Muttling
Posts: 1612
Joined: 9/30/2007 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: celticlord2112 Prior to the March 4 primary results, I would agree with you. Now, I am not so certain Obama has a full head of steam. Well thought out comments but I disagree. Every campain will ride the waves, but if Hillary can't bust his momentum she's toast. quote:
Regardless of delegate counts, Obama has yet to decisively beat Clinton in a major contest. He outspent her by a wide margin in the Texas primary to no avail. The notion that Obama is a flawed candidate because he cannot decisively dispatch Clinton is not without merit, and against McCain could prove a major credibility problem--McCain is at least as tough a political competitor as Clinton is, and his fund-raising difficulties are significantly mitigated by having the advantage of months to raise money without needing to spend it just as quickly. All very true. quote:
Also, there is still the unexploded landmines of Florida and Michigan. Hillary won both those states. Granted, Obama has a credible rebuttal that, per the request of the national party, he did not campaign in either state, but, as he has been unable to convincingly beat Clinton in a major primary, how well does that resonate? Clinton's decision to campaign "under the radar" in those two states was a political master stroke, because now there is significant pressure on the Democrats to find a way to give those two states back their delegations. Again, very true. However, there is a huge problem here for Clinton. If she percieved as stealing the nomination it will do a lot of damage to her campain. Right now there are negotiations underway to let Florida and Michigan's delegates count, but not a lot of details are coming out about how they will count. quote:
Obama is in the lead in pledged delegates, but he still can't get to the magic number of delegates without significant backing by the superdelegates. Will he be able to avoid the perception that Clinton battled him to a draw by the time of the election? I am not certain the answer is yes. Super delegates are the big contention right now, but many of them will fall in line with voters of their states and movements of the party as a whole. I still think Obama has it as long as he can maintain his momentum and he has Mississippi coming up which will be a slam dunk for him.
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