Obama Wins Most Pledged Delegates, Returns To Iowa For Speech (VIDEO)

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The Huffington Post
First Posted: 05-20-08 09:36 PM   |   Updated: 05-28-08 05:12 AM

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Obama Wins

Sen. Barack Obama passed a major milestone on Tuesday night, winning a majority of the pledged delegates in the Democratic race for president, according to estimates from the Obama campaign and several news outlets.

Obama's campaign also announced it had collected more than $31 million in April, "bringing his total amount raised so far this year to $167 million -- a staggering total that suggests his vaunted fundraising machine continues to churn."

The Fix's Chris Cillizza noted, "As has often been the case with Obama's fundraising, the breadth of his appeal is the most impressive trait. Of the $31.3 million Obama raised last month, 94 percent came in the form of contributions of $200 or less, and more than half of all the donations (52 percent) were in chunks of $25 or less."

Obama spoke tonight in Iowa, where he won his first victory in the Democratic race back in January.

"You have put us within reach of the Democratic nomination," he told cheering supporters in Iowa, the overwhelmingly white state that launched him, a black, first-term senator from Illinois, on his improbable path to victory last January.


Obama lavished praise on Clinton, his rival in a race unlike any other, and accused Republican John McCain of a campaign run by lobbyists.

"You are Democrats who are tired of being divided, Republicans who no longer recognize the party that runs Washington, independents who are hungry for change," he said, speaking to a crowd on the grounds of the Iowa Capitol in Des Moines as well as the millions around the country who will elect the nation's 44th president in November.

Watch video of the speech, or read the full text below:

You know, there is a spirit that brought us here tonight - a spirit of change, and hope, and possibility. And there are few people in this country who embody that spirit more than our friend and our champion, Senator Edward Kennedy. He has spent his life in service to this country not for the sake of glory or recognition, but because he cares - deeply, in his gut - about the causes of justice, and equality, and opportunity. So many of us here have benefited in some way or another because of the battles he's waged, and some of us are here because of them.


We know he is not well right now, but we also know that he's a fighter. And as he takes on this fight, let us lift his spirits tonight by letting Ted Kennedy know that we are thinking of him, that we are praying for him, that we are standing with him, and that we will be fighting with him every step of the way.

Fifteen months ago, in the depths of winter, it was in this great state where we took the first steps of an unlikely journey to change America.

The skeptics predicted we wouldn't get very far. The cynics dismissed us as a lot of hype and a little too much hope. And by the fall, the pundits in Washington had all but counted us out.

But the people of Iowa had a different idea.

From the very beginning, you knew that this journey wasn't about me or any of the other candidates in this race. It's about whether this country - at this defining moment - will continue down the same road that has failed us for so long, or whether we will seize this opportunity to take a different path - to forge a different future for the country we love.

That is the question that sent thousands upon thousands of you to high school gyms and VFW halls; to backyards and front porches; to steak fries and JJ dinners, where you spoke about what that future would look like.

You spoke of an America where working families don't have to file for bankruptcy just because a child gets sick; where they don't lose their home because some predatory lender tricks them out of it; where they don't have to sit on the sidelines of the global economy because they couldn't afford the cost of a college education. You spoke of an America where our parents and grandparents don't spend their retirement in poverty because some CEO dumped their pension - an America where we don't just value wealth, but the work and the workers who create it.

You spoke of an America where we don't send our sons and daughters on tour after tour of duty to a war that has cost us thousands of lives and billions of dollars but has not made us safer. You spoke of an America where we match the might of our military with the strength of our diplomacy and the power of our ideals - a nation that is still the beacon of all that is good and all that is possible for humankind.

You spoke of a future where the politics we have in Washington finally reflect the values we hold as Americans - the values you live by here in Iowa: common sense and honesty; generosity and compassion; decency and responsibility. These values don't belong to one class or one region or even one party - they are the values that bind us together as one country.

That is the country I saw in the faces of crowds that would stretch far into the horizon of our heartland - faces of every color, of every age - faces I see here tonight. You are Democrats who are tired of being divided; Republicans who no longer recognize the party that runs Washington; Independents who are hungry for change. You are the young people who've been inspired for the very first time and those not-so-young folks who've been inspired for the first time in a long time. You are veterans and church-goers; sportsmen and students; farmers and factory workers; teachers and business owners who have varied backgrounds and different traditions, but the same simple dreams for your children's future.

Many of you have been disappointed by politics and politicians more times than you can count. You've seen promises broken and good ideas drown in the sea of influence, and point-scoring, and petty bickering that has consumed Washington. And you've been told over and over and over again to be cynical, and doubtful, and even fearful about the possibility that things can ever be different.

