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Electapres.com Clinton Resists Calls To Drop Out

The Washington Post

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton pushed back hard yesterday against calls for her to withdraw from the presidential race, with aides saying she remains more determined than ever to remain in the contest until the end of the primary season.

Allies of Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) have sought to increase pressure on Clinton (N.Y.) to drop out of the race in recent days, arguing that, because of his lead in pledged delegates, her only path to the Democratic nomination lies in a divisive campaign that drags to the party's convention Aug. 25-28 in Denver. Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) yesterday offered what may have been the starkest challenge to Clinton from a prominent Obama supporter, saying in an interview with Vermont Public Radio that she should avert a potentially bloody and ultimately futile battle by stepping aside.

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Rejects Idea of Back Seat on Ticket

The New York Times (register)

COLUMBUS, Miss. — At first, the suggestion was a quiet one, raised by their supporters. Soon, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, lent credence to the idea, telling voters in Mississippi and beyond that Senator Barack Obama would make a fine partner — most likely as No. 2 — on the Democratic ticket.

But when Mr. Obama arrived here Monday, he brusquely discounted the chatter. He suggested that the Clintons were being duplicitous in their offer, implying on one hand that he was not ready to be president, but that on the other, he could solve the party’s political impasse by joining together.

“I don’t know how somebody who’s in second place can offer the vice presidency to someone who’s in first place,” Mr. Obama told a town meeting at the Mississippi University for Women here, alluding to his lead in delegates. As the crowd cheered, he said: “If I’m not ready, how is it that you think I should be such a great vice president? Do you understand that?”


Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama, Vice President]


Electapres.com Ferarro: Obama Where He Is Because He's Black

ABC News

In another twist to the bitter battle for the Democratic presidential nomination, former vice-presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro, a member of Sen. Hillary Clinton's finance committee, vented her frustration with Sen. Barack Obama's campaign success in racially charged remarks.

"If Obama was a white man, he would not be in this position," Ferraro told a local California newspaper last week.

"And if he was a woman (of any color) he would not be in this position. He happens to be very lucky to be who he is. And the country is caught up in the concept," Ferraro said.

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama, Race]


Electapres.com Obama Is Victorious in Mississippi

The Washington Post

Sen. Barack Obama won the Mississippi Democratic presidential primary decisively last night, adding to his overall lead in delegates as he and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton plunged into a six-week battle ahead of a showdown in Pennsylvania.

While voters were casting ballots in Mississippi, the campaigns clashed over comments from Geraldine A. Ferraro, a Clinton supporter and the only woman to be a major party vice presidential nominee, who suggested that Obama has taken the lead in delegates only because he is black. Obama, she said, "would not be in this position" if he were white or a woman.

Obama called the statement "patently absurd," while Clinton dismissed it as "regrettable," saying she thoroughly disagrees with Ferraro's sentiment. Despite their comments, the controversy continued as Obama's advisers demanded a more dramatic renunciation and as Clinton campaign manager Maggie Williams accused the Obama team of fanning the race issue.

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Wins Unusually Hard-Fought Wyoming Causes

ABC News

Barack Obama won the Democratic caucuses today in Wyoming, a state the party's presidential candidates often overlook, but that in this nail-biter of a race saw heavy campaigning by both Obama and Hillary Clinton.

Obama came away with 61 percent of the vote to Clinton's 38 percent. Democrats in Wyoming get little respect. The sparsely populated red state is home to just 218,000 thousand voters, most of them Republicans, like Wyoming's own Dick Cheney.

But this year, Clinton and Obama eagerly glad-handed voters across the state because even Wyoming -- with its 12 delegates -- counts.


Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Adviser Resigns After Calling Clinton 'a Monster'

ABC News

Samantha Power, a senior foreign policy adviser to Sen. Barack Obama, resigned Friday morning after calling Sen. Hillary Clinton a "monster" in an interview with a European newspaper.

