to do so, too. In the Louisiana primary, Obama won easily by getting significant support from whites and overwhelming support from blacks—which suggests that race may be a positive for Obama, or at worst a wash, as long as he manages to energize enough supporters (whatever their ethnicity) to cancel out those who cannot see past his race.
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