And yet, in spite of all the doubt and disappointment - or perhaps because of it - you came out on a cold winter's night in numbers that this country has never seen, and you stood for change. And because you did, a few more stood up. And then a few thousand stood up. And then a few million stood up. And tonight, in the fullness of spring, with the help of those who stood up from Portland to Louisville, we have returned to Iowa with a majority of delegates elected by the American people, and you have put us within reach of the Democratic nomination for President of the United States.

The road here has been long, and that is partly because we've traveled it with one of the most formidable candidates to ever run for this office. In her thirty-five years of public service, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton has never given up on her fight for the American people, and tonight I congratulate her on her victory in Kentucky. We have had our disagreements during this campaign, but we all admire her courage, her commitment and her perseverance. No matter how this primary ends, Senator Clinton has shattered myths and broken barriers and changed the America in which my daughters and yours will come of age.

Some may see the millions upon millions of votes cast for each of us as evidence that our party is divided, but I see it as proof that we have never been more energized and united in our desire to take this country in a new direction. More than anything, we need this unity and this energy in the months to come, because while our primary has been long and hard-fought, the hardest and most important part of our journey still lies ahead.

We face an opponent, John McCain, who arrived in Washington nearly three decades ago as a Vietnam War hero, and earned an admirable reputation for straight talk and occasional independence from his party.

But this year's Republican primary was a contest to see which candidate could out-Bush the other, and that is the contest John McCain won. The Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest 2% of Americans that once bothered Senator McCain's conscience are now his only economic policy. The Bush health care plan that only helps those who are already healthy and wealthy is now John McCain's answer to the 47 million Americans without insurance and the millions more who can't pay their medical bills. The Bush Iraq policy that asks everything of our troops and nothing of Iraqi politicians is John McCain's policy too, and so is the fear of tough and aggressive diplomacy that has left this country more isolated and less secure than at any time in recent history. The lobbyists who ruled George Bush's Washington are now running John McCain's campaign, and they actually had the nerve to say that the American people won't care about this. Talk about out of touch!

I will leave it up to Senator McCain to explain to the American people whether his policies and positions represent long-held convictions or Washington calculations, but the one thing they don't represent is change.

Change is a tax code that rewards work instead of wealth by cutting taxes for middle-class families, and senior citizens, and struggling homeowners; a tax code that rewards businesses that create good jobs here in America instead of the corporations that ship them overseas. That's what change is.

Change is a health care plan that guarantees insurance to every American who wants; that brings down premiums for every family who needs it; that stops insurance companies from discriminating and denying coverage to those who need it most.

Change is an energy policy that doesn't rely on buddying up to the Saudi Royal Family and then begging them for oil - an energy policy that puts a price on pollution and makes the oil companies invest their record profits in clean, renewable sources of energy that will create five million new jobs and leave our children a safer planet. That's what change is.

Change is giving every child a world-class education by recruiting an army of new teachers with better pay and more support; by promising four years of tuition to any American willing to serve their community and their country; by realizing that the best education starts with parents who turn off the TV, and take away the video games, and read to our children once in awhile.

Change is ending a war that we never should've started and finishing a war against Al Qaeda in Afghanistan that we never should've ignored. Change is facing the threats of the twenty-first century not with bluster, or fear-mongering, or tough talk, but with tough diplomacy, and strong alliances, and confidence in the ideals that have made this nation the last, best hope of Earth. That is the legacy of Roosevelt, and Truman, and Kennedy.

That is what change is.

That is the choice in this election.

The same question that first led us to Iowa fifteen months ago is the one that has brought us back here tonight; it is the one we will debate from Washington to Florida, from New Hampshire to New Mexico - the question of whether this country, at this moment, will keep doing what we've been doing for four more years, or whether we will take that different path. It is more of the same versus change. It is the past versus the future. It has been asked and answered by generations before us, and now it is our turn to choose.

We will face our share of difficult and uncertain days in the journey ahead. The other side knows they have embraced yesterday's policies and so they will also embrace yesterday's tactics to try and change the subject. They will play on our fears and our doubts and our divisions to distract us from what matters to you and your future.

Well they can take the low road if they want, but it will not lead this country to a better place. And it will not work in this election. It won't work because you won't let it. Not this time. Not this year.

My faith in the decency, and honesty, and generosity of the American people is not based on false hope or blind optimism, but on what I have lived and what I have seen in this very state.

