| Page 2 of 2 < |
Obama Takes Delegate Majority


|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
"I will leave it up to Senator McCain to explain to the American people whether his policies and positions represent long-held convictions or Washington calculations," Obama's remarks continued, "but the one thing they don't represent is change."
In a statement last night, McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds said: "Rather than offer solutions and leadership, Senator Obama again tonight launched the tired old political attacks of a typical politician, not the 'new politics' he's promised. America needs a commander in chief who is ready from day one. John McCain has the experience, character and courage to move America forward with strength, optimism and resolve."
The odds against Clinton are now so long that it would take a near-miraculous change in the Democratic race to alter the trajectory that Obama is on to clinch the nomination next month. Her claim to be winning the popular vote depends on including the results from Michigan and Florida. Neither Clinton nor Obama campaigned in either state because of party sanctions, and Obama took his name off the ballot in Michigan.
Clinton also pressed the arguments that she has made after other recent victories: that Democrats cannot afford to lose the presidential race and that superdelegates must consider who would be the stronger nominee in the fall. "We have to get this right," she said. "We have to select a nominee who is best positioned to win in November and someone who is best prepared to address the enormous challenges facing our country in these difficult times."
As Clinton carries on her campaign, she has toned down direct attacks on Obama and has made it clear to her advisers that she does not want to do or say anything at this point that could hurt him in a general election. She also hopes to keep alive her case that she would be a stronger candidate in the fall, but she has indicated that she will have a better chance to rally her supporters to Obama's side, if he is the nominee, if she is allowed to finish out the nomination battle on her own terms.
Obama has been similarly careful, telling his staff not to do or say anything that appears to pressure Clinton to leave the race prematurely. Nonetheless, the Obama campaign's decision to stage its celebration in Iowa last night and claim a majority of pledged delegates rankled Clinton and her advisers.
Obama plans to continue shifting his focus to the general election and to the states that will help decide its outcome. Today he will travel to Florida, where he did not campaign earlier this year. Polls in Florida have shown him running behind McCain and faring worse than Clinton against the senator from Arizona.
The Kentucky result continued Clinton's winning steak across a swath of the country that includes Appalachia, as well as industrial states such as Ohio and Pennsylvania that will be battlegrounds in the general election. Clinton has repeatedly pointed to her victories in those states to argue that she would be a stronger candidate against McCain.
The Kentucky results once again highlighted Obama's problem of lacking support from lower-income white voters, a potential concern in a general-election race. But Obama looked to largely white Oregon, where he drew an estimated 72,000 people at a rally in Portland on Sunday, to demonstrate that he can appeal to white voters in other parts of the country.
Despite endorsements over the past week by former senator John Edwards (N.C.) and Sen. Robert C. Byrd (W.Va.), Obama was routed by Clinton among virtually all groups of voters in Kentucky.
According to exit polls, the senator from New York was carrying about three-quarters of white voters who earn less than $50,000 a year and who do not have college degrees. She was winning four out of five white voters older than 60 and even romped among younger white voters, normally an Obama constituency.
But the survey of Oregon voters showed that Obama ran about evenly with Clinton among white voters with incomes below $50,000 and among those without college degrees.
The polling data highlighted deep cultural differences in the two states. Far more voters in Kentucky than Oregon attend church weekly. Far more Oregon voters describe themselves as liberal than those in Kentucky.
Obama, Clinton and McCain reported their April fundraising results last night. Obama's campaign said he had amassed $31 million in April, including 200,000 new donors, as he continued to shatter records for money raised and for donors. Clinton, who has trailed Obama in the fundraising sweepstakes, nonetheless raised $22 million last month, a figure all the more impressive because it came as her path to the nomination continued to narrow.
McCain's team reported raising $18 million in April, the best month to date in his once cash-starved campaign. He reported having almost $22 million in cash on hand; Obama's campaign said it now has about $37 million in the bank.
Staff writers Perry Bacon Jr., traveling with Clinton, and Shailagh Murray, traveling with Obama; polling director Jon Cohen; and polling analyst Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.




