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Clinton's One Plausible Path

By MICHAEL BARONE, U.S. News and World Report | March 10, 2008

Barack Obama won 11 out of 11 primaries and caucuses between Super Tuesday and February 19. Hillary Clinton won three out of four contests on March 4.

Suddenly, the look and feel of the Democratic presidential race is different. Yet the delegate count has changed hardly at all. Three victories in four states with 370 delegates netted Hillary Clinton only about a 20-delegate edge, leaving her still about 100 delegates behind. On the night that John McCain officially clinched the Republican nomination, the course of the Democratic race seemed less clear and more fraught with peril than ever.

Mrs. Clinton appeared confident and vibrant on primary night, while Mr. Obama's graceful cadences sounded a little emptier than before. The storyline is changing, too. For the first time in a long campaign cycle, mainstream press have been pursuing stories that reflect badly on Mr. Obama: his close ties and property purchase with Chicago political operator Tony Rezko, now on trial in federal court; his chief economic adviser's purported assurance to a Canadian diplomat that Mr. Obama doesn't really mean he'll ditch the North American Free Trade Agreement, as he was suggesting in trade-wary Ohio; Mr. Obama's pastor's recent award to the man Mr. Obama refers to as "Minister Farrakhan."

Mr. McCain takes questions until the last reporter runs out of things to ask. Mr. Obama terminated a probing press conference last week after eight questions with the lame excuse that he was running late. Mr. Obama's oratory has been compared to John Kennedy's. But he doesn't have Kennedy's gift for gracefully parrying hostile questions.

The March 4 results suggest Mr. Obama may not turn out to be as strong a candidate against Mr. McCain this November as he is in current polls. Mrs. Clinton's "red phone" ad asked which candidate you would want to rely on to respond to a crisis at three o'clock in the morning. Mr. Obama's campaign said this was a Republican tactic.

Yes — but Walter Mondale ran a similar ad against Gary Hart in 1984. It worked then, and it worked now. In Texas, where the ad ran, Mrs. Clinton got a 60% to 39% margin among those who made up their minds in the last three days. That single ad may have made the difference in a contest she had to win to continue in the race.

In contrast, Mr. Obama's demagoguery on trade failed to attract white working-class voters: He ran far behind Mrs. Clinton in Mahoning County (Youngstown) and the west side of Cuyahoga County (Cleveland). In southeast Ohio, settled originally by Virginians and still Southern-accented today, Mrs. Clinton carried all-white counties with 70% to 80% of the vote — more than she was carrying nearly all-white counties in central Texas. That raises doubts that Mr. Obama could run well in these counties, which provided critical votes in Bill Clinton's wins in Ohio in the 1990s and Jimmy Carter's narrow win there in 1976.

But Mrs. Clinton is still about 100 delegates behind, and the Democrats' proportional representation rules make it impossible for her to close the gap in the remaining primaries.

Her only plausible path to the nomination is to win a majority of super-delegates and, perhaps, to reverse the party's decision disqualifying the Michigan and Florida delegations — overruling the voters in one case and changing the rules after the game has been played in the other. This might pass muster if the national polls show an unambiguous and substantial move toward Mrs. Clinton. Otherwise, in more likely and ambiguous circumstances, a Clinton nomination will seem illegitimate to many who have been swooning over Mr. Obama and streaming into polling booths because he alone offers hope.

The March 4 exit polls show increasing percentages of Democratic primary voters unwilling to accept the rejection of their candidate. Both candidates have an incentive to attack on grounds that will weaken the other in the general election, as Mrs. Clinton has already started to do with her "red phone" ad.

All of this is a windfall, surely, for Mr. McCain — unless he forgets that his party is in trouble and that he needs to make an affirmative case for himself and his policies. And loudly enough to overcome the din as Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama pummel each other.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

Mr. Barone's article has all the depth of a third graders take on the election. What ever happened to insight,... [MORE]

Rob 

Mar 10, 2008 08:53

I think that Clinton is definitely the best candidate and hope that Michigan and Florida's votes will be counted. It... [MORE]

Lynn Ellingwood 

Mar 10, 2008 09:34

Mr. Barone,

I think you are without doubt one of the best and most thoughtful political analysts. Certainly, along with Charles... [MORE]

lee tabin 

Mar 10, 2008 09:49

A: Minister Farrakhan.

CNN 9/26/00: "I'd be open to sitting and talking to Minister Farrakhan. It hasn't sort of come together... [MORE]

Joseph Musco 

Mar 10, 2008 11:00

The Republicans are to be Congratulated on their SUPERIOR JOB of manipulating the Democrats to guarantee their Candidate gets elected.... [MORE]

Mary Hardy 

Mar 11, 2008 06:33

I am always amazed as to how the American people have one, a very short memory, two, a very short... [MORE]

Beverly Sims 

Mar 10, 2008 11:37

Bev Sims, brilliant analysis and reminders! MSM cannot unring these bells. They've controlled elections in the past, but the advent... [MORE]

RushBush 

Mar 10, 2008 14:30

Bev, I totally agree with you. The media resents the fact that Senator Obama has made it thus far. They... [MORE]

shundee 

Mar 13, 2008 11:20

Hillary has the talent and the spine and this has become a marathon race which she will take it. [MORE]

alex 

Mar 10, 2008 12:34

Gov. Spitzer has dealings with Hillary Clinton Campaign did some money from prostitute ring go to Hillary Clintons Campain.

[MORE]

Orlando 

Mar 10, 2008 14:37

Hillary, Obama, McCain? More like: Faith, hope, and clarity, these three, but the greatest of these is clarity!!!! [MORE]

roger kovach 

Mar 10, 2008 22:40

Michael Barrone didn't read his recent Irish press, UK press, or the all-American Assoc Press on March 8 , "Clinton's... [MORE]

Annemarie 

Mar 10, 2008 18:30

If you want to see how undemocratic caucuses truly are, all you have to do is look at the Texas... [MORE]

jrterrier 

Mar 10, 2008 20:02

Hillary's hope does not lie in the super delegates--it lies in holding a first ballot wherein no one wins the... [MORE]

Dayahka 

Mar 11, 2008 21:44

Not sure how they came up with allotting 1/3 of the Texas delegates to caucus votes when the amount of... [MORE]

paulie_nj 

Mar 12, 2008 13:52

If Hillary wins or should I say is selected as the nominee, I am changing my party. Dems are not... [MORE]

rasil4u 

Mar 13, 2008 11:42

I voted for her and would do so again if she some how pulls off a miracle and gets the... [MORE]

paulie_nj 

Mar 12, 2008 14:10

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