For in the darkest days of this campaign, when we were dismissed by all the polls and all the pundits, I would come to Iowa and see that there was something happening here that the world did not yet understand.

It's what led high school and college students to give up their vacations to stuff envelopes and knock on doors, and why grandparents have spent all their afternoons making phone calls to perfect strangers. It's what led men and women who can barely pay the bills to dig into their savings and write five dollar checks and ten dollar checks, and why young people from all over this country have left their friends and their families for a job that offers little pay and less sleep.

Change is coming to America.

It's the spirit that sent the first patriots to Lexington and Concord and led the defenders of freedom to light the way north on an Underground Railroad. It's what sent my grandfather's generation to beachheads in Normandy, and women to Seneca Falls, and workers to picket lines and factory fences. It's what led all those young men and women who saw beatings and billy clubs on their television screens to leave their homes, and get on buses, and march through the streets of Selma and Montgomery - black and white, rich and poor.

Change is coming to America.

It's what I saw all those years ago on the streets of Chicago when I worked as an organizer - that in the face of joblessness, and hopelessness, and despair, a better day is still possible if there are people willing to work for it, and fight for it, and believe in it. That's what I've seen here in Iowa. That's what is happening in America - our journey may be long, our work will be great, but we know in our hearts we are ready for change, we are ready to come together, and in this election, we are ready to believe again. Thank you Iowa, and may God Bless America.

Sen. Barack Obama passed a major milestone on Tuesday night, winning a majority of the pledged delegates in the Democratic race for president, according to estimates from the Obama campaign and severa...
Sen. Barack Obama passed a major milestone on Tuesday night, winning a majority of the pledged delegates in the Democratic race for president, according to estimates from the Obama campaign and severa...
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The Super delegates can put an end to this long drawn out primary. I just hope that more will come out for Mr Obama and end whatever the other person is trying to do to wreck the Democratic Party by
making inaccurate statements in Florida. The Super delegates should take into account
the fact that more Democratic voters and independants would have voted if they thought the
illegal process was going to turn around to be legal. If Rules are not to be obeyed, why have any
Rules?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 PM on 05/25/2008

Thought I would put it here too... this is just so awesome
Wow.. McCain's adivisor resigns because he doesn't want to work against Obama! A Repub with a conscience...
http://caffertyfile.blogs.cnn.com/2008/05/21/mccain-adviser-resigns-doesn%e2%80%99t-want-to-work-against-obama/#comments

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 05/21/2008

I think Hillary Clinton is going to far. At her speech in Boca Raton today, she kept going on and on about the popular vote. Even if that's the way it should be, it's not. Also, she knew the votes wouldn't count, and it didn't matter to her in the beginning (didn't she sign a pledge to that effect?). Now that it seems to be her only hope, she wants to be the one seen as not disenfranchising the voters of MI and FL. I know a re-vote is not possible, but had the candidates campaigned, the outcome may have been different (her name is recognizable - hey, Clinton...­Obama...wh­at the hell...I'll go with Clinton). Or, if the voters thought their votes would count, many more would have come out - look at the historic turnout in other states. I'm not going to say I won't vote in Nov. if she gets her way or if she's the party's nominee - (because I am a true, educated democrat who doesn't want 4 more years of the same), but she is doing serious damage in this campaign with all her talk about sexism, but denying BALANT racism. Sidenote - If people are willing to admit race plays a part in this campaign and are not voting for Sen. Obama because he is black, she is trying to piggyback on the back of racist people all in her quest to become POTUS? Instead of denouncing it, she's encouraging it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 PM on 05/21/2008

That is her sneaky way to bash Obama.... *sighs*

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:50 PM on 05/21/2008

I couldn't agree more. HRC is deliberately trying to muddy Obama up for the general, and now I'm really afraid (after listening to her today) that she is going to take this all the way to Denver.

HRC's argument that FL/MI were disenfranchised -- through a shameful correlation to FL 2000 -- will be the straw that breaks our backs. She is essentially arguing that some voters are more valuable than others (i.e., all states that voted for her should count; those that didn't shouldn't).

As long as the DNC and press go along with this (for fear of being labeled sexist) HRC will not stop until the '08 election is in shambles.

I implore all concerned parties to urge Speaker Pelosi to stop this thing now:

http://speaker.house.gov/contact/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 05/21/2008

Once in a very long time, a candidate such as Obama comes along. You are SO VERY LUCKY.

