Clinton campaign coming to terms with daunting hurdles

Whether Hillary Clinton decides to keep fighting until the convention or not, today is likely to be an unpleasant day for the New York senator. If her win in Pennsylvania gave her a ticket to Indiana and North Carolina, Clinton’s showing yesterday may have given her a ticket home.

Clinton advisers acknowledged that the results of the primaries were far less than they had hoped, and said they were likely to face new pleas even from some of their own supporters for her to quit the race. They said they expected fund-raising to become even harder; one adviser said the campaign was essentially broke, and several others refused to say whether Mrs. Clinton had lent the campaign money from her personal account to keep it afloat.

The advisers said they were dispirited over the loss in North Carolina, after her campaign — now working off a shoestring budget as spending outpaces fund-raising — decided to allocate millions of dollars and full days of the candidate and her husband in the state.

It’s not a welcome scenario. Clinton — trailing by seemingly insurmountable margins in the race for delegates, votes, and states — now lacks resources and confidence. After a sizable victory in Pennsylvania, Clinton was able to turn to her contributors with a compelling case for a new infusion of cash. After Indiana and North Carolina, not so much.

North Carolina, in particular, appears to have been a major blow. Clinton had been raising expectations — she told voters as recently as Friday that the state would be a “game changer” — and the NYT noted that both she and the former president thought they could win the state.

One Clinton adviser called the North Carolina loss in particular “a very significant turning point” because Mrs. Clinton, the former president and some of their advisers had become so excited about their prospects of a surprise victory there. Instead Mr. Obama beat her there by about 15 percentage points.

What are we left with? Last night, campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe boasted about Clinton’s showing yesterday — he told reporters, “We shocked the world” — but no one seems to believe him. So what do they do now?

If her victory speech in Indiana was any indication, she’s not looking to shift gears at all.

Clinton’s giving a speech that is, by turns, churlish, reconciliatory, petulant, and above all, somewhat unfocused. […]

What surprised me about the speech, though, is that she didn’t do more to elevate her own prestige before the party. Whether she’s accepted a likely loss or is still hoping for an unexpected win, warm feelings from Obama’s sections of the party would help her path to the nomination or her reintegration into everyday politics. She’s got good speechwriters — Bill Clinton included — who could write her an elevating, healing address. But as of yet, they’ve not tried that approach. The thinking may be that she can give that speech at the convention, but I’m surprised that they’re not even trying that strategy. She’s too far behind, with too little time on the clock, to grind this victory out. Whether the strategy is to save face or actually change the math, it requires a speech considerably different than this one.

Clinton won’t offer a competing message this morning — she canceled her scheduled appearances on the morning shows. (Ben Smith noted that this a “sign of weakness,” but then again, she probably didn’t want to face a lot of questions about how soon she’d withdraw from the race.)

The strategy moving forward, at least for now, seems premised on two steps. The first is to take the fear factor surrounding Obama up a notch. Last night, Harold Ickes told Time magazine, “We don’t know enough about Senator Obama yet. We don’t need an October Surprise. And (the chance of) an October Surprise with Hillary is remote.” (It sounds like a variation on the “vetting” argument.)

The second is to move the goalposts again.

[I]n a sign of where the Clinton campaign is going, her aides are asserting that the winner will need 2,209 delegates, not 2,025. That higher number reflects the full inclusion of Florida and Michigan, which held their primaries before the date permitted by the Democratic Party. […]

“We’re going to argue that it’s going to take 2,209 to get to the magic number,” said Howard Wolfson, one of Mrs. Clinton’s chief strategists. “We’re going to argue that Florida and Michigan need to be seated full-strength.”

This is a very tough sell, not only because it would punish Obama for the decisions of states that broke the rules, but also because Clinton recently said, “I’ve won some, he’s won some. Each of us has to get to 2025 delegates.” It’s a little late to move the finish line.

By all indications, Clinton will not drop out today. Preemptively answering questions that hadn’t been asked, the campaign announced a new event in West Virginia this afternoon, underscoring the fact that nothing has changed, as far as the senator is concerned.

