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Obama eyes
victorious end to Democratic race
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—Democrat Barack Obama mapped out the end-game for his epic
White House tussle with Hillary Clinton but the former first lady
refused to yield to media catcalls declaring the race over.
Obama said he could declare victory over Clinton for the Democratic
presidential nomination on May 20, when primaries in Kentucky and Oregon
may put him over the top in terms of elected delegates.
In that event, “we can make a pretty strong claim that we have got the
most runs and it’s the ninth inning and we have won,” Obama said, using
a baseball analogy, in an NBC interview Thursday.
But steering clear of calls for Clinton to bow out, and mindful of the
wounds exposed by the Democratic primary season, the Illinois senator
said it would be crucial to win “in a way that brings the party
together.”
Obama’s thumping win Tuesday in North Carolina and his narrow defeat by
Clinton in Indiana have rewritten the narrative of the gripping
Democratic contest.
Editorialists crowned Obama as the Democrats’ champion-elect for the
November election against Republican John McCain.
“And the winner is...” said Time magazine on its cover, over a
photograph of Obama with a million-watt smile. The Economist said: “Mrs
Clinton’s campaign is surely close to its end.”
“I don’t want to be jinxed. We’ve still got work to do,” Obama said of
the Time cover, in a CNN interview.
The New York Times, which had endorsed Clinton, on Friday defended her
right to stay in the race, but said she would be making a terrible
mistake “if she continues to press her candidacy through negative
campaigning with disturbing racial undertones.” Clinton vowed no
surrender , telling supporters in West Virginia their voices deserved to
be heard when the state holds its primary next Tuesday.
“This is a little bit like deja vu all over again,” she said of the
media critics, adding in a statement of intent for the general election:
“I’m running to be president of all 50 states.”
According to his campaign, Obama needs just 33 more pledged delegates to
reach a majority of the Democratic nominating officials, 1,606.
But while reaching this majority would be potent symbolically, Obama
would still need support from Democratic grandees called
“superdelegates” to reach the ultimate winning line for the nomination —
2,025.
Even as he vowed no retreat for the former first lady, Clinton campaign
chairman Terry McAuliffe said superdelegates would coalesce behind a
candidate once the final primaries were held on June 3.
“I think it will be all over. I don’t see it going to the (August)
convention. We’ll have a nominee in June,” he said on NBC.
McAuliffe pinned Clinton’s campaign hopes on edging ahead in the
national popular vote, if the voided results of primaries in Michigan
and Florida are reinstated at a May 31 meeting of the Democratic
National Committee.
Clinton wrote to Obama demanding he join her in supporting new contests
in the two states, warning that the Democrats’ treatment of their voters
now “could be the difference between winning and losing in November.”
But signs of a party shifting gear to back Obama were manifest. At least
six superdelegates have declared for him since Tuesday, including David
Bonior, who was the national campaign manager for failed presidential
hopeful John Edwards.
The Clinton campaign continues to argue that Obama has failed to close
the deal with core Democratic constituencies, including women and
working-class voters, and polls suggest many of them could end up voting
for McCain.
There was renewed talk of Obama running with Clinton as his vice
presidential nominee to bridge the divisions. He said that was
premature, but did not rule out the idea as he praised his indefatigable
foe.
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