Ex-Obama Aide Sorry for 'Monster' Remark"With deep regret, I am resigning from my role as an adviser the Obama campaign effective today," said Power in a statement issued by the Obama campaign. "Last Monday, I made inexcusable remarks that are at marked variance from my oft-stated admiration for Senator Clinton and from the spirit, tenor and purpose of the Obama campaign. And I extend my deepest apologies to Senator Clinton, Senator Obama and the remarkable team I have worked with over these long 14 months."

Power's statement came scarcely an hour after congressional supporters of Clinton demanded that Obama fire Power for the remarks.

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Backers Urge Clinton to Exit if She Loses

The New York Times (register)

WASHINGTON — Top supporters of Senator Barack Obama, joined by at least one prominent Democrat yet to endorse a candidate, put pressure on Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton on Sunday to bow out of the presidential race unless she scores clear victories in the crucial big-state primary contests on Tuesday.

Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton held a rally at Westerville North High School in Westerville, Ohio, on Sunday.
“I just think that D-Day is Tuesday,” said Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico, a former Democratic presidential candidate who has yet to throw his support behind either candidate. And two Obama supporters, Senators John Kerry and Dick Durbin, pushed for Mrs. Clinton to withdraw if she does poorly at the polls on Tuesday.

Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island and Vermont hold primary contests that day, and the Clinton campaign, trailing in the delegates needed for nomination and having lost the last 11 straight contests, has acknowledged that the New York senator needs to win at least Ohio or Texas. Both candidates were campaigning Sunday in Ohio.

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama]


Electapres.com Bush hits Obama on foreign policy

The LA Times

WASHINGTON -- Setting aside his stated reluctance to enter the presidential campaign, President Bush on Thursday strongly criticized Barack Obama's expressed readiness to meet with foreign leaders cast as tyrants, warning that such discussions "can be extremely counterproductive" and "send the wrong signal."

He also challenged Democrats' skepticism about the North American Free Trade Agreement, and reminded Obama that Al Qaeda has been seeking to establish a base in Iraq "for the past four years."

At the same time, he said at a White House news conference that he was not yet willing to join the political fray, but his comments suggested otherwise. He worked beyond the edges of the debate, challenging for the first time -- and across a broad spectrum of issues -- some of the tenets of Obama's and Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaigns and the direction in which the Democrats would take the nation.

Permalink [Category: George Bush, Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Spends Heavily to Seek Knockout Blow

The New York Times (register)

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Taking advantage of his financial edge, Senator Barack Obama is buying large amounts of advertising and building extensive get-out-the-vote operations in an effort to end Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s candidacy with twin defeats Tuesday in Ohio and Texas.

The intensity of Mr. Obama’s drive is especially apparent on television, where he has outspent Mrs. Clinton by nearly two to one in the two states. That is helping him eat deeply into double-digit leads she held in polls just weeks ago.

But after a month in which she raised $32 million — a remarkable amount, but still less than the $50 million or more brought in by Mr. Obama — Mrs. Clinton is fighting back.


Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Rebuffs Challenges on His Israel Stance

The Washington Post

Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) is engaged in a concerted effort to reassure Jewish leaders in the face of an increasingly aggressive Republican campaign to question his tolerance and his commitment to supporting Israel.

In a typical attack, the Tennessee Republican Party, under the headline "Anti-Semites for Obama," said Monday that it was joining "a growing chorus of Americans concerned about the future of the nation of Israel, the only stable democracy in the Middle East, if Sen. Barack Hussein Obama is elected president of the United States."

Permalink [Category: Israel, Obama]


Electapres.com Obama’s Support Grows Broader, New Poll Finds

The New York Times (register)

WASHINGTON — In the past two months, Senator Barack Obama has built a commanding coalition among Democratic voters, with especially strong support among men, and is now viewed by most Democrats as the candidate best able to beat Senator John McCain in the general election, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News Poll.

After 40 Democratic primaries and caucuses, capped by a winning streak in 11 contests over the last two weeks, Mr. Obama has made substantial gains across most major demographic groups in the Democratic Party, including men and women, liberals and moderates, higher and lower income voters, and those with and without college degrees.

