The Pennsylvania primary is three weeks from tomorrow, and the polls out of the state are still pretty one-sided. So, what are campaign watchers to do during the lull? Watch the superdelegates.
Slowly but steadily, a string of Democratic Party figures is taking Barack Obama’s side in the presidential nominating race and raising the pressure on Hillary Clinton to give up.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota is expected to endorse Sen. Obama Monday, according to a Democrat familiar with her plans. Meanwhile, North Carolina’s seven Democratic House members are poised to endorse Sen. Obama as a group — just one has so far — before that state’s May 6 primary, several Democrats say.
Helping to drive the endorsements is a fear that the Obama-Clinton contest has grown toxic and threatens the Democratic Party’s chances against Republican John McCain in the fall.
Since this report ran on the WSJ’s front page this morning, Klobuchar announced her support for Obama, but the part about North Carolina’s entire House delegation backing Obama is apparently premature. Obama aides denied it, while Rep. G.K. Butterfield, the only Dem from the delegation to endorse, said Obama will gain support this week from the state’s lawmakers, and the number will be “more than one but less than six.”
Nevertheless, the general trend of superdelegates seems tilted in Obama’s direction. Clinton recently picked up the support of Jack Murtha — and in Pennsylvania, his name carries enormous weight — but he appears to be more the exception than the rule.
Over the last week or so, Obama started with Bill Richardson’s endorsement, then picked up Bob Casey, then Klobuchar, and is now poised to do well among North Carolina’s House delegation.
Since the “Super Tuesday” primaries on Feb. 5, Sen. Obama has won commitments from 64 superdelegates and Sen. Clinton has gotten nine. Sen. Obama has a total of 217 superdelegates in his camp while Sen. Clinton has 250, and her margin has been shrinking with each week. Sen. Clinton would have several more in her tally, but they’re from Michigan, and delegates from Michigan and Florida won’t be seated — at least for now — because both states defied party rules and held their primaries earlier than permitted.
“I think that says a lot about just where people are and what they’re thinking,” says former Senate Majority Leader Thomas Daschle, an Obama supporter. “And I think the numbers are just going to keep getting better” for Sen. Obama. […]
Even raising the prospect of a convention fight could backfire for Sen. Clinton by antagonizing the superdelegates she needs. Many superdelegates are on the ballot themselves this year, and the last thing they want is a chaotic convention that plays into the hands of Republicans.
I hadn’t actually thought much about that last point. I’d assumed the superdelegates would want to wrap up the process sooner rather than later because it will help the party’s chances of winning the White House. But the WSJ piece is also right — a drawn-out nomination fight, culminating in a convention fracas eight weeks before Election Day, doesn’t help the superdelegates in Congress themselves.
Clearly, Hillary Clinton intends to keep fighting, apparently for the next five months. But watch these superdelegates. A senator here and a House member there might not seem like much, but they add up, and if the superdelegates begin to break in large numbers, the writing on the wall will be impossible to ignore.