Why is the DNC not stepping forward now to stop Clintons from damage to the U.S. image!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 05/21/2008
- GingerB I'm a Fan of GingerB 82 fans permalink
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Out of respect (or fear).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 05/21/2008

Hillary blown through 31 million dollars of her own money - imagine if that was our tax dollars and her heading our economy!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 PM on 05/21/2008

Funny how Sen. Obama as of April has spent $60 million dollars. I really hope you have something better than that as it as been reportedly widely at every turn he outspends her 2 to 1.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:54 AM on 05/23/2008
- reelcobra I'm a Fan of reelcobra 6 fans permalink

The big winner here besides BHO is of course Iran, since they can now hope to meet with BHO without those pesky United Nations preconditions, if we elect him to our highest office.

I thought we on the hard left here at the HuffPo blasted Bush for acting unilaterally.

Perhaps someone can explain why our guy's position isn't dangerous to our alliances?

http://www.nypost.com/seven/05212008/postopinion/opedcolumnists/obama_to_ajad__atomic_assist_111819.htm?page=0

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 05/21/2008
- Dustee I'm a Fan of Dustee 60 fans permalink
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You're right. Let's all vote for McSame!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 PM on 05/21/2008
- reelcobra I'm a Fan of reelcobra 6 fans permalink

__________­__________­__________­___

Character is a "distraction" - Not an Issue

And don't mention our guy's:

Wife
Mentor
Middle Name
Friends
positions
Race
Inexperience

BHO '08!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 05/21/2008

Not his best speech, but very good. He wants so badly to move forward, as do the American people. But Hillary just won't quit! Let's start talking about VP ideas...
http://sethandray.wordpress.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 AM on 05/21/2008

I would have a lot more respect for HRC if she came out and denounced the people that vote for her only because of race. Those people might as well head on over to the GOP and if the Dems can't win without them then the US has some serious problems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:38 AM on 05/21/2008
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 229 fans permalink

Where is the "keepin' them honest" media coverage of Hillary Clinton's unmitigated lies to FL voters .. why is there no media counter to what she is saying to those people ... she and Bill have done enough misinforming across our country even at our very own possible demise (economically and diplomatically). Just how scurrilous will superdelegates continue to allow her to be!?

I find Hillary's procedures unacceptable not becoming a democratic race for the white house ... she has learned a very bitter lesson from a dirty republican machine and it ought to leave a very lasting, nasty taste in the mouths of all democrats.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:02 AM on 05/21/2008

1627 is NOT A MILSTONE....IT NEVER WAS.

Talk about changing goal posts and SPINNING....this is a MEANINGLESS NUMBER.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 AM on 05/21/2008
- Actionmac I'm a Fan of Actionmac 10 fans permalink
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Because hillary said so...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 05/21/2008
- Actionmac I'm a Fan of Actionmac 10 fans permalink
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Why, because hillary told you so?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:08 PM on 05/21/2008

Everyone seems to be forgetting one thing. It doesn't matter who wins the popular vote, the number of states won, the types of states won (i.e., big states, swing states, etc.). The Democratic primary winner is ONLY determined by the total number of DELEGATES.

Either side can argue whatever metric they want but the only number that matters is the delegate count. If people don't like that fact then the system should be changed. But as of right now it's the only system that matters.

BTW...I'm a FL Dem who voted in the "your vote doesn't count" primary and I DO NOT want the delegates seated from FL and MI. I'm tired of the ever increasing policy all over this country of acquiescing on an issue or a punishment just to appear politically correct. Our state legislature broke the rules, they should live with the consequences. What ever happened to "you broke it, you brought it"?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 AM on 05/21/2008
- elbzee I'm a Fan of elbzee 20 fans permalink
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THANK YOU crushinator! A voice of reason among the chatter! I agree and appreciate your effort to speak out. My father taught me to play the cards I'm dealt. I do not cheat. Nor do I lie. I am sickened by the realization that today in America; it's the norm to cheat. When you get caught, just lie and obfuscate. We've had 7+years of lying cheaters teaching the populous that it's OK. The facts are as you stated. The committee made the rules. The states were told the rules. The states decided to break the rules. Clinton doesn't care that the rules were broken.

Obama followed the rules. In my opinion, that counts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 05/21/2008
- M.S. Bellows, Jr. - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of M.S. Bellows, Jr. 81 fans permalink

It also doesn't matter which metric you use; Obama still wins. Most popular votes if caucus states are counted as well as Michigan and Florida? Obama. Most popularly elected delegates? Obama. Most superdelegates (as of today for sure -- new endorsement from Connecticut)? Obama. The only metric where Clinton wins is "don't count caucus states, do count Florida, don't give Obama any votes at all from Michigan." If any of her supporters can justify that particular calculation as fair, legal, or democratic, I'd love to hear it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 AM on 05/21/2008

You're right. That was the point I was trying to make, I was trying to leave names out of it to be objective. Regardless of who is in the lead in any of these other metrics (Obama probably, unless HRC uses fuzzy math), delegates are the only metric that counts.

