2008 presidential race, Barack Obama, Barack Obama Super Tuesday, Breaking Politics News, California primary, Clinton campaign, Clinton Obama California, Democratic Primaries, New Jersey primary, New York primary, Obama campaign, Super Tuesday, Super tuesday campaigning, Super Tuesday polls, Super Tuesday primaries, Super Tuesday primary, Super Tuesday results, Tuesday primaries
2008 presidential race, Barack Obama, Barack Obama Super Tuesday, Breaking Politics News, California primary, Clinton campaign, Clinton Obama California, Democratic Primaries, New Jersey primary, New York primary, Obama campaign, Super Tuesday, Super tuesday campaigning, Super Tuesday polls, Super Tuesday primaries, Super Tuesday primary, Super Tuesday results, Tuesday primaries

Super Tuesday Results: The Morning After

DAVID ESPO | February 6, 2008 11:31 PM EST | AP

Compare other versions »

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

WASHINGTON — Sen. John McCain padded his commanding delegate lead in the Republican presidential race Wednesday and urged conservative critics to cut him some slack. In a Democratic surprise, Hillary Rodham Clinton disclosed she'd lent $5 million to her cash-short campaign.

"And I think the results last night proved the wisdom of my investment," said the former first lady, one day after trading victories with Barack Obama in a Super Tuesday string of contests from coast to coast.

The competition for Republican delegates was a runaway.

Nearly complete returns from Super Tuesday left McCain with 707 delegates, nearly 60 percent of the 1,191 needed to win the nomination at the national convention in St. Paul, Minn., this summer.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney had 294, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee 195 and Texas Rep. Ron Paul 14.

Despite steadily lengthening odds, neither Romney nor Huckabee offered any hint they were ready to exit the race.

McCain, the Arizona senator, said the nomination was his, though, and added he recognized there was work to be done to unify the party after acrimonious campaigning.

"I do hope that at some point we would just calm down a little bit and see if there's areas we can agree on," he said, one day in advance of an appearance before conservative activists who have shunned his candidacy.

The Democratic delegate count lagged, the result of party rules that shunned the type of winner-take-all primaries in states such as New York and New Jersey that helped McCain build his advantage.

On Tuesday's busiest primary night in history, Clinton and Obama were separated by 26 delegates, with 139 yet to be allocated.

Overall, that left Clinton with 1,045, more than half of the 2,025 needed to secure the Democratic nomination. Obama was right behind with 960.

With little time to rest, both Obama and Clinton pointed toward the next contests, primaries in Louisiana, Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia plus caucuses in Nebraska, Washington, Maine and the Virgin Islands in the next week. In all, those states offer 353 delegates.

At a news conference in Chicago, Obama claimed victory on Super Tuesday, saying he had won more states than the former first lady for the day and would wind up with more delegates by the time all were tallied.

He bluntly took issue with the suggestion that he, more than she, could be brought down by Swift Boat-style criticism in the fall campaign.

"I have to just respond by saying that the Clinton research operation is about as good as anybody's out there," he said.

"I assure you that having engaged in a contest against them for the last year that they've pulled out all the stops. And you know I think what is absolutely true is whoever the Democratic nominee is the Republicans will go after them. The notion that somehow Senator Clinton is going to be immune from attack or there's not a whole dump truck they can't back up in a match between her and John McCain is just not true."

He said he would be campaigning in all the states in the next round of primaries and caucuses.

Clinton said she would contest Obama everywhere, although senior aides conceded Obama would have more to spend on ads.

"We will have funds to compete," Mark Penn, Clinton's chief strategist, told reporters in a conference call. "But we're likely to be outspent again."

A few hours later, Howard Wolfson, the campaign's communications director, said the senator had loaned money to her campaign late last month.

Officials with both campaigns have said Obama raised $32 million in January and Clinton $13.5 million, a significant gap between the two that allowed Obama to place ads in virtually every Super Tuesday state and get a head start on advertising for the next primaries and caucuses.

Among Republicans, there was speculation that Romney was contemplating a withdrawal. He offered little hint of his plans, announcing only that he would appear before conservatives and make a speech to Maryland Republicans on Thursday.

The wealthy former businessman has spent an estimated $40 million to $50 million in personal funds to finance his campaign, but he ran something of a scaled-back effort in several Super Tuesday states.

He emerged with a string of victories in caucuses, but won primaries only in his home state of Massachusetts and in Utah.

Huckabee scored a series of Southern victories on Super Tuesday and has said he will stay in the race until someone has enough delegates to clinch the nomination.

Interviewed on CBS, Huckabee sidestepped when asked whether he might be an irresistible vice presidential running mate on a ticket headed by McCain. "I still want to be the irresistible choice to be the president," he said.

McCain wasn't talking on that subject, but the vote totals and exit polls made it abundantly clear that he was weak where the former Arkansas governor was strong _ in appealing to evangelical conservatives in the Bible Belt.

