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Keyword: superdelegates

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  • Norah to McAuliffe: 'Mathematically Impossible' for Hillary to Win Nomination

    05/07/2008 10:19:31 AM PDT · by governsleastgovernsbest · 26 replies · 92+ views
    NewsBusters ^ | Mark Finkelstein
    Hillary's odds of overtaking Obama among elected delegates is not much better than those of the milk-wagon nag's winning the Preakness. But is it "mathematically impossible" for Clinton to win the nomination? No way. Many superdelegates remain undeclared. And even those who have come out for Obama are not bound. If another shoe of the Rev. Wright variety were to drop, it's far from inconceivable that the supers would move to Hillary. But perhaps in a sign of how much the MSM wants Hillary out and their guy in, Norah O'Donnell has had the chutzpah to proclaim to Hillary honcho...
  • Clinton Having Trouble Meeting with Superdelegates

    05/07/2008 9:35:16 AM PDT · by illiac · 58 replies · 287+ views
    Drudge Report ^ | 5/7/08 | Drudge Report
    Developing story on Drudge. No details as of yet. Superdelegates do not want to meet with Clinton today.
  • Undemocratic Democrats Prepare the Smoke Filled Rooms

    05/06/2008 4:53:29 AM PDT · by Invisigoth · 9 replies · 92+ views
    North Star Writers Group ^ | May 6, 2008 | Gregory D. Lee
    Remember all the moaning and groaning during the 2000 presidential election when the Democrats accused the Republicans of stealing the election? Remember how lawyers for Al Gore attempted to disenfranchise Floridian U.S. servicemen and women overseas by asking the courts to toss out their absentee ballots? Well, Democratic “superdelegates” could disfranchise half of their own voters this election year. This summer, almost 800 so-called superdelegates will occupy smoke-filled rooms of cigar bars in Denver as they mull over their choice for the Democrat presidential nominee. Never mind that Barack Obama will in all likelihood have won the majority of votes...
  • California superdelegates' wavering bodes ill for Hillary Clinton

    05/05/2008 9:37:58 AM PDT · by The_Republican · 14 replies · 161+ views
    LA Times ^ | May 5th, 2008 | Scott Martelle
    Hillary Rodham Clinton, stung last week by the defection of a prominent superdelegate, could lose the backing of more of these Democratic Party leaders and elected officials if she fails to make significant gains in the remaining month of presidential nominating contests, several California superdelegates said this weekend. Two of the five superdelegates aligned with Clinton who spoke at the annual California Democratic Convention here said they would reconsider their support if rival Barack Obama maintained his lead in elected delegates and the popular vote after the last contests on June 3. While hardly reflecting a groundswell, the superdelegates' comments...
  • Nagin Picked As Superdelegate

    05/04/2008 3:39:22 AM PDT · by chemicalman · 37 replies · 108+ views
    99.5 fm WRNO ^ | Saturday, May 3, 2008 | 99.5 fm wrno
    Nagin Picked As Superdelegate Hasn't said if he will support Obama or Clinton Saturday, May 3, 2008 New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin has been elected a superdelegate to the Democratic Party's presidential nominating convention. The state party's central committee picked Nagin over four other candidates, including Lieutenant Governor Mitch Landrieu, who unsuccessfully challenged Nagin for mayor in 2006. Nagin won 83 votes in voting Saturday, Jerry McKernan of Baton Rouge had 50 and Landrieu had 28. Nagin is one of 11 Louisiana superdelegates who will go to the convention and do not need to pledge their support to a candidate...
  • Hillary Clinton clings on as ‘white flight’ begins to harm Barack Obama

    05/04/2008 12:41:07 AM PDT · by KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle · 38 replies · 198+ views
    Times (UK) ^ | 05/04/2008 | Sarah Baxter
    On the eve of two crucial primary election contests, Hillary Clinton is pinning her hopes of winning the Democratic presidential nomination on a collapse in the white vote for Barack Obama. “White flight” from Obama, who was hailed as the first post-racial presidential candidate, has been gathering force since Clinton’s nine-point victory in last month’s Pennsylvania primary. Her allies will be looking at voting patterns in Indiana and North Carolina on Tuesday, the two largest remaining states to go to the polls, for any signs that Obama’s proven weakness among white working-class voters may turn into a rout. Clinton is...
  • Hillary Clinton, Fairy Princess

    05/03/2008 3:28:33 AM PDT · by Puzzleman · 40 replies · 100+ views
    Slate ^ | May 2, 2008 | Timothy Noah
    -- snip --Here's a rule I would like every political reporter, campaign official, TV talking head, and politician in the United States to follow. Go ahead and say, if you like, that Hillary Clinton retains a serious chance of winning the Democratic nomination. If you say this, however, you must describe a set of circumstances whereby this could happen. Try not to make it sound like a fairy tale...
  • In D.C. Area, a Superdelegate Tug of War

