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What does this mean for Obama?
The numbers being reported now put him nearly 100 delegates UNDER Clinton...but then I think they are giving a lot of delegates to Clinton before the results are in to justify it...even so, this is looking bad for Obama...
What are the pundits saying? Are Obama and Clinton still neck and neck? Does Obama still have a shot at the white house? Is it still one of those things where either of them could jump ahead in the end, or, is Clinton clearly the frontrunner after tonight?The numbers being reported now put him nearly 100 delegates UNDER Clinton...but then I think they are giving a lot of delegates to Clinton before the results are in to justify it...even so, this is looking bad for Obama...
What are the pundits saying? Are Obama and Clinton still neck and neck? Does Obama still have a shot at the white house after Super Tuesday's results? Is it still one of those things where either of them could jump ahead in the end, or, is Clinton clearly the frontrunner after tonight?
14 個解答
- 匿名1 十年前最愛解答
NBC is giving more delegates to Obama. It's a statistical tie and NBC is reporting that the Clinton camp is nervous, they're not expected to win the next few in a row, which means the momentum may shift to Obama. That's why Clinton wants a debate-a-week, she wouldn't have asked for that if the news was good. A draw = a loss for the candidate who was supposed to crush Obama on Super Tuesday, it didn't happen. It's a tie, the next week or so might be huge. I think it's good for Obama's momentum, because a draw = a win for him, but no matter what the Clintonistas say or what Obama supporters say, it's a tie, it's a draw and it's anybody's race and the momentum could swing either way. Trying to spin a race that hasn't been finished yet into a victory, just shows desperation on the part of the Clinton supporters, it's a dead giveaway that they're spinning it so hard. That should tell you something.
- 匿名1 十年前
It is pretty much over for Obama. California was the big prize and Hillary beat him handily there. They can spin it all they want but Hillary is going to get a ton of delegates from California and Obama will only get a few. Hillary is a the point now that she does not have to win just stay close and she will walk it home. Great job Hillary we shut up a lot of fools today.
- PercyLv 41 十年前
The Obama camp was hoping to be within 100. Yes Obama won more states, yet 6 of the states he won are caucus states not primaries. yes, the delegates still count there, however, caucus voting is so much different than primary voting. he did win more stated, and IL handily, yet Hillary pulled out more of the larger states. Obama did good in tightening the race, yet when all was said and done, in the states he really targeted he came up short. MA was a great win for Hillary....she won in Spite of the Kennedy Endorsement, and Kerry endorsement and the governor endorsements for Obama. That is a huge win for her. Yet he did barely take CT, so kudos to him for that.
Of course he still has a shot. I would not necessarily say that either of them is the front runner. The contests will continue now for months....where each will win some and loose some.
Once the delegates are reinstanted for MI and FL, that will help Hillary as she won both of those states.
Obama camp raised the expectations very high, and then fell short....not out, just short.
- *kwah*Lv 51 十年前
What does it mean for Obama? I think it means he has a lot more fooling the American people to do, if he wants them to vote him into the White House. Yes I believe he still has a chance to win! But, he still has a lot of money to through around to the candidates so that the will nominate him into the ballot. But then again so do the other presidential hopefuls left in the political arena. Hillary is the D-front-runner, but that doesn't mean a whole lot there is still lots of time for all the candidates to make each other look bad. One will definitely stand out, so far I haven't seen a stand out of either party.
- KellyLv 51 十年前
He definitely has a shot. I think they're including superdelegates in their numbers -- there are 796 superdelegates and only 300 of them have already pledged support to Clinton or Obama. There are lots more who apparently could go either way at this point.
If you look at the difference between them in pledged delegates (not superdelegates), it's really not that much different.
- MandyLv 71 十年前
Over 2,000 delegates are needed to get the nomination. If you look at it that way, 100 delegates isn't really much of a big deal. I don't know if I'd say they are neck-and-neck, but he definitely still has a real shot.
- 1 十年前
Actually NBC places him 55 delegates behind. Far from insurmontable with several HUGE states to come in Ohio, Texas and Pennsylvania. If Obama's your guy, he still has a great shot at it.
- JuicyLv 41 十年前
The delegates Clinton is getting are from party elites she didn't earn any of those, and not only that the Party elites can change their minds.
Obama won 14 states and Hillary won only 8, I don't think party elites should be giving anything to Clinton except the boot.
- 匿名1 十年前
He's pretty much finished. Unless he can pull off landslide victories in states like Ohio and Pennsylvania (an extremely unlikely scenario), the proportional allocation of delegates all but assures a Hillary nomination.
- 匿名1 十年前
Why are you asking here? Turn on a viable news channel like CNN, MSNBC, PBS, CSPAN and find out for yourself.
The election isn't over until Election day in November. Until then, it is now and will continue to be a very interesting race.....