Most people on HuffPO have probably already seen this, but this is a great clip on Olbermann analyzing how HRC keeps "moving the goal posts". Hilarious but true.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWSl6bEisUA

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 05/21/2008
- Darksider I'm a Fan of Darksider 2 fans permalink

I'm an Obama supporter but not a home owner. I didn't vote in the primary as I had nothing to vote about. lots of people I know didn't vote because they knew it wasn't going to count. No way should the Florida and Michigan results be counted as is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 PM on 05/21/2008

tyro
she's not ruining obama's chances of winning he's doing it all by himself and with some assistance from his fanatically cult like supporters. but thanks for feeling so sorry for us and explaining why we go on supporting her and not your obama. i didn't know i was an even bigger idiot than i thought. thank you for pointing out my misconception and providing some existential clarity.
as far as your comments, not worth responding to all the misrepresentations you claim. i don't care anymore, we are well passed that point. now, all that matters is who wins the nomination and the general election.
despite his assertion, he is far from winning the nomination and appears to be unelectable this fall. she just won another state by close to a 3 to 1 advantage. any talk of getting out is absurd. she is getting stronger and showing why she is more electable. and unless, she caves in and takes herself out of consideration there will be a floor fight for the nomination in denver, as only one delegate needs to offer her name for a vote.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 AM on 05/21/2008

Hillary Clinton is taking her supporters for idiots. There were some of her supporters in WV and KY who might have voted for a black man, but with her Wright and Muslim non-issues and innuendo, she managed to galvanize them against Obama. Then in KY she decided to cry sexism and say that women were discriminated against so that women wouldn't vote for a man. Using her typical fear and hate campaigning methods she has managed to erect a standard where her supporters can gather around and feel justified to hate a black man as president. She has sunk so low that she has drawn the praise of Carl Rove. She has no delusions of winning the presidency. This is just her attempt to hurt Obama out of pure vindictiveness. I sympathize with her supporters who have to continually parrot her talking points to obfuscate her true motives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:40 AM on 05/21/2008

I speak as a Louisvillian where Obama won big as he did in Lexington. I am sad and embarrassed for the Commonwealth choosing to live in a despicable past. I am angry at the Clintons for exploiting that ugly past. Hillary's headquarters is on my corner and it's true that most of her supporters there are over 50 women. So am I and see so many of them that I've worked with on various campaigns and they are as strident and mean spirited as she is. In stark contrast the people I've worked with here on Senator Obama's campaign are diversified in every way and just as dedicated. We will not give up and we will continue to work.
Hillary pandered to the people who have so lttle that hate is a precious commodity because they can use that hate to lay blame for everything they don't have. They will go against every one of their interests and vote Republican and would do just the same were Hillary the nominee.
Appalachia from start to finish chooses to remain ignorant and the Clintons seized on that and used it to their advantage. In the end todays headline remains...Obama Wins Most Pledged Delegates and he will be our nominee!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 05/21/2008
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 229 fans permalink

It's been said over and over again, Hillary can't win even with FL and MI .. even if she is given all that she thinks she "won" in those states! Hillary can't metrically win with FL, MI and PR unless she achieves more than 70% of that cumulative!!

All of these rhymes and reasons fall flat on their faces ... this woman is being coddled by men ... all in the eyes of thinking american people ... most fair thinking women are very much aware of this!

Not only is Hillary not presidential, she is one of the most divisive type women in america right now .. quite undignified, quite classless!

She is actually misleading to the points of lying to Florida's democratic electorate .. deliberately and she did in up-state PA with that Bosnia stuff ... that was no gafe, that was deliberate to take attention away from her full documented support of NAFTA which caused PA's industries to disappear!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 AM on 05/21/2008
- FiddleDD2 I'm a Fan of FiddleDD2 10 fans permalink

Isn't it true that the RNC stripped FL and MI of delegates (and some other states) for holding their primaries early? Didn't the RNC agree to seat half of those delegates and that is that?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 AM on 05/21/2008
- JadedAggie I'm a Fan of JadedAggie 9 fans permalink

Yes they seated 1/2 the delegates from Florida and Michigan. It's the reason why nearly everyone assumes the democrats will end up doing the same thing. This way the DNC can punish the states and if people complain they can say the Republicans did it too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 AM on 05/21/2008
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