But there are signs of vulnerability for Mr. Obama, of Illinois, in this national poll: While he has a strong edge among Democratic voters on his ability to unite and inspire the country, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York is still viewed by more Democrats as prepared for the job of president. And while he has made progress among women, he still faces a striking gender gap: Mr. Obama is backed by two-thirds of the Democratic men and 45 percent of the women, who are equally divided in their support between the two candidates. White women remain a Clinton stronghold.


Permalink [Category: Obama, Polls]


Electapres.com Dodd Endorses Obama for President

The New York Times (register)

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Senator Christopher J. Dodd, a leading Democrat and an early candidate for the party’s presidential nomination, announced Tuesday that he was endorsing Senator Barack Obama.

Both Mr. Obama and his rival, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, had sought Mr. Dodd’s support after Mr. Dodd dropped out of the race following the Iowa caucuses last month. Announcing his endorsement at a news conference in Cleveland, Mr. Dodd said he was concerned that the campaign has become too divisive and suggested it had gone on too long. Mr. Dodd said on Tuesday that he had spoken with Senator Clinton before the announcement.

“I don’t want a campaign that is divisive here, and there’s a danger in that,” Senator Dodd said. “Now is the hour to come together.


Permalink [Category: Dodd, Obama]


Electapres.com A Host Disparages Obama, and McCain Quickly Apologizes

The New York Times (register)

CINCINNATI — Senator John McCain apologized Tuesday after a conservative radio host who helped introduce him before a rally used Senator Barack Obama’s middle name, Hussein, three times, while disparaging him.

Bill Cunningham, who is host of “The Big Show with Bill Cunningham,” a local program here that is also syndicated nationally, was one of several people who revved up the crowd before Mr. McCain’s appearance at a theater here.

Mr. Cunningham lambasted the national news media, drawing cheers from the audience, as being soft in their coverage of Mr. Obama compared with the Republican presidential candidates, declaring they should “peel the bark off Barack Hussein Obama.”

Permalink [Category: Dirty Tricks, McCain, Media, Obama]


Electapres.com Military fears Obama's 'unknown quantity'

The Washington Times

Members of Washington's military and defense establishment are expressing trepidation about Sen. Barack Obama, as the Illinois senator comes closer to winning the Democratic presidential nomination and leads in national polls to become commander in chief.

But his backers, including a former Air Force chief of staff, say the rookie senator believes in a strong military, and with it, a larger Army and Marine Corps.


Permalink [Category: Military, Obama]


Electapres.com Could Obama Turn Red States Blue?

The Washington Post

As Sen. Barack Obama creeps ever closer to the Democratic presidential nomination, the eyes of The Fix are more and more diverted to what a general election matchup between the senator from Illinois and Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) might look like.

Obama's campaign has insisted that he has the ability to drastically expand the general election playing field beyond the 19 states (plus the District) that Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) won in 2004.

"The right Democrat, like Barack Obama, can carry red states, just like the 14 Democratic governors elected in states won by George Bush in 2004," said Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, an Obama supporter and one of those red-state governors.


Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Obama's Red-State Prospects Unclear

The Washington Post

For Democrats desperate to reclaim the White House, the numbers have been tantalizing.

In winning Tuesday's primary in the key swing state of Wisconsin, Sen. Barack Obama drew support from tens of thousands of Republicans and independents. He pulled off the same feat in his landslide victory in the Virginia primary the week before, suggesting he could win the state in November. In South Carolina, he had more votes than the top two Republican contenders put together; in Kansas, his total topped the overall GOP turnout.

All along, Obama has argued that he can redraw the political map for Democrats by turning out unprecedented numbers of young voters and African Americans, and by attracting independents and even Republicans with his message of national reconciliation. But the picture emerging of his appeal in GOP strongholds and in swing states, even as he widens his delegate lead over Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.), is more complex than his claim to broad popularity in "red state" America would have one believe.


Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Fever Is Breaking On the Web

The Washington Post

It's the nature of the Web -- and, really, of life. What goes up must come down. What's popular becomes too popular. What's seen as hip and hot and cool eventually gets mocked.

Even, yes, Barack Obama.

In recent days, sites have popped up indicating that the ongoing online Obamamania has hit a wall. What kind of wall? A snarky, ironic, this-Obama-thing-has-gotten-over-the-top wall. Obama's smiling mug is mashed up on countless faces on SenatorObamas.com. He's Sumobama. He's Pharaohbama. He's Navajobama, complete with a blue-and-white feathered headdress. The blog Is Barack Obama the Messiah? features a photo of the Illinois senator standing on a flight of stairs, Christlike, above an adoring crowd while a ray of light beams from above.

Permalink [Category: Internet, Obama]


Electapres.com Eyes of Texas upon Obama

The Washington Times

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — Sen. Barack Obama cruised through the Lone Star state yesterday, bolstered by superdelegates who are leaning his way, his rival's vanishing poll lead and large numbers of Hispanics — his opponent's best hope — attending his events.

The Illinois Democrat leads national polls, has a slim lead or is tied in polls of Texans and is closing the gap with Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton in Ohio. Yesterday he acted like a front-runner by ducking questions from reporters and instead addressing big crowds in hopes of winning the state's March 4 vote.

Mr. Obama always gets big cheers when saying President Bush's name won't be on the ballot in November, but they were deafening here yesterday, so he added: "We're sending him back to Texas."


Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Wisconsin Hands Obama a Victory, the Ninth in a Row

The New York Times (register)

Senator Barack Obama decisively beat Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in the Wisconsin primary on Tuesday night, accelerating his momentum ahead of crucial primaries in Ohio and Texas and cutting into Mrs. Clinton’s support among women and union members.

With the two rivals now battling state by state over margins of victory and allotment of delegates, surveys of voters leaving the Wisconsin polls showed Mr. Obama, of Illinois, making new inroads with those two groups as well as middle-age voters and continuing to win support from white men and younger voters — a performance that yielded grim tidings for Mrs. Clinton, of New York.

On the Republican side, Senator John McCain of Arizona won a commanding victory over Mike Huckabee in the Wisconsin contest and led by a wide margin in Washington State. All but assured of his party’s nomination, Mr. McCain immediately went after Mr. Obama during a rally in Ohio, deriding “eloquent but empty” calls for change.

Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Clinton Camp Says Obama Plagiarized in Speech

The New York Times (register)

NILES, Ohio — With the next round of voters set to weigh in on the Democratic presidential race, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s campaign on Monday accused Senator Barack Obama of committing plagiarism in a weekend speech. Mr. Obama dismissed the charge as absurd and desperate.

Mr. Obama told reporters he should have credited Gov. Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, a friend, for a passage in a speech he delivered on Saturday in Milwaukee. But Mr. Obama said his rival was “carrying it too far.”

“Let’s see,” Mr. Obama said. “I’ve written two books. I wrote most of my speeches. I would add that I noticed Senator Clinton, on occasion, has used words of mine as well.”

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama]


Electapres.com Obama seeks to turn the tables in Ohio and Texas

The LA Times

BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS -- With the Democratic presidential race about to enter another crucial phase of voting, Barack Obama has launched a newly aggressive strategy to undermine two pillars of support for rival Hillary Rodham Clinton: Latinos and working-class white voters.

Each is an important constituency in major March 4 primaries -- Latinos in Texas and blue-collar workers in Ohio -- which many believe Clinton must win to keep her White House hopes alive.

In Ohio, Obama backers are courting local union leaders and members with promises that the Illinois senator will change U.S. trade policies enacted by Clinton's husband, and which the unions blame for severe job losses.

Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Gingrich on Obama's chances: Yes he can

The LA Times

HONOLULU -- Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich says the presidential candidate who best communicates a message of change will win, and so far that candidate is Sen. Barack Obama.