But Clinton also has some meetings today with party leaders and superdelegates, some of whom may share a message with her that changes her perspective.

What party leaders are we talking about?

  • trailing by seemingly insurmountable margins in the race for delegates, votes, and states

    Could we please drop the “seemingly”?

  • One Clinton adviser called the North Carolina loss in particular “a very significant turning point”…

    Like the sound of an ankle breaking on the home stretch.
    Stick a euthanasia needle in her someone… She’s done.

  • My guess is that they didn’t want to try the speech CB proposes on the fly, in the heat of the emotional reaction to the results. When (and I do think it is a when, not an if) Hillary gives that speech, they will want to have spent a quieter day on it to get it right. Given that she cleared this morning’s calendar, they may be starting down that road. That speech may come yet this week — at best she can win WV and KY, but she will lose Oregon, and it likely will not be close. That math just doesn’t work — even if you seat Florida and Michigan, even if the remaining Supers break her way. Indeed, Obama is getting very close to where he can say “you know what, lets go ahead and seat Florida and Michigan; in Michigan, Sen. Clinton can have all of her delegates if I can have all of the rest, and in Florida since we were all on the ballot, we’ll let the delegates fall where they may.” If he did that, the bold show of strength would snip one of the few threads Clinton has left of her argument and (I think) make him look very strong and magnanimous. And the risk of it backfiring would be very small.

  • CNN.com breaking news: “Campaign aide says Hillary Rodham Clinton loaned herself $6.4 million in the past month.”

  • It looks like that Hillary has “loaned” her campain close to 6.5 million over the last month.

  • Clinton loans campaign millions !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    A campaign aide says Hillary Rodham Clinton loaned herself $6.4 million in the past month.

  • “We’re going to argue that it’s going to take 2,209 to get to the magic number,” said Howard Wolfson, one of Mrs. Clinton’s chief strategists. “We’re going to argue that Florida and Michigan need to be seated full-strength.”

    If they genuinely start pushing this, you’ll be astonished at the amount of Hillary-hatred it will breed, even amongst many of her current supporters: it would be phenomenonally unwise, costing her not only any remote shot at the nomination, but in due course, her Senate seat as well.

  • I wouldn’t be surprised if she decided to try a goal post move again. Between increasing the numbers of delegates and her rather nice position with respect to the Rules Committee, I bet she goes through a day of depression and comes out pumped up again with the expectation that she ‘n’ Bill can force rules changes to their advantage. Roger Simon writes that she needs to keep her cool, not go over the line, if she wants a political future.

    It would be nice to have a little widget now which goes “ding” every time another superdelegate announces for Obama!

  • All these reaction quotes and bad financial information doesn’t just leak out. It is possible that the self-loan is an effort to generate sympathy fundraising, but I think it more likely the campaign is intentionally paving the way to bow out.

  • Clinton is a negative, lying two faced bitch who appeals to low class uneducated racists and we are showing her the days of Jim Crow and black submission to white supremecists are over. She is about status quo not change. Her obliteration of Iran, pandering about gas tax and lies about Nafta and Bosnia are catching up with her. WE WANT REAL CHANGE. NOT BS.

  • She’s got (irrelevant) wins coming up in West Virginia and Kentucky. It’d make sense to carry on through to those, then end on a high note.

    I don’t think there’ll be a VP offer, so Hillary will need to decide if a career in the Senate will do it for her. Her time there was, I think, largely prelude to this presidential run. Will she want to stay if her larger goal is out of reach?

  • “it would be phenomenonally unwise, costing her not only any remote shot at the nomination, but in due course, her Senate seat as well.”

    I’m already looking forward to voting for Bloomberg.

  • you’ll be astonished at the amount of Hillary-hatred it will breed, even amongst many of her current supporters

    I wish I believed that, but from where I’m sitting her supporters appear as deeply dug-in as she is.

  • I may be in the minority, but I think its over. I think we’ll see alot of the super delegates make their move this week. I think we’ll see super delegates supporting Hillary Clinton switch sides as well.

