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Obama gains majority of elected Democratic Party delegates
By Patrick Martin
22 May 2008
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Senator Barack Obama split two statewide primaries Tuesday
with Senator Hillary Clinton, winning Oregon and losing Kentucky,
in the process collecting enough delegates to give him a majority
of the delegates elected in primaries and caucuses.
Among the superdelegateselected officials and members
of the Democratic National Committee who are automatically seated
at their partys conventionObama has overtaken Clintons
early lead and now has a slight edge.
Media tallies showed Obama with 1964 delegates to Clintons
1779, a lead of 185, with only another 86 to be elected in the
last three primaries, in Puerto Rico June 1 and Montana and South
Dakota on June 3. Obama is only 62 short of the total of 2,026
required for nomination.
According to an analysis by NBC News, the delegate race has
been essentially unchanged since Obamas victories in 11
consecutive caucuses and primaries between February 5 and March
4, which provided him a net gain of 118 delegates, and an overall
lead of about 150. After subsequent contests in Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania,
Indiana, North Carolina, West Virginia, Kentucky and Oregonand
intensive media coverage of such issues as the views of Rev. Jeremiah
Wright, Obamas former pastorthe Illinois senators
lead is now just slightly larger.
Clinton is continuing her campaign, at least through the final
primaries, but cannot win the nomination unless the remaining
uncommitted superdelegates intervene to overturn the outcome of
primaries and caucuses. Most of these are not actually undecided,
but either barred by party rules from committing publicly until
after the end of the primaries, or not yet selected by state party
organizations.
Clinton flew to Florida the day after her Kentucky victory,
to press her demand that the Democratic convention seat the delegates
from Florida and Michigan, the two states that were stripped of
representation because state party officials defied national party
rules and scheduled their primaries too early.
All of the Democratic candidates backed the sanctions against
Michigan and Florida and did not campaign in either state, while
Obama and several other Democrats, but not Clinton, removed their
names from the Michigan ballot altogether. Clinton won both states,
taking 51 percent of the vote in Florida against Obama and John
Edwards, and 55 percent of the vote in Michigan against a slate
labeled uncommitted.
A Democratic Party rules committee is to meet May 31 to decide
on whether to seat all or part of the Florida and Michigan delegates,
but even in the unlikely event that both delegations are seated
without any penalty, the result would not enable Clinton to overcome
Obamas delegate lead.
Instead, the Clinton campaign has been proclaiming its victory
in the popular vote, based on a tendentious accounting that includes
Clintons vote in Michigan but not the disguised Obama (uncommitted)
vote, and excludes several caucus states won by Obama that did
not release official vote totals, only the number of delegates
(Iowa, for example).
The voting May 20 maintained the demographic pattern that has
emerged over the past two months, with Clinton winning among the
elderly and among lower-income white voters, particularly in the
Appalachian region, while Obama won by equally decisive margins
among young people, blacks and middle- and upper-income whites.
In Kentucky, where Clinton won by a margin of 66 percent to
31 percent, Obama carried only the states two largest counties:
Jefferson, which includes the city of Louisville, the only large
concentration of black voters; and Fayette, which includes the
states second-largest city, Lexington, home of the University
of Kentucky. Clinton carried every other county, rolling up as
much as 90 percent of the vote in the eastern counties, where
the coal mining industry has collapsed and much of the population
lives in deep poverty.
In Oregon, the Obama campaign staged the largest event of the
five-month primary campaign, a rally in Portland Sunday that drew
75,000 people. Obama won the state by a 60-40 margin, carrying
Portland as well as Eugene, the states second-largest city.
Clinton won only a handful of rural counties, and by much narrower
margins than in similar districts of Kentucky. Clinton won narrowly
among voters over 65, while Obama won among voters under 30 by
a margin of 40 points.
The Clinton campaign faced a deepening crisis as superdelegates
continued to shift to Obama and the Democratic Partys biggest
financial backers begin to coalesce behind the frontrunner. Senator
Robert Byrd of West Virginia, the senior Democrat in the Senate,
announced his endorsement of Obama despite Clintons 41-point
margin of victory in his state, one of at least eight new superdelegate
endorsements since Sunday. The United Mine Workers of America,
which had previously backed Senator John Edwards, also endorsed
Obama.
