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Saturday, April 26, 2008
Michael Barone :: Townhall.com Columnist
Popular Vote Gives Clinton an Edge
by Michael Barone
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Who should John McCain pick as his running mate?














One thing many people haven't noticed about Hillary Clinton's 55 percent to 45 percent victory over Barack Obama in the Pennsylvania primary is that it put her ahead of Obama in the popular vote. Her 214,000-vote margin in the Keystone State means that she has won the votes, in primaries and caucuses, of 15,112,000 Americans, compared to 14,993,000 for Obama.

If you add in the votes, as estimated by the folks at realclearpolitics.com, in the Iowa, Nevada, Washington and Maine caucuses, where state Democratic parties did not count the number of caucus-attenders, Clinton still has a lead of 12,000 votes.

Moreover, she may be able to maintain that lead, despite an expected Obama victory in North Carolina on May 6, by rolling up big popular vote margins in West Virginia on May 13, Kentucky on May 20 and Puerto Rico on June 1. So it's likely that Clinton will be able to argue that undecided super-delegates should heed the will of the people.

Obama supporters can counter that claim with arguments of their own. Their candidate is ahead and will remain ahead in delegates chosen in caucuses and primaries. Michigan, where Obama was not on the ballot, and Florida have been disqualified by the Democratic National Committee for voting too early. Counting popular votes unduly discounts the results from caucuses, in which many fewer people participate than in primaries. And the Democratic Party can't afford to alienate the young and black voters who enthusiastically back Obama.

These arguments will probably prevail. Yet Clinton's popular vote lead is one piece of evidence that suggests that Obama will be a weak general election candidate. In national polls, neither Democrat seems stronger than the other: The realclearpolitics.com average of polls as this is written shows Obama leading John McCain 46 percent to 45 percent and Clinton and McCain tied at 46 percent apiece. But they don't run the same in different states.

SurveyUSA's 50-state polls released in March showed that electoral votes would go to different parties in 15 states depending on whether McCain was pitted against Clinton or Obama. And it is electoral votes that determine who will be president.

There are states where Obama runs stronger than Clinton. They include most of the West -- notably Colorado, a state Democrats lost in 2000 and 2004 but which has trended their way since. They include states in the Upper Midwest, like Minnesota, and New England states like Connecticut and New Hampshire, which Democrats won in 2004 but where Clinton seems weak. Continued...

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About The Author
Michael Barone is a senior writer with U.S. News & World Report and the principal co-author of The Almanac of American Politics, published by National Journal every two years. He is also author of Our Country: The Shaping of America from Roosevelt to Reagan, The New Americans: How the Melting Pot Can Work Again, the just-released Hard America, Soft America: Competition vs. Coddling and the Competition for the Nation's Future.
 
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Subject: Randy
I haven't sen any evidence that Sen mcCain wants a draft. I hope you're wrong. We could use a leader who would inspire young men to join up and serve. I don't know if he would or could do that. We haven't had anyone in office recently who tried to inspire others to serve their country in any way. It's been quite out of fashion in recent decades. I think President Bush missed an opportunity to galvanize the public after 9-11.

I also doubt whether Sen Obama wants a draft. I think he wants to substantially reduce our military, and has said so on various occasions. He would look to Nato or the UN instead. Great plan. (Not)


Hillary leads in the popular vote
This conversation has got off topic, but is extremely interesting. I like the quotes relative to socialism/communism. Virtually any philosophy which puts groups before individuals is socialistic, and since the 1980s we have had one in this country called communitarianism. Clinton embraced it during the 1992 election and his "grougpism" quote dates from that. I haven't heard him make anything approaching that comment for years.

The cultural revolution and its mass technique of political correctness comes from Mao's attempt to remake China in the 1960s and exterminate all knowledge and loyalty to China's history and traditional society. Part of that process was/is self/cricicism and public apologies and humiliations, like the "truth and reconciliation commission" set up in South Africa by Mandela and his marxist African National Congress when he came to power.

The Woods Foundation Obama and Ayers are associated with is all about socio/political organizing and indoctrination (everyone who gets a grant must attend "education" seminars). And Wright's church is an example of Alinsky's plan to join socialistic programs with "progressive" churches to "change" society. Does Wright's church get any grants from Bush's "Faith based initiatives?

Finally, yes McCain hated Rumsfeld, because Rumsfeld opposed bringing back the draft. McCain wants several hundred thousand troops in Iraq and for us to stay there forever. McCain wants the draft back. And so does Obama, I suspect, as a mass indoctrination and regimentation institution through which collectivistic and Multicultural "values" can be instilled in the young.
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