    I think the Clintons ran a horrible, horrible campaign on many levels, but they’re not stupid. If they want to remain vital figures in the Democratic Party they’ll have to play nice. She lost. I’d be shocked if there aren’t negotiations going on right now between the two campaigns. Obama will offer to help with her campaign debt and discuss a Supreme court nomination. The clintons will agree to active campaign for him.

    She would be toxic as a VP nominee. He can offer her the Attorney General spot. The clintons are viewed as too corrupt for that. Senate Majority leader is possible, but I really think she’ll want a seat on the Supreme Court.

  • The unchecked hostility and male aggression directed toward Senator Clinton now has forced the Clintons to pauper themselves as they try to get America to do the right thing. Now that they’ve lent the campaign $11.5 million in personal funds that we know of, just what are they supposed to live on? How far will her enemies’ hatred go? Pushing Hillary and Bill into a life of eating Ramen noodles, panhandling and picking up half-smoked cigarette butts off the street?

    All of you should take a long, hard look at what your shameful misogyny has done to the woman who deserved and had earned the presidency, and whose larger goal was altruistically saving us from the disaster that Mr. Hot Stuff will be. I hope you’re proud of yourselves.

  • #3 is way too harsh, but it’s time to stick a fork in the primary. Everyone knows it but for a few people who are either making money from the continuation or are too emotionally invested to step back and see the bigger contest we’re about to engage in.

    Red Indiana shattered voter turnout records, and unless a huge chunk of them were Operation Chaos jerkoffs, we could blow this thing out big time in November, even if half the Hillary folks stay home in a huff.

  • Unless the party ‘elite’ can scream loud enough into her deaf ears, I doubt Hillary will throw in the towel. She’ll take it to the convention even if Bill tells her not to (which he won’t). Only when she realizes that she has to keep some support to survive for another fight in a different year, like 2012, will she consider withdrawing. Two years of campaigning 24/7, not enough sleep, and believing your own press releases can be quite blinding to reality. How anyone’s sanity survives an ordeal such as this is a mystery. She may be in nihilistic mode.

  • Hillary will need to decide if a career in the Senate will do it for her. Her time there was, I think, largely prelude to this presidential run. Will she want to stay if her larger goal is out of reach?

    That’s been my question as well, jimBOB. I wonder if she’ll stay in past 2012, when her term ends.

  • Prediction Re:#15: If Obama puts Hillary on the supreme court we will lose the following election. She is now viewed as dishonest and politically craven by 3/4 of America, and there are plenty of people who would be better qualified.

    Hillary can be the senator from New York. If that’s not enough for her, then she needs to go buy a small island and make herself Queen.

    BTW, Antonin Scalia stole my last post and put it up there. I hate it when that happens.

  • HRC won in IN. A win is a win. If she were not a viable candidate she wouldn’t be winning any states.
    NC shows that black women identify more with their blackness than their femaleness. Surprises me… but heh.

  • I have a pitch for HRC: Run again in 2016. Everyone will be 8 years older then! Old people LOVE you!

  • Ding Dong! The Witch is dead.
    Which old Witch? The Wicked Witch!
    Ding Dong! The Wicked Witch is dead.
    Wake up – sleepy head,
    rub your eyes, get out of bed.
    Wake up, the Wicked Witch is dead.
    She’s gone where the goblins go,
    Below – below – below. Yo-ho,
    let’s open up and sing and ring the bells out.
    Ding Dong’ the merry-oh, sing it high, sing it low.
    Let them know
    The Wicked Witch is dead!

  • “NC shows that black women identify more with their blackness than their femaleness”

    Identity politics are soooooooo last month. What, you guys couldn’t come up with a reason why NC doesn’t matter?

  • “NC shows that black women identify more with their blackness than their femaleness”

    And by that “logic,” white working-class men who voted for Clinton must identify more with their whiteness than their maleness.

  • Hey STEVE, try doing an article on Obama’s speech. That was pretty good. I caught a lot of it on the way home last night.

  • I donated to Clinton’s campaign today and I hope other Clinton supporters will do the same.