Gingrich, in the islands promoting his book "Real Change," predicted in a telephone interview from Maui that Obama will surge ahead of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton for the Democratic nomination and pose a significant challenge to Republican Sen. John McCain.

"If McCain can't communicate a vision of dramatic change for America, he'll just lose, whether he appeases conservatives or annoys conservatives," said Gingrich, architect of the "Contract With America," which helped Republicans take the House and Senate in 1994.

Permalink [Category: Gingrich, Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Still Has Big Advertising Edge

The Washington Post

Since emerging from a coast-to-coast slate of presidential contests on Feb. 5, Democrat Barack Obama has significantly outspent rival Hillary Rodham Clinton on television commercials, providing a crucial edge that helped push him to a rapid succession of primary and caucus victories.

Obama's ability to blanket the airwaves -- and repeatedly start statewide television ad campaigns a week ahead of Clinton -- has been the defining advantage to emerge from the commanding fundraising lead he staked out in January.

In the nine days following Super Tuesday, the senator from Illinois spent about $13.5 million on television ads, compared with Clinton's $8.3 million, according to a media consultant not connected with any campaign who collected the figures and shared them on the condition of anonymity. In Wisconsin, which will vote on Tuesday, Obama ads monopolized the airwaves for six days before Clinton responded with her own spot.

Permalink [Category: Ads, Money, Obama]


Electapres.com Black Superdelegates Shift to Obama

ABC News

Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., may have an added obstacle in her pursuit of the support of superdelegates — the party insiders and elected officials who compose roughly 20 percent of the total Democratic delegates, and who may ultimately choose the nominee.

Obama Unsure About John Lewis SupportOne prominent superdelegate who is also the highest-ranking black in Congress told ABC News that the racially tinged way in which critics say the Clintons conducted their campaign in South Carolina is driving black superdelegates into the arms of Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill..

"The surge — if I may use that word — occurred in direct correlation to the way that campaign had been ratcheted up," said Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., the House Majority Whip who has not endorsed a candidate. "Those of us who live in the South especially, we know the code words when we hear them and we understand the tone. People felt some of that was going on and they reacted to it in a very bitter way."


Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com U.F.C.W. Backs Obama; S.E.I.U May Endorse Tonight

The New York Times (register)

The Service Employees International Union, widely seen as the nation’s most politically potent union, is likely to endorse Senate Barack Obama on Thursday evening, a top union official said.

The official said that the endorsement was likely to come in a conference call of the union’s board scheduled for 6 p.m. Thursday.

The S.E.I.U endorsement would also be important for Mr. Obama in numerous ways. It would give him the backing of a union with 1.9 million members, many of whom are political activists. It should also help increase his support among Hispanics because so many of the S.E.I.U.’s members, many of them janitors and hospital workers, are immigrants. And the endorsement might also help Mr. Obama win more support among white, blue-collar voters, a group where he has been lagging behind Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Permalink [Category: Labor, Obama]


Electapres.com Win or Lose, U.S. Is Changed

The Washington Post

Win or lose, Barack Obama has changed America. It's one thing to believe in a picture we'd like to be true -- a society moving toward a colorblind ideal -- and something entirely different to live each day with a personification of that ideal.

"I've actually changed my view of Americans," said Marvin Lawson, a retired black man from Columbia who came with his wife, Victoria, to see Obama speak at the University of Maryland this week. "I've been pleasantly surprised. This country still has a racial divide; we cannot ignore that. But this campaign will take us to the next level, that we really are ready to accept those values we espouse as a nation."

Obama won a majority of the white male vote in Virginia's Democratic primary Tuesday. He won a majority of the seniors there, too, according to exit polls.

Permalink [Category: Obama, Race]


Electapres.com Obama Defeats Clinton in Maryland, Virginia and D.C.

The Washington Post

Sen. Barack Obama swept to convincing victories over Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton in Democratic presidential primaries in Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia, extending his winning streak since Feb. 5 to eight.

