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Title: Some Context
Source: Anonymous Liberal
URL Source: http://www.anonymousliberal.com/
Published: Apr 23, 2008
Author: Anonymous Liberal
Post Date: 2008-04-24 01:30:01 by nolu_chan
Keywords: None
Views: 48
Comments: 2

www.anonymousliberal.com/

Some Context

Anonymous Liberal
Wednesday, April 23, 2008

I've been impressed throughout the primary race by the ability of the Clinton campaign to get members of the media to internalize their spin. Today, for instance, I saw very little attempt by anyone in the media to push back against the Clinton campaign's "tide is turning" narrative. So allow me to add some much needed context.

March 4 was supposed to mark Clinton's "comeback" in this race. On that date, Clinton won primaries in Ohio, Rhode Island, and Texas (though she lost the Texas caucuses). That snapped what had been a long series of lop-sided wins for Obama following Super Tuesday. In the aftermath of those contests, polls indicated that Clinton had a massive lead in Pennsylvania (this PPP poll had the lead at 26 points on March 17).

Despite her victories, however, Clinton hardly made a dent in Obama's delegate lead and people began to realize just how difficult the math was for her. Obama's lead looked increasingly insurmountable, and as a result, the McCain campaign, the RNC, and most conservative activists and pundits began to focus their attention on Obama, whom they saw as the presumptive Democratic nominee. At the same time, the Clinton campaign realized that their only plausible path to victory was to throw the kitchen sink at Obama in the hopes of tarnishing his electability to the point where frightened superdelegates would come crawling back to Clinton.

So since late March (when Clinton was leading in Pennsylvania by over 20 points) Obama has had to endure a two-fronted assault with the Clinton campaign on one side and the Republicans on the other. He's had to deal with the two biggest controversies of his campaign: the Reverend Wright episode and the fallout from his "bitter" comments. And he's had to do all that while trying to stifle the momentum Clinton generated from her March 4 wins.

And after all that, when the results finally came in Pennsylvania, Obama lost by less than 10 points. Though I'm sure that the Obama camp was hoping for a better result, the bottom line is that Obama made up significant ground in Pennsylvania, and he did it during--by far--the most difficult stretch of his campaign to date. That has to be deeply discouraging to the Clinton campaign, no matter what they say outwardly.

posted by A.L. at 10:50 PM

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#1. To: All (#0)

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Tom Maguire said...

I can channel the Hillary message to the superdelegates for you - if we had learned about Jeremiah Wright in December instead of March, the question today would be how much longer can Hillary and Edwards keep going.

If Wright/Ayers/clinging bitterly had broken in December and Barack had miraculously survived, would he have five percent fewer delegates? Would Hillary have five percent more? If you think the answer is yes, then today's race would be essentially tied.

I don't know if superdelegates buy it, but that is the message.

Tom Maguire

11:55 PM

nolu_chan  posted on  2008-04-24   1:31:03 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: nolu_chan (#0)

good summation

'Individuals should not take responsibility for their own defense. That’s what the police are for. ... If I oppose individuals defending themselves, I have to support police defending them. I have to support a police state.”' Alan Dershowitz

robin  posted on  2008-04-24   1:38:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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