    There is nothing about this outcome that suggests Clinton should be stopping, any more than after previous primaries where the clamor for her to quit has been just as deafening. Obama wishful thinking knows no bounds.

    Lanny Davis said last night that Obama ran ads in FL after promising not to campaign there. I hadn’t known that. I have also been hearing that the rules say MI and FL should be stripped of half their delegates, not all, so the rules are already being broken in Obama’s favor. This is a matter for the rules committee and it does make a difference to the delegate counts, so this isn’t over just because Obama wants it to be.

    I found the bias of CNN and MSNBC revolting. Openly mocking the Clinton panelist when he was off the air, having the vote counters openly rooting for Obama, etc. Brian Williams explaining how the person who calls the state keeps on earphones to avoid being biased — then we all see on camera that he is African American — as if he we didn’t know who he is supporting. Then 95% of the African American voters in both states going for Obama while Gary deliberately slow counts in order to make a Clinton victory look like a defeat (or to make themselves more important, or both?).

    More than half of Clinton voters in NC say they will not support Obama. However this turns out, Obama is in trouble and I find it hard to understand how he can take satisfaction from a victory that is both race-based and comes at the expense of a corruption of process, especially for MI & FL. Clinton is right to fight for those delegates — she won them.

  • I had no idea that “We shocked the world” translates to “We screwed the pooch” in reality-speak.

  • she probably didn’t want to face a lot of questions about how soon she’s withdraw from the race

    I think she also canceled the appearances because at that point it wasn’t clear that she’d even win Indiana, and it would have been even worse to go on with the appearances if she hadn’t.

  • Obama wishful thinking knows no bounds.

    Clinton needs to win every single primary left by a 65%-35% margin and then also take in 60% of the remaining superdelegates. And you’re claiming that Obama is engaged in “wishful thinking”?

  • 2209? They added when they should have SUBTRACTED. If Mich and Fla don’t count, then the magic number should be 1841.

  • @ 27: There is nothing about this outcome that suggests Clinton should be stopping, any more than after previous primaries where the clamor for her to quit has been just as deafening. Obama wishful thinking knows no bounds.

    “Just because he was ahead numerically before, and increased his lead last night, doesn’t mean he’s winning!” You are clearly on some spectacular drugs.

    Brian Williams explaining how the person who calls the state keeps on earphones to avoid being biased — then we all see on camera that he is African American — as if he we didn’t know who he is supporting.

    So is he voting for Obama because he’s black, or he’s a guy? Are those the only two reasons you’re capable of seeing as to why someone would vote for the Stealth Muslim?

    More than half of Clinton voters in NC say they will not support Obama.

    Then they are cowards, fools, or frauds. Or a combination of the three. I’m sure if the situation were reversed, you’d be excoriating “Obama-only” voters in the same fashion. Any Democrat that is willing to let McCain take charge just because their nominee didn’t get the nod needs to quit wasting my precious oxygen.

  • I don’t understand why the possibility of a Supreme Court seat for her keeps being raised. How is she in any way qualified to be a Supreme Court justice other than that she attended law school 35-40 years ago and once had a position with a Little Rock law firm (remember the billing records)? She flunked the DC bar and never told a soul about it, including her best friend. Whatever happened to the notion of putting brilliant legal thinkers on the court? She lost, and shouldn’t be rewarded or enticed to drop out with a position for which she is manifestly not qualified.

  • I shouldn’t have to repeat this because it is basic civics. The nominating committee determines who the nominee will be, not the sum of the primary votes. Before the convention, neither candidate will have sufficient votes to nominate. After the first ballot, pledged delegates can vote for whoever they want. This isn’t a simple matter of adding up the popular vote or adding up the pledged delegates. It goes to the convention.

    Obama, since day 1, has tried to change the rules about how candidates are nominated, by suggesting that whoever gets the most pledged delegates should be supported by the superdelegates and must be the nominee. That is rewriting the rules, since that is not how conventions have worked in the past and not what the rules say. The situation with FL and MI only complicates matters because the Rules Committee will have to decide their status before voting can occur.