    05/02/2008 7:53:39 PM PDT · by mdittmar · 9 replies · 79+ views
    The Washington Post ^ | May 3, 2008 | Tim Craig, John Wagner and Nikita Stewart
    Maryland Democratic Party Vice Chairman Lauren Glover is fielding calls from Sen. Barack Obama. Jim Leaman, executive director of the Virginia AFL-CIO, is being inundated with personal letters and e-mails from supporters of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. And D.C. Council member Harry Thomas Jr. just wants be left alone. Pressure is mounting on the 67 Democratic superdelegates from the District, Maryland and Virginia to choose between Obama and Clinton in the most heated presidential nomination fight in a generation. With neither Clinton nor Obama likely to win enough pledged delegates to secure the nomination, the 793 superdelegates nationwide will have...
  • Polls show voters drift to Clinton ahead of next primaries (Superdelegates to Obama)

    05/02/2008 6:33:55 AM PDT · by Mr. Brightside · 49 replies · 85+ views
    AP ^ | 5/2/08
    Polls show voters drift to Clinton ahead of next primaries By STEVEN R. HURST – 1 hour ago WASHINGTON (AP) — Polls showed voters drifting toward Hillary Rodham Clinton before crucial Democratic primary votes next week, but the all-important party superdelegates — whose backing is now essential for the nomination — were falling increasingly in line behind Barack Obama. Despite the momentum building behind Clinton after her win in Pennsylvania, it still appeared mathematically impossible for her to overcome Obama's delegate lead for the party nomination. In the past two months, Obama has whittled Clinton's superdelegate lead by half, a...
  • The new, new math: Clinton's delegate count looks grim, Obama's electability questionable

    05/02/2008 9:39:11 AM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 41 replies · 130+ views
    MSNBC/The National Journal ^ | April. 29, 2008 | Charlie Cook
    Despite the recent show of strength by Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., the odds against_her_winning the Democratic presidential nomination are as imposing as ever—and probably worse. There was a time when one of the stronger arguments in favor of nominating Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., was that he was more electable than Clinton. The thinking at the time was that Clinton was so polarizing, she could get close to winning a general election but would have difficulty getting over the top. Now, about the only plausible argument that Obama is more electable is to claim that Clinton’s backers would probably get_over...
  • Rush Addresses Racial Fears of the Superdelegates (Admits 'chaos' won't cause blacks to abandon DNC)

    05/02/2008 9:05:15 AM PDT · by Behind Liberal Lines · 313 replies · 214+ views
    Rush Limbaugh ^ | 5/1/08 | Rush Limbaugh
    RUSH: You superdelegates in the Democrat Party, you're worried about denying Obama the nomination because you fear that your black voters will abandon you permanently? Come, come! Review your history with me once again. You Democrats have already done far worse to black voters than yanking the nomination away from Barack Obama. Have no fear, superdelegates. Be confident. Blacks will stay with you. So will Jesse Jackson, so will Al Sharpton
  • Obama’s Wright response wins him superdelegates

    05/02/2008 11:47:36 AM PDT · by The_Republican · 39 replies · 119+ views
    TheHill.com ^ | May 2nd, 2008 | Sam Youngman
    Sen. Barack Obama’s (D-Ill.) sharp denunciation of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright this week has superdelegates moving in his direction. While the reverend’s controversial remarks and his widely panned appearance at the National Press Club caused many pundits to wonder if superdelegates would be frozen into indecision, those who moved into Obama’s column this week cited the Illinois senator’s reaction as one of their reasons for backing him. Former Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chairman Joe Andrew was perhaps the biggest jewel of the week for Obama. Until Thursday, Andrew had supported Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.). He was appointed DNC chairman...
  • Defection of longtime superdelegate jolts Clinton (and Bill sez elitists support Obama?)

    05/01/2008 6:53:12 PM PDT · by flowerplough · 27 replies · 35+ views
    AP/Yahoo news ^ | May Day (that's what Hill said!) | DAVID ESPO
    Hillary Rodham Clinton was jolted Thursday by the defection of one of her longtime superdelegate supporters, a former national party chairman who urged fellow Democrats to "reject the old negative politics" and unify behind Barack Obama. "A vote for Hillary Clinton is a vote to continue" a long, self-destructive Democratic campaign, Joe Andrew added in a letter designed to have an impact on the turbulent race nationally as well as in his home state of Indiana, site of a primary next week. "A vote to continue this process is a vote that assists John McCain," Andrew wrote. (Mr. Andrew agrees...
  • Democratic Party's superdelegate system smacks of elitism

