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Single Payer Candidates
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The New Organizers, Part 1: What's Really Behind Obama's Ground Game
The GOP Goes Back To Its Ugly Roots
McCain and Team Have Many Ties to Gambling Industry
Has Sarah Palin Motivated the Very Voters That Obama Needs to Win?
Current Endorsed Candidate Campaigns
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Geoghegan, Tom (Congress, IL-05)
Jackson, Jesse (Senate, IL)
Other Races of Interest
Marcy Winograd: Jane Harman Profits From Anti-Generics Amendment She Helped Eshoo Pass
PDA MA Endorses Mike Capuano for Senate
ANC-PAC Endorses Marcy Winograd in Race Against Jane Harman
Jane Harman Challenger, Marcy Winograd, Pledges Support For Armenian American Issues
Taking Back Our Constitutional Rights
PDA Chapter Endorses Tom Geoghegan to Replace Emanuel in IL CD5
Geoghegan: Rhymes with Reagan, Thinks Like Wellstone
Rep. Jackson Is Our Choice to Be Senator
PDA-Illinois Endorses Jesse Jackson, Jr.
Barack Obama for President
10/02/02--The Day Obama Took the Lead
The Wall St Crisis, the 2008 Campaign and What To Do About It
Obama Gaining Crucial Ground, Polling Shifts in Some Key States
Solving Our Financial Crisis
VEEPSTAKES: Obama-Biden
Thomas Looks Towards 2010, Returns to Georgia Senate
An Hour or Two of Your Time Could Change the Congress
The America We Love
Clinton Concedes, Endorses Obama
Sen. Kerry Addresses PDA Members' Concerns
Obama, Clinton and What Has Been Achieved
Advantage Obama
USW Endorses Obama
PDA CO Chapter Endorses Joan Fitz-Gerald for Congress
Party Like It's 1932: The Obama Option
Obama Is Right
Mary Pallant Receives Ventura County Chapter Endorsement
Clinton Has What It Takes
Barack the Vote In the Remaining States
Armitage Wins Endorsement of Greater Daytona PDA Chapter
Clinton's Cringe-Worthy Moment
Give Dennis Kucinich His Due
A Personal Note from Dennis Kucinich
John Edwards Suspends Campaign
US Corporate Elite Fear Candidate Edwards
Kucinich: For the Record
Obama Thanks Kucinich for Encouraging His Backers to Make Obama Their Second Choice
Take a look at Joe Biden--There's a lot in him for Progressives
PDA Energy for Kucinich for New Hampshire!
PDA Members for Edwards take aim at Iowa
Ralph Nader supports Edwards' anti-corporate message
Edwards Delivers Speech On Lifting Up America's Middle Class
Kucinich Hits Homerun in Jefferson's Hometown
PDA - The Freedom to Choose
PDA Rocks!
Bill Richardson
Why I'm supporting John Edwards: It's time for a Progressive President with Coat Tails
Why Should PDA Support Dennis Kucinich?
Signs of Desperation?
Edwards: Senator Clinton Must Take a Stand on Peru Trade Deal
Kucinich Will Introduce Privileged Resolution To Force Vote On Impeachment of Vice President Dick Cheney TODAY
Kucinich's Challenge
Will Democrats Follow John Edwards On Trade--And Win Elections?
John Edwards: Sick of Bush's Rank Hypocrisy
Why is John Edwards leading in Iowa?
"To Build One America, End the Game"
Saving the Middle Class: A Real-Not Rhetorical-Plan
'Winners Never Quit and Quitters Never Win'
John Edwards and "You"
As if our lives depend on it…
Why Progressives Should Support John Edwards for President
Edwards is the only progressive candidate who can win the presidency
Introducing Dennis Kucinich
Edwards will give Kucinich a fight for the progressive vote
Dennis Kucinich represents the Heart & Soul of PDA
What Makes Laura Bonham Run: PDA Staff Member Runs for Utah State Legislature
Clint Curtis is changing the tide in Florida
PDA Welcomes Sen. Feingold to Maryland
Rep. Conyers Endorses PDA National Board Member John Bonifaz for Massachusetts Secretary of State
John Bonifaz for Secretary of State (MA)
Current Campaign Directory
Complete Campaign Archives
Advantage Obama
By John Nichols, The Nation
June 1, 2008
Published May 31, 2008 by The Nation.
Barack Obama won.
That's the bottom line after a day of wrangling by Democratic National Committee's rules and bylaws committee over whether to seat delegates selected in the disputed primaries of Michigan and Florida.
New York Senator Hillary Clinton put her name on the Michigan ballot when Illinois Senator Obama did not. And while the names of both candidates were on the Florida ballot, Clinton visited the state on the eve of the primary--effectively breaking a pledge not to campaign--while Obama stayed out of the Sunshine State. Clinton won both January primaries, and she was counting on big delegate hauls to renew her flagging campaign for the Democratic nomination.
She didn't get it.
The rules and bylaws committee--on which Clinton had something of an advantage but where the desire to settle the Democratic race was stronger than personal loyalty--decided Saturday to reinstate all of Florida and Michigan's delegates to the party convention in Denver.
Each delegate from the states will get a half-vote, as a penalty for the decisions of Michigan and Florida to move their primaries ahead of the schedule approved by the DNC.
That may sound complicated but it boils down to a few simple numbers:
If no delegates from Michigan or Florida had been seated, Obama's lead over Clinton as of Saturday would have been 202 delegates.
The decision of the committee gives Clinton 105 pledged delegates from Florida and 69 from Michigan. That boosts her total by 87 votes.
Obama gains 67 pledged delegates from Florida and 59 from Michigan, for a boost of 63 votes.
Add it all up and Obama finishes 178 delegate-vote lead over Clinton.
That's a win.
Obama remains the frontrunner -- and he is already focused on the November race. That fact was fully if somewhat painfully confirmed by the candidate's decision "with some sadness" to end his family's affiliation with Chicago's Trinity United Church of Christ after struggling for months to distance himself from his former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, and Wright's allies.
If his relationship with the socially-conscious congregation he was a a member of for two decades had soured for Obama, his relations with the Democratic party establishment were on the upswing Saturday.
The determination of the rules and bylaws committee--about as "party insider" a group as you will find--proved to be more than satisfactory for the candidate candidate who started this race as something of an "outsider."
"This results in Sen. Clinton obtaining a substantial number of additional pledged delegates, but I also understand that many members of the Florida and Michigan delegations feel satisfied that the decision was fair," the senator from Illinois said while campaigning in South Dakota. "Our main goal is to get this resolved so we can immediately turn the focus of the entire party on winning Florida and Michigan and delivering on the needs of the people in Florida and Michigan--states that are enormously important, states where a lot of people are struggling."
Clinton backers are still making noises about fighting the Michigan ruling, with Clinton advisers Harold Ickes and Tina Flournoy saying, "(We) strongly object to the committee's decision to undercut its own rules in seating Michigan's delegates without reflecting the votes of the people of Michigan."
"Mrs. Clinton has asked me to reserve her rights to take this to the credentials committee," Ickes said after the committee decision, and Clinton backers chanted "Denver! Denver! Denver!"--signaling a desire to keep fighting.
But this is mainly for show. The Clinton campaign must appear to be soldiering on in order to remain competitive going into Sunday Puerto Rico primary and Tuesday's contests in Montana and South Dakota--as well as any negotiations with the Obama campaign.
But the fact is that Clinton's road to the nomination--which seemed virtually impossible before Saturday--has essentially been closed by a friendly arm of the Democratic National Committee.
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