    As has been pointed out by numerous columnists, there have frequently been situations where the second place candidate in terms of pledged delegates has persevered until the convention, and even situations where he has won the nomination. This isn’t over just because Obama wants it to be, and it definitely isn’t over because Obama supporters think it must be over after they have cast their precious votes.

  • Re Mary at 27: I got nothin’. I’ve been bested. She fucking crazy.

  • to IFP, it takes a strong man to admit he’s been bested. And you were. Like totally.

  • IFP, that was a graceful concession in the face of impossible odds… which itself proves beyond any remaining doubt that you can’t be a Clinton Cultist.

  • And IFP, if there was ever any doubt, Mary clean locked it up at 34. I have no idea how you’d parody that one.

  • And IFP, if there was ever any doubt, Mary clean locked it up at 34. I have no idea how you’d parody that one.

    Agreed. Back away slowly….

  • “As has been pointed out by numerous columnists, there have frequently been situations where the second place candidate in terms of pledged delegates has persevered until the convention, and even situations where he has won the nomination.” – Mary #34

    Who are theses columnists ?
    Please give me the ‘frequent’ examples of this happening ?

    Mary you are fooling no one, either you have an IQ of single digits or you love AM radio, my guess, all the above.

  • I know it. I’m done, guys. I may live to fight another day, but today’s prizes have been awarded, and I didn’t even place.

  • The sun must set in the east and the water is dry in Mary’s world.

    Wow. I think we found Dr (In)Sanity’s Clinton counterpart.

  • Mary,

    We missed you last night as the results were coming in. Nobody at campaign headquarters to make sure you were working?

  • IFB, you do win the award as the woman who is not a man. Remain proud, and sharpen your knives for coming battles.

    Tomorrow is another day!

  • The comments on this post are (s)hitting new lows. Please Obama supporters, let her leave with her coat on. Clinton supporters, graciously accept defeat.
    It’s time to give McCain a wedgie…

  • Ronny, I would happily let Hillary leave with her coat on and any dignity intact that she hasn’t personally destroyed. But she won’t leave.

    “This candidacy and this campaign continues on,” Clinton spokesman Howard Wolfson this morning.

    On a conference call with reporters this morning, the Clinton campaign says there have been “no discussions” of ending the campaign.

    Jim Fallows on her speech last night: “Obviously this counts as gracious only if she follows the logic of the results and leaves the race now, or at least calls off the kind of campaigning that does the Republicans’ work for them. “

  • As a Canadian I have been watching this race from the beginning, as the outcome affects all of us. Hillary Clinton started out as a sure thing. Then the tide turned. I believe if she had run a clean campaign and stayed out of the gutter, she would have had more success. The Obama campaign has been hit with everything but the kitchen sink and has managed to rise above it all. It shows who has the integrity, honesty and the backbone to be the next President. The Clintons went into Indiana expecting a double digit win. It didn’t happen. They went to N. Carolina expecting a win and were crushed. It is time for the Clinton machine to give up gracefully and get behind Obama. It is interesting in one of the exit polls that the Obama supporters would vote for Clinton, but the Clinton supporters wouldn’t vote for Obama. I think that shows who can unite the Democratic party and who would divide it.

  • Truely scurrilous comments today from you Obama worshippers and cultists…

    How dare you even attempt to deprive Hillary from her rightful place in the hereditary, unitary presidency!

    By devine right, it is Hillary’s turn. Then it is Jeb’s turn. Then it will be Chelsea’s turn and then Jenna can have her turn.

    To suggest otherwise is to show your true unpatriotic colors. All hail the Bush-Clinton-Bush-Clinton-Bush-Clinton dynasty!

  • I really, really don’t understand the screed about seating MI delegates. Obama wasn’t even on the ballot there. Under what insanity can you call that a fair shake for MI voters, the democratic party, or democracy at large?