    05/01/2008 8:39:58 AM PDT · by Signalman · 19 replies · 29+ views
    Ventura County Star ^ | May 1, 2008 | Ed Jones
    The Democratic Party is not democratic. It has devised a system of nominating a presidential candidate that is elitist and will result in patronage. It is abundantly clear that the party that claims to trace its roots to Thomas Jefferson is deluding itself and the American public. We have witnessed a three-month period of hard-fought primaries or caucuses in which the people in 42 states and four territories have voted to select the delegates who presumably will nominate the Democratic presidential candidate. But it is all a ruse. Democracy has gone out the window because of the elitist policy of...
  • Former Democratic leader switches to Obama (Joe Andrew, DNC Chairman 1999-2001)

    05/01/2008 12:50:53 AM PDT · by HAL9000 · 25 replies · 129+ views
    Associated Press (excerpt) ^ | May 1, 2008 | Nedra Pickler
    Excerpt - WASHINGTON (AP) — A leader of the Democratic Party under Bill Clinton has switched his allegiance to Barack Obama and is encouraging fellow Democrats to "heal the rift in our party" and unite behind the Illinois senator. Joe Andrew, who was Democratic National Committee chairman from 1999-2001, planned a news conference Thursday in his hometown of Indianapolis to urge other Hoosiers to support Obama in Tuesday's primary, perhaps the most important contest left in the White House race. He also has written a lengthy letter explaining his decision that he plans to send to other superdelegates. "I am...
  • Superdelegates line up behind candidates

    04/30/2008 8:14:09 PM PDT · by The_Republican · 11 replies · 30+ views
    Real Clear Politics ^ | April 30th, 2008 | Nedra Pickler
    Barack Obama is closing in on Democratic presidential rival Hillary Rodham Clinton's advantage among superdelegates, building on his lead in the primary race even as he faces troubled times. Party leaders are encouraging superdelegates to pick a side by late June to prevent the fight from going to the national convention in August, and it seems some are listening as the race enters its final five weeks of voting. Chelsea Clinton got a superdelegate for her mom while campaigning in Puerto Rico on Wednesday, just as Obama press secretary Bill Burton sent out a statement announcing the support of Rep....
  • DFU YouTube SING-ALONG: Superdelegates Will Sc*** Obama for Hillary

    04/30/2008 3:08:39 PM PDT · by doug from upland · 4 replies · 51+ views
    DFU News of the Day in Song ^ | 4-30-08 | Lyrics & Movie, Doug from Upland
    YOUTUBE SING ALONG --- the Superdelates will sc*** Obama for Hillary
  • Obama backer predicts victory in Hill war - Battle for Super Delegates may be over

    04/30/2008 9:16:55 AM PDT · by The_Republican · 36 replies · 62+ views
    Politico ^ | April 30th, 2008 | AMIE PARNES & JOSEPHINE HEARN
    Capitol Hill insiders say the battle for congressional superdelegates is over, and one Senate supporter of Barack Obama is hinting strongly that he has prevailed over Hillary Rodham Clinton. While more than 80 Democrats in the House and Senate have yet to state their preferences in the race for the Democratic nomination, sources said Tuesday that most of them have already made up their minds and have told the campaigns where they stand. “The majority of superdelegates I’ve talked to are committed, but it is a matter of timing,” said Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.). “They’re just preferring to make their...
  • Obama the Inevitable (Barf)

    04/29/2008 9:34:07 PM PDT · by Dawnsblood · 5 replies · 79+ views
    Spiegel Online ^ | 4/29/08 | Gabor Steingart
    An apparent rejection of her black rival would also do more to harm Hillary Clinton than help her campaign. A candidacy against the background of angry youth or even burning barricades would be of little value. Thus, it is not Obama himself who now offers the strongest argument for his nomination, but the history of his ancestors. In fact, with his history standing at his side, Obama hardly needs to try any longer. This history peers into the present, sadly and silently, from a time we commonly call the past. And yet this is a past that America cannot seem...
  • Obama narrows superdelegate gap

    04/29/2008 11:58:38 AM PDT · by COUNTrecount · 7 replies · 28+ views
    Boston.com ^ | April 29, 2008 | Foon Rhee
    While Hillary Clinton snagged the biggest-name backer of the day, Barack Obama has reportedly added two more superdelegates to his fold. Richard Machaceck, a Democratic National Committee member from Iowa, has declared for Obama after the Illinois senator won 16 of the 29 national convention delegates at stake in congressional district conventions over the weekend, the Des Moines Register is reporting. And the Associated Press says US Representative Ben Chandler of Kentucky, grandson of a former two-time governor of the Bluegrass state, is supporting Obama as well. Clinton is hoping that the endorsement of North Carolina Governor Mike Easley might...