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Clinton Beats Obama in Puerto Rico

Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) clinches enough pledged delegates to secure the Democratic nomination, as polls closed in the last state primary elections in South Dakota and Montana, June 3, 2008.
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Clinton's last, best hope to reverse that math came and went yesterday when the Rules and Bylaws Committee met to resolve the fate of Florida and Michigan whose delegates were stripped by the DNC after moving their respective primaries too early in the nominating calendar.

The committee granted Clinton less than half the delegates she had hoped to claim from the two states, which were sanctioned by the DNC for moving their primaries up too early in the year in the nomination fight.

The committee's decision -- particularly with regards to Michigan -- was met with derision in the Clinton campaign, which floated the possibility of taking the fight over the Wolverine State to the party's national convention in late August. "We reserve the right to challenge this decision before the Credentials Committee and appeal for a fair allocation of Michigan's delegates that actually reflect the votes as they were cast," the campaign said in a statement released immediately following Saturday's proceedings.

Nonetheless, the committee's decision to seat the Florida and Michigan delegations at the convention, but grant each delegate only half a vote, resolves a major piece of the nomination puzzle in Obama's favor.

Puerto Rico was the largest delegate prize left on the board, South Dakota, with 15 delegates, and Montana, with 16 delegates, will bring the 2008 presidential primary process to a close on Tuesday. Even the most ardent Clinton backers acknowledge that their candidate's pledged delegate deficit will stand in triple digits when all votes are counted on Tuesday

Polling in Puerto Rico, albeit limited, suggested that Clinton was headed for a significant victory. A survey done by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, a Democratic firm, showed Clinton with 59 percent of the vote to Obama's 40 percent.


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