In a victory speech tonight in Madison, Wis., Obama declared "we're on our way," but warned that the job of bringing about fundamental change in Washington was far from done. "We know it takes more than one night -- or even one election -- to overcome decades of money and the influence, bitter partisanship and petty bickering that's shut you out, let you down and told you to settle," he said.

Even as the results were rolling in, the shakeup in Clinton's senior staff continued, as deputy campaign manager Mike Henry announced his resignation. Henry's departure came just two days after campaign manager Patti Solis Doyle stepped down.

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama]


Electapres.com Seeking Unity, Obama Feels Pull of Racial Divide

The New York Times (register)

WASHINGTON — It was November 2006 when Senator Barack Obama first gathered friends and advisers at a Washington law firm to brainstorm about what it would take for him to win the presidency.

Senator Barack Obama on Monday at a rally at the University of Maryland in College Park. His campaign has worked to strike a balance in its message as it tries to avoid being defined by race.
Those who attended the meeting said the mix of excitement and trepidation at times felt asphyxiating, as the group weighed the challenges of such a long shot. Would Mr. Obama be able to raise enough money? What kind of toll would a campaign take on him and his family? What kind of organization could he build?

Halfway into the session, Broderick Johnson, a Washington lawyer and informal adviser to Mr. Obama, spoke up. “What about race?” he asked.

Mr. Obama’s dismissal was swift and unequivocal.


Permalink [Category: Obama, Race]


Electapres.com Obama tries to keep hot streak going

The Washington Times

Mr. Obama leads his rival by wide margins in both Virginia and Maryland, and is expected to win the District handily. He is buoyed by momentum from five straight wins as Mrs. Clinton deflects negative attention from her campaign shake-up.

The remaining candidates in the Republican race also campaigned across Virginia and Maryland, with Sen. John McCain of Arizona — all but assured of his party's nomination — hitting events in Annapolis and Richmond. He appeared at an aviation museum with Sen. John W. Warner and former Sen. George Allen, both of Virginia, and once again vowed to follow September 11 mastermind Osama bin Laden "to the gates of hell."

Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Sweeps, Huckabee Hangs On

Time Magazine

Pundits may well marvel that, for once, participants in Tuesday's D.C., Maryland and Virginia Democratic Potomac Primaries will be casting votes that "actually matter," but yesterday's results among Republicans show that even if a party's nomination is all sewn up, votes can still matter quite a lot. John McCain's losses in Kansas and Louisiana — and his narrow win in Washington state — suggest that, at the very least, the Republican party will not be able to begin preparing for the general election as soon as leaders would like. At worst, Mike Huckabee's insistence on staying in the race undermines McCain's precarious status as a consensus conservative candidate. The longer that anyone-but-McCain voters have an option in the primary voting booth, the less likely they will be to turn out to vote in the general at all.

Huckabee has little chance of actually winning the nomination. He would have to win each one of the next primary contests with better than 50% of the vote just to keep McCain short of the 1,191 delegates needed to nab the GOP nod. And even then, it is unlikely that a brokered convention would work out in his favor. Remember, the only Republican whom traditional conservative leaders distrust more than McCain is Mike Huckabee. (This distrust might stem from Huckabee's independence from traditional conservative organizations; the Club for Growth's opprobrium means little to his loose coalition of homeschoolers, economic populists, evangelicals and socially moderate, young Christians.) Huckabee's best hope — as he admitted in a speech on Saturday — is for divine intervention: "I know the pundits, and I know what they say: The math doesn't work out...Well, I didn't major in math, I majored in miracles. And I still believe in those, too." Unfortunately, miracles are not yet an approved nomination vehicle. (This might change should, for instance, Huckabee accept the consolation prize of party chair.)


Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Huckabee, McCain, Obama]


Electapres.com TIME Poll: Clinton More Beatable than Obama

Time Magazine

Though the real election is nine months away, Sen. Barack Obama would fare slightly better than Sen. Hillary Clinton in a head to head match-up with Sen. John McCain if the general election were held today, a new TIME poll reveals. Obama captured 48% of the vote in the theoretical match-up against McCain's 41%, the TIME poll reported, while Clinton and McCain would deadlock at 46% of the vote each. Put another way, McCain looks at the moment to have a narrowly better chance of beating the New York Senator than he does the relative newcomer from Illinois.

The difference, says Mark Schulman, CEO of Abt SRBI, which conducted the poll for TIME, is that "independents tilt toward McCain when he is matched up against Clinton But they tilt toward Obama when he is matched up against the Illinois Senator." Independents, added Schulman, "are a key battleground."


Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, McCain, Obama, Polls]


Electapres.com Clinton, Obama Target Latinos, Northern Virginia

The Washington Post

Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama are aggressively targeting Latino and immigrant voters in the Washington area, especially Northern Virginia, for Tuesday's Potomac Primary, as the region's foreign-born communities have grown so rapidly that their ballots could be decisive in a close electoral contest.

The two have brought their historic battle to the region, with Clinton determined to reap the benefits of her long-term popularity among Latino voters and Obama fighting to chip away at that support.

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama, Race]


Electapres.com Grass-roots organizing gives Obama an edge

The LA Times

WASHINGTON -- Beyond the final tally of votes and delegates, Super Tuesday turned out to be a historic moment: An African American candidate rooted in the racially charged urban politics of Chicago sweeping largely white heartland states from North Dakota and Minnesota to Kansas and Idaho.

And the apparent key to Barack Obama's success in those states could prove a major asset in four more states selecting delegates today -- as well as in Texas and other potentially pivotal states that will vote in the weeks just ahead.

What gave Obama an edge, his strategists say, was a heavy investment in grass-roots organizing, coupled with support from local politicians and community leaders who lent their personal credibility to a relatively little-known Illinois senator who might have seemed worlds away from the lives of local voters.

The system has been particularly effective in caucus states; thus far, Obama has won seven. He is poised to extend the string today when Nebraska and Washington state, as well as the Virgin Islands, hold caucuses. A fourth state, Louisiana, is holding a primary, but its large African American population could help give Obama a clean sweep.

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Money, Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Comments On Results At Jefferson Jackson Dinner In Richmond

ABC News

Sen. Barack Obama celebrated his three state sweep Saturday night by telling Virginia voters at the state’s Jefferson Jackson dinner, “Today voters from the West Coast to the Gulf Coast to the heart of America stood up to say 'yes, we can.' We won in Louisiana, we won in Nebraska, and we won Washington state, and we won north, we won south and we won in between and I believe that we can win in Virginia on Tuesday if you’re ready to stand for change.”

Obama largely avoided criticisms of his Democratic opponent, Sen. Hillary Clinton –- who spoke on stage just a half an hour before him. He praised Clinton, saying she was his friend before and will be his friend after the election, and mentioned their differences on health care.

But Obama spent most of his speech criticizing John McCain –- making the case that the presumed Republican nominee has embraced the “failed politics of George Bush’s Washington.”

Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Clinton Secretly Visits Edwards; Obama Next

ABC News

ABC News has learned that Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., met with former Sen. John Edwards secretly at his home in Chapel Hill, North Carolina on Thursday. Clinton's rival for the Democratic presidential nomination, Illionis Sen. Barack Obama will meet with Edwards on Monday, sources say.

Clinton initially told reporters that she was not asking for Edwards' endorsement immediately after he got out of the race. Yesterday, speaking in Lewiston. Maine Clinton said "I'll ask John Edwards to help with anything I do in the White House."

This would be an important endorsement for Clinton to secure, and is essential enough to her that she made a stealth trip to North Carolina, despite her busy campaign schedule. Clinton was two hours late to her first event last Thursday in Virginia, presumably things in the Tar Hill state tied her up.

