男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
   

Race is Obama's to lose

(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-02-20 13:47

WASHINGTON - The Democratic nomination is now Barack Obama's to lose.

After nine consecutive defeats -- including a heartbreaker in tailor-made Wisconsin on Tuesday -- Hillary Rodham Clinton can't win the nomination unless Obama makes a major mistake or her allies reveal something damaging about the Illinois senator's background. Don't count her out quite yet, but Wisconsin revealed deep and destructive fractures in the Clinton coalition.

It's panic-button time.

That explains why Clinton's aides accused Obama of plagiarism for delivering a speech that included words that had first been uttered by Deval Patrick, the Massachusetts governor and a friend of Obama. The charge bordered on the hypocritical -- Clinton herself has borrowed Obama's lines -- and by itself was unlikely to have an impact on the race.

Clinton claimed Tuesday that reporters, not her campaign, pushed the plagiarism story line. That is not true.

The Clinton camp hopes to produce other instances of rhetorical theft and show a pattern of bad behavior. The danger for Obama is anything that undercuts his image as a candidate who rises above politics. Something like this might work to Clinton's advantage: Obama is backtracking on a pledge to abide by spending caps in the general election, and his explanation is bogus.

Obama is undeniably raw. Less than four years removed from the Illinois Legislature, he stands at the brink of the Democratic nomination and will soon go one-on-one in debates with a tough and savvy former first lady. The odds of a misstep are low but not impossible for these reasons: Clinton will grow increasingly negative; Obama faces more scrutiny as the new front-runner; his performance in multi-candidates debates was uneven; and the charmed Illinois senator has never faced political crises.

Should Obama stumble in the next two weeks, does he know how to recover?

Clinton certainly knows how to bounce back. She helped her husband, Bill, recover from near-death experiences during his White House run and rebounded herself after a thumping in Iowa.

But her rival has won the most states, earned the most pledged delegates and has all the momentum. Clinton needs to win Ohio and Texas on March 4 -- then Pennsylvania in April -- to narrow Obama's lead among pledged delegates. Only then could she argue with a straight face that a majority of the nearly 800 free-roaming "superdelegates" should back her over Obama.

"Both Senator Obama and I would make history," the former first lady told supporters Tuesday night. "But only one of us is ready on Day One to be commander in chief, ready to manage our economy and ready to defeat the Republicans. Only one of us has spent 35 years being a doer, a fighter and a champion for those who need a voice."

Only one of them can win, and it doesn't look good for her.

"The chances of Obama doing something that's going to cause a major problem are about as low as her doing something that will turn it around," said Democratic strategist Bill Carrick, who is not tied to either campaign. "When you start pressing to come back, it's usually the person who's behind who makes the mistake."

Ignore the Clinton advisers who argue that Wisconsin was just a bump on the road en route to the tell-all March 4 primaries. Listen instead to the message sent by her ragged coalition:

Obama led among whites (widely among white men), moderates and those earning less than $50,000, all bastions of Clinton's past strength. Obama and Clinton split the vote among women, erasing her one-time advantage.

Demographically, Wisconsin was a warm-up for Ohio: nearly 90 percent of Tuesday's voters were white; about 40 percent earn less than $50,000 annually; nearly 60 percent have no college degree; and half are over 50 years old -- all demographics that have tended to favor Clinton.

In a sign of desperation, the Clinton camp floated the idea of poaching delegates that Obama earned via elections. While allowable under Democratic National Committee rules, the tactic would likely divide Democrats along racial lines and set the party back decades.

It would be the ultimate act of selfishness and foolishness. Even Clinton must realize there is little she can do to win the nomination. She can only help Obama lose it.



Top World News  
Today's Top News  
Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours
主站蜘蛛池模板: 安国市| 镇江市| 普宁市| 峨眉山市| 浑源县| 府谷县| 文化| 斗六市| 永清县| 辽阳市| 乐都县| 洪雅县| 石家庄市| 满洲里市| 富源县| 铁岭县| 云安县| 突泉县| 兰考县| 平舆县| 柳州市| 沂源县| 宁国市| 新河县| 梨树县| 阿拉善右旗| 康定县| 丹棱县| 奇台县| 富裕县| 临湘市| 黑龙江省| 南充市| 城市| 交口县| 济南市| 澜沧| 丹东市| 应用必备| 临漳县| 泸定县| 资兴市| 信阳市| 哈尔滨市| 大同市| 浦县| 永昌县| 巴楚县| 西峡县| 巴里| 垫江县| 曲麻莱县| 仁化县| 郧西县| 建昌县| 宜兴市| 沭阳县| 门头沟区| 嘉义市| 泸定县| 三门峡市| 湾仔区| 浪卡子县| 南宁市| 黑河市| 蒲江县| 紫云| 刚察县| 张家口市| 恩平市| 全州县| 平塘县| 临湘市| 南安市| 永修县| 晋江市| 中卫市| 博罗县| 玉田县| 鸡西市| 政和县| 绥宁县|