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Obama sweeps
3 States, Huckabee wins 2
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—Barack Obama easily swept Democratic presidential contests in
three states on Saturday, striking the latest blows in a bruising
back-and-forth battle with Hillary Clinton for the party’s nomination.
Among Republicans, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee won contests in
Louisiana and Kansas over front-runner John McCain, highlighting
conservative discontent with the Arizona senator two days after he
essentially sewed up the nomination.
Obama scored decisive wins in Louisiana, Nebraska and Washington to gain
a small dose of momentum in a deadlocked, state-by-state fight with
Clinton for Democratic convention delegates who will choose the party’s
presidential nominee in the November election.
“Today, the voters from the West Coast to the Gulf Coast to the heart of
America stood up to say yes, we can,” Obama said at a party dinner in
Richmond, Virginia, a state that votes on Tuesday. “We won in Louisiana,
we won in Nebraska, we won in Washington state, we won North, we won
South, we won in between, and I believe that we can win Virginia on
Tuesday if you’re ready to stand for change,” the Illinois senator said.
The wins by Huckabee, a Baptist minister whose campaign has been fueled
by support from religious conservatives, came in states with big
conservative voting blocs and did not change McCain’s daunting advantage
in the Republican race.
McCain managed to hold off Huckabee and the third candidate in the
Republican race, Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, with a narrow victory in
Washington state, according to the two major newspapers in Seattle, the
state’s largest city.
McCain has more than 700 of the 1,191 delegates needed to capture the
Republican nomination at this summer’s convention. He virtually clinched
the race on Thursday with the withdrawal of his chief rival, former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.
But Huckabee said he would not give up, telling a conference of
conservative activists in Washington, D.C., he would continue his
shoestring campaign until McCain mathematically won the nomination.
McCain still faces widespread opposition from conservatives unhappy with
his views on immigration, tax cuts and other issues. “I did not major in
math, but I majored in miracles, and I still believe in them,” Huckabee
said at a rally at the University of Maryland in College Park. Huckabee
won about 60 percent of the vote in Kansas, more than double McCain’s
total. He narrowly beat McCain in Louisiana. Obama cruised to easy wins
in Nebraska and Washington, doubling Clinton’s tally by capturing more
than 60 percent of the vote. He comfortably beat Clinton in Louisiana,
winning more than half of the vote. Obama also won easily in the U.S.
territory of the Virgin Islands. Clinton, a New York senator, and Obama
are about even in pledged delegates after contests in more than half of
the U.S. states, but both are well short of the 2,025 needed to win the
nomination.
Democratic rules allocate delegates on a proportional basis statewide
and in congressional districts, meaning even the loser in each state can
win big blocks of delegates. There also are another 796
“super-delegates,” elected officials and party insiders, who can switch
their support at any time.
It was not immediately clear how the delegate count would break down in
Saturday’s vote, with a combined 161 pledged delegates. The Obama camp
said it won just more than 100 of those delegates up for grabs. Obama,
who would be the first black U.S. president, had been the favorite in
all three contests. In Louisiana, he benefited from a high percentage of
black voters, his strongest supporters.
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