Hillary Clinton won a landslide victory in Kentucky
Tuesday, but momentum -- and a growing sense of inevitability -- is now firmly
on Barack Obama's side.
Sen. Barack Obama has picked up a majority of the
pledged delegates, according to CNN calculations.
He took Oregon
last night, but it was his symbolic victory with pledged delegates that was the
storyline.
The one-time long shot for the Democratic nomination
has a majority of pledged delegates to the Democratic Convention and is now
about 70 delegates shy of the finish line.
Obama had already been looking toward November before
last night's split decision. He chose Iowa
-- the site of his first win in this marathon primary fight -- to address
supporters in what many observers viewed as a victory lap. It was also an
indication of Obama's intent to fight for a number of battleground states lost
by John Kerry in 2004.
"The skeptics predicted we wouldn't get very
far," Obama said. "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."
Despite the daunting odds of overtaking Obama in the
overall delegate count, Clinton
remained defiant and promised to stay in the race.
"You've never given up on me, because you know
I've never given up on you," Clinton told
supporters in Kentucky.
Clinton's
victory in Kentucky -- as in West Virginia last week -- was noticeable
for its magnitude and breadth. As expected, she dominated Obama in a largely
white, working-class state tailor-made for her increasingly populist message.
Once again, she won both men and women. She carried every age group. She
captured the bulk of voters in every income category, and at every level of
educational achievement.
Kentucky
voters also fired a warning shot across the bow of an Obama campaign that has
largely turned its sights to the fall election.
Only one-third of Clinton's
voters in the Bluegrass
State said they would
vote for Obama in a general election matchup against presumptive Republican
nominee John McCain. Almost 80 percent of Clinton's
voters said they would not be satisfied if Obama wins the Democratic
nomination. A majority of voters statewide believed Obama is not honest and
trustworthy, and that he does not share their values.
No Democrat has won the White House without carrying Kentucky since John F.
Kennedy narrowly defeated Richard Nixon in 1960.
Obama either has to find a way to convince these
voters to support him or he needs to redraw the electoral map in November by
carrying states such as Colorado, North Carolina and Virginia
-- states which rarely vote Democrat on the presidential level.
Obama's favorable numbers in Oregon, on the other hand, reflected his
strength with more-affluent, well-educated, secular voters in another critical
region.
He defeated Clinton by
an almost 2-1margin among men in Oregon.
Perhaps more impressively, he drew her to a tie (at 50 percent each) among
white women -- long considered to be one of the New York senator's core constituencies.
Oregon's
largely progressive political tradition proved to be a boon to the Democratic
frontrunner. Self-described liberals, comprising 57 percent of the state's
electorate, backed Obama by 20 points, 60-40 percent. At the same time,
however, he also managed to carry moderates and conservatives, albeit by much
smaller margins.
Nearly four out of five Oregon primary voters were college educated,
and they voted for Obama by more than 20 points, 61-39 percent. The smaller
pool of non-college educated voters backed Clinton by nine points, 54-45 percent. Obama,
however, surprised many observers by pulling nearly even with Clinton (48-51 percent) among white voters
who did not graduate from college -- a group which has been largely unreceptive
to his campaign in other parts of the country.
Finally, Obama benefited from the votes of the nearly
3 in 10 Oregon
voters with no religious identification. While Protestants and Catholics split
virtually evenly between the two Democratic candidates, voters who cited no
religious affiliation backed the Illinois
senator by 22 points, 61-39 percent.
The campaign now shifts to Florida -- a pivotal general election
battleground whose delegates to the Democratic convention remain in a state of
flux. Clinton and Obama have campaign stops scheduled Wednesday across the
state.
Clinton, who desperately needs to have both the Florida and Michigan
delegations seated in accordance with their January primary results, is
demanding a resolution. Meanwhile, Obama says he is in favor of seating the
disputed delegations, but needless to say does not agree with Clinton's proposed remedy.
source: newyork.com
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