18 Nisan 2008 Cuma

[Dems2008] Analysis: Time, delegate math working against Clinton

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20080418/delegate-challenge/

Analysis: Time, delegate math working against Clinton

DAVID ESPO | April 18, 2008 01:56 PM EST |

WASHINGTON — Time is running out on Hillary Rodham Clinton, the long-ago front-
runner for the Democratic presidential nomination who now trails Barack Obama in
delegates, states won and popular votes.

Compounding Clinton's woes, Obama appears on track to finish the primary campaign
fewer than 100 delegates shy of the 2,025 needed to win.

Clinton argues to Democratic officialdom that other factors should count, an unprovable
assertion that she's more electable chief among them. But she undercut her own claim in
Wednesday night's debate, answering "yes, yes, yes" when asked whether her rival could
win the White House.

There's little if any public evidence the party's elite, the superdelegates who will attend
the convention, are buying her argument anyway.


In the days since the surfacing of Obama's worst gaffe of the campaign _ an observation
that small town Americans are bitter folk who cling to religion and guns out of frustration
_ he has gained six convention superdelegates, to one for Clinton.

"I investigated and studied the context of the whole speech," said one of the six, Reggie
Whitten of Oklahoma, who told Obama on Tuesday he would support him. "I think the
comment was to some extent taken out of context and blown up, but I can tell you I think
people in small towns have a lot of reason to be bitter," added Whitten, who grew up in
Seminole, a town of 6,700.

Clinton leads in Pennsylvania polls in advance of Tuesday's primary there, with 158
convention delegates at stake. A victory is essential to her chances of winning the
nomination, but far from sufficient. Instead, a triumph of any magnitude would instantly
establish Indiana on May 6 as her next must-win state, particularly since her aides have
privately signaled that defeat is likely in North Carolina on the same day.

Overall, Obama's delegate lead is 1,645-1,504. That masks an even larger advantage
among those won in primaries and caucuses. There, his advantage is 1,414-1,250.

An additional 566 are at stake in the remaining contests in eight states, Guam and Puerto
Rico before the primary season ends on June 3.

If Obama captures 53 percent of them, which is the share he has gained in contests to
date, he would close out the primary season with at least 1,945 delegates, only 80 less
than the total needed to clinch the nomination. If he and Clinton split the 566 evenly, he
would still be within 100 of the number needed.

Clinton needs to win a forbidding 65 percent of the delegates in the remaining primaries
to draw even with Obama in pledged delegates. It's a share she has achieved only once so
far, in Arkansas, where her husband was governor for more than a decade.

Given the unyielding delegate math, Clinton has relied for weeks on forbearance from
party leaders to sustain her challenge. And they are growing restless, eager for the epic
nomination battle to end so Democrats can unify for the fall campaign against John McCain
and the Republicans.

In fact, it's unlikely any other candidate could have survived as long without coming under
overwhelming pressure to withdraw.

"There aren't many figures in American politics who could sustain 11 straight losses and
hang into a race and raise $35 million," Obama said at The Associated Press annual
meeting recently. "So in that sense she's unique, and the fact that former President Clinton
is there, too, and the structure that he has of loyalty all across the country and the brand
name that they have makes it very tough."

If he was bitter about it, he didn't show it.

Still, there are limits to how long party leaders will wait, given polls that show McCain has
pulled even in the race for the White House.

New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, a Clinton supporter, said Friday she needs a big win in
Pennsylvania, and a loss would be a "door closer."

Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank, also a Clinton supporter, said recently that the
candidate who trails in delegates after June 3 should quit the race. "Probably before that,
once it becomes clear that one or the other is clearly _ there's no realistic chance," he told
the AP in an interview.

Frank's remarks were merely more pointed than when Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
said a few weeks ago that he hoped the race would be over by the end of June. Or when
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she thought it would be a disservice to the party for the
superdelegates to overturn the verdict of the primary voters.

Congressional leaders have their own reasons for wanting an end to the nominating
campaign.

They are playing a different numbers game.

Obama and Clinton are focused on 2,025, the magic number of delegates.

But 218 is the number that matters most to Pelosi, the number of seats needed to assure a
continued Democratic majority in the Congress that convenes in January. Reid has visions
of 60, the probably unattainable number of seats that would allow a unified Democratic
majority to break any Republican-led filibuster.

For now, they and other party officials have granted Clinton a little more time to make her
case, and she takes every opportunity.

Eager to capitalize on Obama's comments about small town Americans, she announced
the support last Tuesday of Bill Kennedy, a commissioner in Montana's sparsely populated
Yellowstone County.

Unflustered, Obama countered 24 hours later with an announcement that 25 of the 35
Democratic members of the Legislature in predominantly rural South Dakota were for him.

"I know he's a Christian. I'm a Christian," said one of them, Dale Hargens, the state House
leader.

He resides in Miller, S.D., population 1,650.

_____

EDITOR'S NOTE _ David Espo covers politics for The Associated Press.


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