A Louisiana primary and caucuses in Kansas on Saturday offer an inviting target for Huckabee, who has demonstrated a strong appeal to social conservatives.

McCain didn't say so, but there is ample evidence he is pleased to have Huckabee in the race. In state after state, Huckabee has divided the anti-McCain vote with Romney, preventing the former Massachusetts governor from emerging as a more serious threat.

On Tuesday, McCain's delegates at the West Virginia convention swung over to support Huckabee at the last minute in a successful maneuver designed to deprive Romney of a victory.

Comments for this post are now closed


 
Comments
613
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next › Last » (7 pages total)

All this racial talk is a diversion from the real issues! Who cares about the race thing ~ racist and that's about it! Bottom line are the issues. Then there is the message and the vision and finally the call to action. Obama has a vision, message and is calling all of us to action, so, where's the commitment to the Constitution, ending Washington corruption, ending the neo-con play for world domination and the ONE WORLD ORDER! I haven't heard anyone approach these subjects. Yes, I know they are NOT on the table but I wish they were! The country really has a deeper sickness to cure than race!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:08 PM on 02/06/2008

"As one measure, Clinton managed to get more votes in Minnesota than all that were cast in the 2004 Democratic caucuses in that state, despite her running a distant second to Obama."

This is what's exciting me about this race. Is this happening in other states, too?

Breaking it down:
Clinton got more votes than ALL the 2004 MN caucus goers COMBINED. 2004 was a record year for us, the 'turn off this war' year.

And Barack won the state 67% to 33%. Barack alone turned out TWO TIMES as many voters than all those from 2004 COMBINED.

Is Barack infusing the Democratic party with new voters like this in other purple/red states?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 02/06/2008
photo

FISA UPDATE!

Remembering that the Reactionaries have half the seats in the Senate, it is not surprising that things are not going well.

The Rethugs are obstructing by blocking not only the amendments that would make the Intelligence bill even remotely palatable, but they are obstructing the Stimulus Package. The goal of all this is to force the Senate to vote on FISA just before the expiration of PAA in a few days, and give the House no time to consider the bullshit Senate bill in conference committee.

More details at Daily Kos:

FISA Fight: White House temper tantrum
by mcjoan
Wed Feb 06, 2008 at 09:13:17 AM PST
The Republican shenanigans on filibustering the stimulus package in order to delay consideration of the FISA fix now seems to have been orchestrated from the White House, if you could judge by a letter (pdf) AG Mukasey and DNI McConnell sent to Reid yesterday.
See full article at: http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/2/6/121113/6419/454/451096

FISA Fight: Taking it to the House
by mcjoan
Tue Feb 05, 2008 at 12:58:33 PM PST
Yesterday's Republican shenanigans, that are continuing today as they filibuster that economic stimulus package that was such a high priority, highlight the importance of keeping the House strong on holding the line to keep their FISA legislation, the RESTORE Act, the base bill as they go to conference.
See the whole article at: http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/2/5/155323/6199/90/450451

Action items: Contact your own Senators and also this list of Senators (see the articles linked above) likely to be persuadable. Tell them (1) NO on telco amnesty, (2) NO basket warrants or reverse targeting, (3) sequestration of illegally harvested evidence, (4) make FISA the exclusive means of surveillance, and (5) vote for a 4 year sunset.

Take action! Call and write!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 02/06/2008
photo

Did anyone hear the breakdown of votes by race/gender a million times last night ? Whats up with that ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:42 PM on 02/06/2008
photo

"Obama won 13 Super Tuesday states; Clinton, eight plus American Samoa. Clinton scored the advantage in delegates, bring her total to 845 to Obama's 765, by the latest accounting. The road ahead was long for the Democrats: It takes 2,025 delegates to claim their nomination."

Excuse me, but how is it that Obama is claiming a delegate lead? To reiterate from an earlier post:

As of right now [an hour thirty mins ago], the hard numbers are (courtesy of the Washington Post):

Clinton 803 delegates 12 states
Obama 742 delegates 15 states

Storms on the horizon - the status of Florida (wouldn't you know?) and Michigan delegates, as well as those Super Delegates (Obama has 34 pledges to Clinton's 21).

Super Delegates??? I'm not feeling all warm and fuzzy about either the appellation or function of these uber-plenipotentiaries. I imagine it's just the same old back room politics with capes and x-ray vision. Still it makes me grumpy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:41 PM on 02/06/2008
photo

Both dem and repig voters have the economy as the number one issue, and Iraq 2, and 3 respectively. News bulletein to voters, keep pissing money down the Iraq hole, and the economy will never be good, fucking duh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 02/06/2008

This contest would be significantly different if the blacks were voting on issues and not race.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 02/06/2008
photo

Republicans don't have the numbers. They can't do it without fixing the vote.