The Washington Post reported Sunday on a meeting in
the capital, co-hosted by a prominent Obama backer, former senator
Thomas A. Daschle of South Dakota, to honor former Treasury secretary
Robert Rubin, a Clinton backer, and raise money for the Democratic
National Committee. The event was one of a series of such gatherings
of fundraisers and surrogates from both camps to merge
operations for the fall campaign, the newspaper reported.
Other press reports indicated that a prominent Clinton fundraiser,
investment banker and former Treasury official Roger Altman, was
urging the New York senator to end her campaign, while her former
campaign manager, Patty Solis Doyle, had contacted Obama aides
to offer her support for the fall campaign.
One sign of the crisis in the Clinton campaign was the increasingly
hysterical tone of the comments by the candidates husband,
former president Bill Clinton, who told a crowd in Lexington,
Kentucky Monday night that the media was to blame for his wifes
current standing in the polls.
By their own admission its been the most slanted
press coverage in American history, Clinton said. Every
time you turn on the television and listen to one of the people
dissing her, they all have a college degree, theyve all
got a good job, theyve all got health care and theyre
having no trouble filling up their gas tank.
Clintons discovery that the media pundits are part of
a privileged elite is not exactly a revelationand he never
complained of it during 2007, when the same media proclaimed Hillary
Clinton the frontrunner and presumptive nominee.
Such populist demagogy notwithstanding, neither Mrs. Clinton
nor Obama represent the interests of working people. The Democratic
Party, like the Republican, is a party that defends the profit
system and the financial aristocracy at the top that controls
the vast bulk of the wealth produced by workers.
The Clinton campaign has gone beyond such populist staples,
however, in an increasingly ugly appeal to white racism, voiced
openly in Hillary Clintons declaration earlier this monthin
West Virginiathat she had the backing of hard-working
Americans, white Americans, whose support Obama was unable
to win.
Exit polls in Kentucky showed Clinton winning white voters
by a margin of 49 percentage points, while Obama won the much
smaller black electorate by 9 to 1. One in five white voters said
that race played a role in their vote, and nearly 90 percent of
those voted for Clinton. Only 29 percent of those Democratic primary
voters said they would support Obama in November if he were the
partys nominee. By contrast, only one in ten white voters
in Oregon said race was important, and they split their votes
evenly between Obama and Clinton.
This aspect of the Clinton campaign foreshadows the far more
open appeal to racist sentiment that will be a key element of
the Republican campaign in the general election. This connection
was spelled out most cynically by Dick Morris, the former Clinton
political adviser who is now a supporter of Republican John McCain.
In a newspaper column Sunday, Morris wrote, The growing
fear of Obama, who remains something of an unknown, will drag
every last white Republican male off the golf course to vote for
McCain, and he will need no further laying-on of hands from either
evangelical Christians or fiscal conservatives.
While the prospect of the election of the first African-American
president will provoke a racist backlash in some quarters, it
is also one of the sources of widespread illusions in Obama in
the black community and among millions of young people.
In this context, it must be emphasized that Obama does not
represent an insurgent campaign, even within the context of the
Democratic Party. He has become the favored candidate of the Democratic
Party establishment and of much of the financial aristocracy.
Obama is a conventional big business politician whose program,
if anything, is more conservative than that espoused by Bill Clinton
in 1992. Indeed, last week Obama proclaimed himself an admirer
of the foreign policy of President George H. W. Bush, whom Clinton
defeated in that years election.
See Also:
Calling Pelosi's bluff, Republicans temporarily
block war-funding bill
[17 May 2008]
Republicans lose Mississippi House seat
despite anti-Obama campaign
[15 May 2008]
Tensions rise in Democratic contest as
Obama nears nomination
[10 May 2008]
Obama builds lead over Clinton after
North Carolina, Indiana primaries
[7 May 2008]
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