  • I began as a strong Clinton supporter, in her core demographic, with reservations only about her vote on Iraq. But between the mismanagement of her campaign, her pandering and her fanning the Wright bogosity flames, I was uneasy enough to take another look at Obama. I saw a man who was right about Iraq from the jump, who’s run a flawless and brilliantly organized campaign, who doesn’t take PAC or lobbyist money (has anyone commented that this honorable choice tied one arm behind his back?) and who hasn’t stooped to hit Clinton on any of the scandals that were fat targets for the right wing (unlike her choice on Wright). He’s an honorable, very smart man and I was proud to vote for him in the NC primary. I’ll be even more proud when he cleans McCain’s clock in November.

  • Agreed. Back away slowly….

    Ah….yeah. I got nothin’. My precious vote and I are going back to work.

  • 27. Mary said: Lanny Davis said last night that Obama ran ads in FL after promising not to campaign there.

    As usual, Lanny Davis is full of it. I remember the supposed scandal. Obama advertised on national cable channels that did reach Florida (in the days before Super Tuesday, when that was the best way to reach all of the states with impending primaries). The Clinton campaign accused him of advertising in Florida, Obama’s people said they had asked and it wasn’t possible to black the ads out in Florida only. And this part someone will have to check, but the way I remember it the Clinton campaign either started advertising in Florida directly afterwards using that as an excuse or at least threatened to.

  • Dear Carpetbagger Commenter,

    For the last month I have not really been reading comments here or at any of my usual blogs. Sitting around agreeing about everything is kind of dull. This race was basically decided in Maine, Confirmed when Obama took Virginia and totally guaranteed once Obama Crushed Hillary in Wisconsin. The last months have just been CNN generated horse race nonsense. This race was over long ago. But man… The news ratings with Hillary in the race have just been off the charts. I don’t blame them.

    But interestingly, I do skim through comments here at CB every day. Only to check up on one person’s posts and the responses to them. You’d never believe it, but its to read Mrs. Mary.

    I find her fascinating. She swings wildly from psychotic rage filled, race baiting crazed Hillary talking points, to truly heart felt expressions of why she cares for Hillary. She is obviously completely divorced from political reality. And equally devoted spiritually to her candidate. She is as COMPLETELY committed to Hillary as I am to Obama. When I think about it, I realize I would say or do anything to get Obama elected (luckily I don’t have to).

    Reading her crazed, Rove/Hillary talking points, and her ugly smear mongering nonsense actually is something I take to heart. I hope my complete devotion never reaches a level where my loyalty and commitment to Obama leads me into political insanity.

    Anyway. Keep writing Mary. I learn something scary but real about humans/politics/teams/hero worship every day from you.

  • Mary… at a certain point talking points really stop working.

    Arguing purely one sided, ignoring the fact that both are politicians and both are far from perfect really cuts into one’s credibility. I think that’s why people here don’t take you seriously. I don’t expect or like normal people to argue like campaign operatives, in shades of black and white.

    Maybe politicians take on shades of black and white to normal people when the competition devolves to an emotional level? I know this won’t make a difference – I’m mainly trying to analyze why your comments seem to me to be so divorced from reality and why there is negativity towards you among not only Obama cheerleaders, but people who respect both potential nominees. I think it’s simply because we hope that normal thinking people think and behave not purely in spin.

    Of course, if getting people’s attention is your main goal, you’re doing a good job.

  • […] Mrs. Clinton, the former president and some of their advisers had become so excited about their prospects of a surprise victory there (in NC)

    On what basis? This goes well beyond pot and the inhaled/didn’t inhale question. It’s more like massive quantities of Lucy in the Sky, with Diamonds.

  • She can drop out now since it is predicted she will win KY and WV anyway,we can still see her % her name will still be on the ballot. If I know Hillary like I think I know with those wins she will call herself the come back kid and the media will spin it that way as well. This mess will start all over. I for one think now is the time why prolong the inevitable unless she and her campaign has something else up their sleeves. It is already starting with them wanting to raise the delegate count to 2209. Does the Clintons own the democratic party or what !!!

