The AP seems to be having an awkward day when it comes to calling the Democratic presidential race. In the late morning, the AP reported that Hillary Clinton will concede in her speech in NYC tonight. Within minutes, Clinton campaign officials insisted that the report was simply wrong.
Now the AP is reporting that Barack Obama has, as of this afternoon, clinched the nomination. That’s not quite right, either, at least not yet.
Barack Obama effectively clinched the Democratic presidential nomination Tuesday after a grueling marathon, based on an Associated Press tally of convention delegates, becoming the first black candidate ever to lead his party into a fall campaign for the White House.
Campaigning on an insistent call for change, Obama outlasted former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton in a historic race that sparked record turnout in primary after primary, yet exposed deep racial and gender divisions within the party.
The tally was based on public declarations from delegates as well as from another 15 who have confirmed their intentions to the AP. It also included 11 delegates Obama was guaranteed as long as he gained 30 percent of the vote in South Dakota and Montana later in the day. It takes 2,118 delegates to clinch the nomination. [emphasis added]
That bolded phrase makes quite a bit of difference. It’s why the report isn’t exactly reliable, and why the bottles remain corked at Obama campaign headquarters.
Ben Smith explained:
Not to be a stickler here, but that’s not how this has been working, either in our count or in the Obama campaign’s. The commitments that matter are the ones that are public. So the story is trivial: I think you could probably get virtually all of the superdelegates at this point to privately acknowledge that they’ll vote for Obama at the convention.
So as far as the (academic) matter of deciding when exactly Obama gets the majority, I’m going to stick with named supporters. Our count, and the Obama campaign’s, leave him about 30 shy.
Yep. Ben’s not being a “stickler,” he’s being accurate. The AP is a little over anxious to get the jump on the “clinched” headline, but the story — which seems to be everywhere — really is trivial. Once those private commitments become public, then the AP can get back to us. As of this minute, the counts that I’ve seen show Obama 30.5 delegates from the magic number of 2,118.
Obama has, by the way, picked up 10 new superdelegate endorsements in the last six hours, and rumor has it there will be plenty more as the day unfolds. But unlike the commitments the AP relied on, they’re all public.
The Democratic race will be over real soon, but there’s no reason for the AP to jump the gun.