Barack Obama is in hot
pursuit of general election voters, hoping America
won't notice he got his head handed to him in West Virginia.
The Illinois senator virtually pretended the
primary didn't happen Tuesday, with no election night speech or any public
appearance at all after the polls closed and gave Hillary Rodham Clinton a more
than 2-1 victory even though her candidacy is likely doomed.
At Obama's Chicago
headquarters, advisers said there was no reason to worry — West
Virginia was demographically suited to Clinton and won't be part of their general
election plans. It's also true that Clinton's
win is unlikely to slow his march toward the nomination — Obama picked up 30
superdelegates this week, more than the 28 total pledged delegates up for grabs
in West Virginia.
But maybe the Obama camp
should be more worried. The voters who went against Obama Tuesday night —
white, rural, older, low-income and without college degrees — don't just live
in West Virginia.
They live everywhere in the country, in places Obama needs to win.
They live in places like Macomb County, Mich.,
where Obama planned to start his day Wednesday by dropping by a Chrysler plant.
That's a recognition that he has work to do to win over working class voters
even if his campaign doesn't say it.
Obama's daylong visit to Michigan will be his
first campaigning there since he signed onto a pledge nine months ago to
boycott the state. He pulled his name from the ballot in the state's
illegitimate primary, held too early for party rules.
That means many voters in
the state are just starting to get to know Obama, said Bill Rustem, president
of Michigan
think tank Public Sector Consultants.
Obama's campaign leaders say
they are confident most of these Clinton
voters are Democrats first and will support Obama once the primary is over. In
a memo before the polls even closed, they said conclusions cannot be drawn
about the general election campaign from the results of the Democratic
primaries and pointed out that head-to-head polls between Obama and McCain show
Obama is running as well as past Democratic candidates among white voters.
Clinton's advisers said she planned
to use her big victory to try to persuade uncommitted superdelegates during a
meeting at her home Wednesday that she would be the strongest nominee in the
general election.
The Obama campaign also said
in its memo that Clinton also will likely win
handily next week in Kentucky.
His saving grace is that Oregon
votes on the same day and is likely to give Obama a big win to balance it out.
A double shellacking for Obama would have had him limping to the nomination.
source: washington.com
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