  • Look, Obama should WORRY a lot about losing in a landslide in November. A lot of us Clinton supporters are just NOT going to vote for the empty suit no matter what she says. In fact, some of us are going to not only vote for McCain, but even work for his campaign.

    The exit polls should be an OMINOUS sign for Obama and his supporters: Only 48% of Clinton supporters say that they will vote for the empty suit in November. 35% will vote for McCain and 17% will not vote.

    Why do you think Obama runs behind McCain in poll after poll? It’s because Clinton supporters are very unlikely to support the empty suit in November.

    He’ll go down in November like Dukakis in 1988 or worse yet, like McGovern in 1972.

  • Citation

    We already knew some of Hillary’s supporters are neocons, and we didn’t expect them to vote for her even if she WON the nomination. Certainly not Obama, either.

    Obama will leave a friendly door open to you if you decide you’ve been had by McCain.

    But unfortunately McCain will lose the GE. He’s dead meat.

  • My favorite thing about Mary is that no matter how many times people prove her wrong she still comes back here with the same talking points/racism..

    Citation : You are a worthless tool of a person without a single truly democratic bone in your body. Selling out the SCOTUS and setting the stage for millions of more people dying is just plain EVIL..

  • (The translation of Post 34, in order to provide IFP with a much needed rest, will be performed by a Real Professor who may, likewise, be considered Insane. Most Real Professors have to be. It’s part of the Job Procedure for Dealing with Wretched Undergraduates Who Cannot Write a Cohesive Syllable but Still Believe Themselves to be Gods.

    ***

    I shouldn’t have to repeat this because it is basic Medieval Fiefdom Building 101. The nominating committee can be bought because I say they can be bought, and the voters are stupid cretins for believing that they can defy my demands. Before the convention, neither candidate will have sufficient votes to nominate because I can move the goalposts as often as I want—being a Clinton gives me that right. After the first ballot, pledged delegates can vote for whoever they want—or they can vote for me and not miss their precious plane-rides home. This isn’t a simple matter of adding up the popular vote or adding up the pledged delegates; it is about ME. It goes to the convention, where I will tie everything into knots by challenging every last Obama delegate, and they will have to go home, leaving my delegates as a clear majority of delegates in attendance.

    Obama, since day 1, has tried to change MY rules about how candidates are nominated, by suggesting that whoever gets the most pledged delegates should be supported by the superdelegates and must be the nominee. That is NOT rewriting the rules as I have decreed, since that is not how conventions have worked in the Fiefdom of Clintonia of the ancient past and not what MY rules say. The situation with FL and MI only complicates matters because the Rules Committee will have to decide their status in a manner I totally agree with before voting can occur.

    As has been pointed out by numerous of my loyal sycophants pretending to be columnists, there have frequently been situations in my whiskey-induced stupors and alcohol withdrawal blackouts where I was the clear winner by being in last place. This isn’t going to be over just because Obama won, and it definitely isn’t over because Obama supporters think their precious votes are somehow meaningful—because they are NOT.

  • I am so tired of the Clinton’s. If Hillary somehow manages to STEAL this election away from Obama, I would rather vote for McCain, because he shows more integrity. It’s the same old thing, do and say anything to get elected, even play the race card if it’s convienient. Power is more important than the will of the people and the good of the country. We’re doomed!!

  • Loretta:

    We, Clinton supporters, think it is Obama who will have STOLEN this election if the votes of people in MI and FL are not counted (especially FL since everyone’s name was on the ballot and only Obama advertised there, an act that was AGAINST THE RULES).

    In our eyes he will be an ILLEGITMATE candidate if he continues to engage in vote suppression.

    The thing that gets many of us is that Obama is just the SAME OLD, SAME OLD, like all politicians, but he acts like he’s holier than anyone else. If he’ll just cut out the pretense and hypocrisy and stop parading around like the Messiah (saying that he can unite everyone when he HAS NOT shown any ability to operate effectively in a bipartisan manner in his 10 years as a legislator), he may get some of our votes, which he will definitely need if he wants to stand any chance of beating John McCain.

  • Citation, then you are either lying or a moron.
    They broke the rules. Tough shit.

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