Permalink [Category: Edwards, Hillary Clinton, Obama]


Electapres.com For Obama, a Super Saturday

The Washington Times

Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama yesterday took a big step in chipping away at Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's slim lead in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination by easily winning state contests in Washington, Nebraska and Louisiana.

The sweep means Mr. Obama has mostly wiped out Mrs. Clinton's lead in the race for delegates and possibly passed her. The victories also give him momentum for Tuesday's contests in the District, Maryland and Virginia.

"Today the voters from the West Coast to the Gulf Coast, from the heart of America, stood up to say, 'yes we can,' " Mr. Obama said last night at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. "We won north, we won south, we won in between, and I believe that we can win Virginia on Tuesday."

Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama]


Electapres.com Obama Gets Convincing Wins in 3 States

The New York Times (register)

Senator Barack Obama won decisive victories over Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in Washington, Louisiana and Nebraska on Saturday, giving him an impressive sweep going into a month when the Democratic nominating contests are expected to favor him.

The successes come just as Mr. Obama is building a strong advantage over Mrs. Clinton in raising money, providing important fuel for the nominating contests ahead. Still, the results were expected to do little to settle the muddle in the delegate race that resulted after the wave of contests last Tuesday in which the two candidates split up states from coast to coast.

In Republican contests on Saturday, Mike Huckabee won in caucuses in Kansas and, by the barest of margins, in the Louisiana primary, an embarrassing setback for Senator John McCain as he tries to rally the party around him as the nominee. However, in Washington, the state party declared Mr. McCain the winner of its caucuses Saturday night, after a close race with Mr. Huckabee.


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Electapres.com Obama backers highlight breadth

The Politico

Super Tuesday was a draw on paper, but Sen. Barack Obama’s strategists have begun arguing that his broadly-distributed wins—in states as varied as North Dakota and Georgia—make him especially well-positioned for a fall match-up with the likely Republican nominee, Arizona Sen. John McCain.

Kansas Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, one of a number of Obama’s prominent endorsers from states that either swing or consistently vote Republican in presidential elections, told Politico in a phone interview that Obama’s appeal reaches well beyond the Democratic base.

“I hear every day from Republicans and independents in Kansas that they would be willing to cross party lines if they like the candidate’s vision,” Sebelius said. “I hear every day that Barack Obama is a candidate they would feel very comfortable supporting and would be eager to support.”

Permalink [Category: Obama]


Electapres.com Few From Obama’s Youth Remember His Drug Use

The New York Times (register)

Nearly three decades ago, Barack Obama stood out on the small campus of Occidental College in Los Angeles for his eloquence, intellect and activism against apartheid in South Africa. But Mr. Obama, then known as Barry, also joined in the party scene.

Years later in his 1995 memoir, he alluded to smoking “reefer” in “the dorm room of some brother” and talked about “getting high.” Before Occidental, he indulged in marijuana, alcohol and sometimes cocaine as a high school student in Hawaii, according to the book. He made “some bad decisions” as a teenager involving drugs and drinking, Senator Obama, now a presidential candidate, told high school students in New Hampshire last November.


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Electapres.com Obama and Clinton Brace for Long Run

The New York Times (register)

With no breakout winner in Tuesday’s Democratic primaries, Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama on Wednesday began fortifying for a drawn-out nomination fight, with Mrs. Clinton disclosing that she had lent her campaign $5 million while Mr. Obama raised $3 million online in a single day and rejected calls for more debates.

The Republican candidates were more focused on the short term after Senator John McCain’s strong performance on Tuesday: Mr. McCain canceled a trip to Germany in order to try to seal up the nomination in the next few contests, while Mitt Romney huddled with advisers and signaled that he would stay in the race.

While Mr. McCain moved far ahead in the total number of nominating delegates, with 689 compared with 156 for Mike Huckabee and 133 for Mr. Romney, Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton were in a narrower and more complicated delegate battle, with both camps claiming a lead based on their own analysis of Tuesday’s vote.


Permalink [Category: Hillary Clinton, Obama]


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