Even if Mike Gravel (I love that guy) were the nominee, and all vote counting was done properly and legally, he'd win. It is no accident that a woman and an African American man, both qualified and brilliant are our candidates. It's sweet and poetic if you ask me.

The turnout this year for dems will be huge this year, I believe it will be numbers we've never seen before. It's already been amazing so far, and these are the primaries.

Relax on that this dem can't win defeatist talk. It simply doesn't hold water imo.

People also talk like Hillary is only getting support from conservative democrats, when in reality, she's got the super-mega-ultra liberal votes from folks like me, and everyone in between.

I wasn't in high school or junior high when Bill was president like our young Obama independents.

I was in the work force, and I saw progress and opportunity every year the man was in office. Yeah, I was pissed at Don't Ask, pissed at DOMA, I was even pissed at Desert Storm. But we had a balanced budget, and we had a president who granted interviews to leading gay magazines and organizations - and spoke the word "Aids". Those were times when we couldn't have it all instantaneously.

Then came Bush, aka the darkness that gripped the country. The purse-strings closed in my industry, and then came the religious inquisition. Then came the propaganda - conservative talk radio, talk TV, Rupert Murdoch and Ailes, "liberal" came to mean every bad thing that conservative actually is.

Sorry, but I lived the Clinton years as an adult. They were very good for me and many others.

A blowjob? Ya, France's president was carrying on publicly with mistress after mistress in his concurrent presidency, the public new it, and didn't care because it had nothing to do with how he ran the country. Americans really have to mature in regards to sexuality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 AM on 02/06/2008

Safe...Gee, you can REALLY stretch, to try for YOUR hate ,HUH ????

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 AM on 02/06/2008
photo

Personally, I'm looking forward to the primary coming up here in Texas. Yes, yes, Texas is a friggin' red state, but it has a mass of delegates and will play a role in the nomination. And believe it or not there are tons of dems here, from the Rio Grande Valley to conservative Dallas.

Although, living here in Dallas as I do, I strongly recommend none of the candidates, consider a motorcade.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 AM on 02/06/2008

I'll be donating $20.08 to each Mike today. I'm sure many of you HuffPo people will join me in donating to Mike & Mike.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 AM on 02/06/2008
photo

If any of you still needed proof of how this election was rigged from the start, SuperTuesday provided it (actually the New Hampshire primary did, but the MSM isn't talking about that).

I can't be the only one here who is flabbergasted at how the most hated candidates have been chosen as the "front runners." Starting with Giuliani. Nosferudy Ghouliani, thank god he's out of here.

Then flipflop prettyboy Romney whose only credentials are his status in the businessworld as a sucessful corporate raider, outsourcer and liquidator. Although given the economy these days, a Romney presidency almost makes a perverse kind of sense.

Then there is Hillary Clinton, the most hated woman in politics, winning all the polls and most of the primaries. And now McCain and his Straightjacket Express.

Who's voting for these clowns, anyway? Diebold?

I can't be the only one who smells a rat, and I hate the one to stick my neck out but it's TIME. It's time for the slaves to revolt, and this can be done simply by walking off the plantation. We can't fight this monster, but we CAN starve it, first by turning off the television set and TELLING THEM WHY.

And then stop buying their sh*t. Period. Cut up your VISAs and get "off the grid." It's time to boycott our "controllers" by snapping our wallets shut, and engaging in peaceful noncooperation until their empires completely fall apart. Why not? Our jobs are in jepoardy anyway! The markets are EXTREMELY vulnerable, so stab them in the back of their knees before they can do any more damage to our Republic. "The iron is hot."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 AM on 02/06/2008

The only way that Obama would be Hillary's VP is if he didn't want any future in future politics. Take for instance Al Gore. Because Al Gore ran with Bill Clinton his election chances for 2000 blew up in his face. YOU CAN'T TRUST A CLINTON.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 AM on 02/06/2008
photo

"NBC News, which is projecting delegates based on the Democratic Party's complex formula, figures Obama will wind up with 840 to 849 delegates, versus 829 to 838 for Clinton."

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0208/8358.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 AM on 02/06/2008
photo

I've never been so upset with my fellow libs and dems in my life. Why...OH WHY....would you keep voting for Hillary when you know that she has no chance against McCain? Why would you put us in a position to shoot ourselves right in the foot yet again? Don't you guys realize that a Hillary nomination would galvanize the republicans/conservatives like never before? They would vote in record numbers for McCain, even though conservatives don't really like him, just out of spite for Hillary. You guys know how badly they don't want another Clinton in the White House. We better hope that Obama goes on a roll here in the next month or two or we're truly finished.

This could have been so sweet too....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:38 AM on 02/06/2008
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next › Last » (7 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

You must be logged in to reply to this comment. Log in  or  Connect