Skyclad1uhm1
Lifer
- Aug 10, 2001
- 11,383
- 87
- 91
Originally posted by: senseamp
Tremendous victory for Hillary Clinton. Obama is falling apart.
I asume this is sarcasm? Or are you a Hillbilly fanboy?
Originally posted by: senseamp
Tremendous victory for Hillary Clinton. Obama is falling apart.
You're likely mistaken about the final count.Originally posted by: b0mbrman
Ouch. Didn't the NY Times endorse her? Now that's what I call flip-flopping...
Anyhow. 54.7% 45.3% is where the numbers are at right now. Once all the votes are counted, they'll probably end up around 54.6% to 45.4% (HRC will love significant digits in the morning )
This should be a net gain of approximately 14 delegates from a 86-72 split
Originally posted by: Aegeon
You're just mistaken about the final count.Originally posted by: b0mbrman
Ouch. Didn't the NY Times endorse her? Now that's what I call flip-flopping...
Anyhow. 54.7% 45.3% is where the numbers are at right now. Once all the votes are counted, they'll probably end up around 54.6% to 45.4% (HRC will love significant digits in the morning )
This should be a net gain of approximately 14 delegates from a 86-72 split
If you look at the remaining areas where votes need to be counted, they are essentially all the areas which most strongly favored Obama, so it should go down to about a flat 9% lead for Hillary.
Oh please.Originally posted by: rchiu
Bwahahaha, funny how you people are counting decimal now trying to discount Hillary's victory. A victory is a victory is a victory, just like every other victory Hillary had in all the big states that counts in the real election.
Originally posted by: Lemon law
Like the old style Southern democratic primaries of 50 years ago, the candidate who won the democratic primary always went on to win the general election.
Yet in 08, the dems have two very strong and similar candidates the democratic electorate are still undecided on. Yet in the last of the big blue state primaries, Hillary seems to win over Obama on just one major constituency. Namely on the unskilled worker vote that has been the giant loser in a global economy. Somehow Hillary has hit the right note while Obama has appeared to be too elitist.
What is hard for me to think of if Obama wins the nomination, is any possibility that McCain can pick up any of those votes when the republirats have been the party most responsible for selling their interests down the river. That same unskilled worker group has watched candidates of both parties make empty promises they don't even try to deliver on.
Making that unskilled worker vote an irrational wildcard come November. And clearly an area where Obama must do better.
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: Butterbean
NY TImes just slammed Hill pretty good for a paper that endorsed her
Editorial
The Low Road to Victory
April 23, 2008
The Pennsylvania campaign, which produced yet another inconclusive result on Tuesday, was even meaner, more vacuous, more desperate, and more filled with pandering than the mean, vacuous, desperate, pander-filled contests that preceded it
Voters are getting tired of it; it is demeaning the political process; and it does not work. It is past time for Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton to acknowledge that the negativity, for which she is mostly responsible, does nothing but harm to her, her opponent, her party and the 2008 election.
If nothing else, self interest should push her in that direction. Mrs. Clinton did not get the big win in Pennsylvania that she needed to challenge the calculus of the Democratic race. It is true that Senator Barack Obama outspent her 2-to-1. But Mrs. Clinton and her advisers should mainly blame themselves, because, as the political operatives say, they went heavily negative and ended up squandering a good part of what was once a 20-point lead.
It is getting to be time for the superdelegates to do what the Democrats had in mind when they created superdelegates: settle a bloody race that cannot be won at the ballot box. Mrs. Clinton once had a big lead among the party elders, but has been steadily losing it, in large part because of her negative campaign. If she is ever to have a hope of persuading these most loyal of Democrats to come back to her side, let alone win over the larger body of voters, she has to call off the dogs.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04...alink&exprod=permalink
I wonder, what does the NYTimes think she should do when she's trying to win and there are no substantial differences between the candidates on substantial issues. is she supposed to stay home making pies and hope people vote for her because she's a darn nice gal?
Originally posted by: jpeyton
I want Hillary to have the weakest possible case for the Supers when she rides her campaign to the convention.Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: jpeyton
Same here.Originally posted by: idiotekniQues
just donated some money to obama's campaign.
at this stage in the game, what's the point?
he's got the nomination locked up, you'd be better off giving your money to the DNC.
If Obama can survive Rev. Wright, "bitter", and still erode her 20 point lead, imagine what will happen in the rest of the contests.
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: Lemon law
Like the old style Southern democratic primaries of 50 years ago, the candidate who won the democratic primary always went on to win the general election.
Yet in 08, the dems have two very strong and similar candidates the democratic electorate are still undecided on. Yet in the last of the big blue state primaries, Hillary seems to win over Obama on just one major constituency. Namely on the unskilled worker vote that has been the giant loser in a global economy. Somehow Hillary has hit the right note while Obama has appeared to be too elitist.
What is hard for me to think of if Obama wins the nomination, is any possibility that McCain can pick up any of those votes when the republirats have been the party most responsible for selling their interests down the river. That same unskilled worker group has watched candidates of both parties make empty promises they don't even try to deliver on.
Making that unskilled worker vote an irrational wildcard come November. And clearly an area where Obama must do better.
I think calling them irrational is a bit condescending, but it's going to be an interesting general election when Obama clinches the nomination.
McCain v Obama will put a number of states in play on both sides that were otherwise deemed safe (PA, NJ, NH, and MI spring to mind for republicans... VA, Idaho and Kansas immediately spring for democrats, along with any senate/house seats that can ride Obama's coattails to victory with heavy turn-out in black districts)
Originally posted by: chowderhead
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: Lemon law
Like the old style Southern democratic primaries of 50 years ago, the candidate who won the democratic primary always went on to win the general election.
Yet in 08, the dems have two very strong and similar candidates the democratic electorate are still undecided on. Yet in the last of the big blue state primaries, Hillary seems to win over Obama on just one major constituency. Namely on the unskilled worker vote that has been the giant loser in a global economy. Somehow Hillary has hit the right note while Obama has appeared to be too elitist.
What is hard for me to think of if Obama wins the nomination, is any possibility that McCain can pick up any of those votes when the republirats have been the party most responsible for selling their interests down the river. That same unskilled worker group has watched candidates of both parties make empty promises they don't even try to deliver on.
Making that unskilled worker vote an irrational wildcard come November. And clearly an area where Obama must do better.
I think calling them irrational is a bit condescending, but it's going to be an interesting general election when Obama clinches the nomination.
McCain v Obama will put a number of states in play on both sides that were otherwise deemed safe (PA, NJ, NH, and MI spring to mind for republicans... VA, Idaho and Kansas immediately spring for democrats, along with any senate/house seats that can ride Obama's coattails to victory with heavy turn-out in black districts)
Give me a break. Idaho and Kansas? Obama drew 15k people to his rally in Idaho. There was probably 20,000 people that caucused in Idaho. 500,000 people voted there in the 2004 general and Kerry lost by nearly 40 points. Obama does not do better in Kansas than Clinton does.
There are no caucuses in a general election. Obama's supposed strength in these plain states and mountain states are overstated. He will not win these states once McCain runs one ad saying Obama wants to grab your guns (DC gun and IL handgun ban).
Originally posted by: b0mbrman
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
She picked up 28 more delegates than Obama.
Damn, she was outspent 2 to 1 and Obama didn't crush her.
I bet that crushes a lot of guys in here.
No, she picked up *at least* 28 delegates...meaning she got at least 18 percent of the vote
I imagine no one's crushed except for all the guys who were predicting an Obama win.
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: b0mbrman
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
She picked up 28 more delegates than Obama.
Damn, she was outspent 2 to 1 and Obama didn't crush her.
I bet that crushes a lot of guys in here.
No, she picked up *at least* 28 delegates...meaning she got at least 18 percent of the vote
I imagine no one's crushed except for all the guys who were predicting an Obama win.
OK, numbers update:
She got 18 more delegates than Obama, big whoopie doo.
She outspent 3 to 1.
Originally posted by: 351Cleveland
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: b0mbrman
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
She picked up 28 more delegates than Obama.
Damn, she was outspent 2 to 1 and Obama didn't crush her.
I bet that crushes a lot of guys in here.
No, she picked up *at least* 28 delegates...meaning she got at least 18 percent of the vote
I imagine no one's crushed except for all the guys who were predicting an Obama win.
OK, numbers update:
She got 18 more delegates than Obama, big whoopie doo.
She outspent 3 to 1.
I think you mean she was outspent 3 to 1... and I think it was closer to 2 to 1.
Originally posted by: 351Cleveland
I gotta laugh... it was a 10 point win. It wasnt close. Was the gap 20 at some point? Sure... but that is polling. It is barely ever accurate to that degree. The fact that the race was called with 2000 votes counted kinda says it all. Yeah, she was expected to win, and yesterday everyone was saying she needed 10+ points to really count it as a win. She got it... now everyone says it doesnt matter.
First rate entertainment
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: 351Cleveland
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: b0mbrman
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
She picked up 28 more delegates than Obama.
Damn, she was outspent 2 to 1 and Obama didn't crush her.
I bet that crushes a lot of guys in here.
No, she picked up *at least* 28 delegates...meaning she got at least 18 percent of the vote
I imagine no one's crushed except for all the guys who were predicting an Obama win.
OK, numbers update:
She got 18 more delegates than Obama, big whoopie doo.
She outspent 3 to 1.
I think you mean she was outspent 3 to 1... and I think it was closer to 2 to 1.
Some articles say 3 to 1, some say 2 to 1. Either way McCain wins.
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
hilary is the stronger candidate.
weathering the storm of negativity she still wins.
Originally posted by: jpeyton
Somebody please wake me up when she has more pledged delegates or overall popular vote.
It does matter, but not as a positive for Clinton.Yeah, she was expected to win, and yesterday everyone was saying she needed 10+ points to really count it as a win. She got it... now everyone says it doesnt matter.
He didn't need to win PA...look at the map...look at the delegate count...and take McCain into consideration...the 2008 election could significantly change the electoral map...all previous conceptions of blue states and red states go out the window once you bring two candidates to the table with drastically different ideas on how to lead the country.He outspent Clinton 3 to 1 and could not win.
He doesn't have to beat Clinton in a big state...he needs to net more delegates than her across all states, which he has done.He has can not beat Clinton in a big state.
There is a lot of positive...exit polls also suggest that Hillary's negativity rating is on the rise, which is not a healthy number going into a General Election.Nothing positive for Obama here.
quit regurgitating what the media is telling you.Originally posted by: Capt Caveman
Originally posted by: 351Cleveland
I gotta laugh... it was a 10 point win. It wasnt close. Was the gap 20 at some point? Sure... but that is polling. It is barely ever accurate to that degree. The fact that the race was called with 2000 votes counted kinda says it all. Yeah, she was expected to win, and yesterday everyone was saying she needed 10+ points to really count it as a win. She got it... now everyone says it doesnt matter.
First rate entertainment
I agree. It's kind of sad how the Obama fanboys are making this a positive for Obama.
He outspent Clinton 3 to 1 and could not win.
He has can not beat Clinton in a big state.
Nothing positive for Obama here.