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Old 03-31-2008, 01:19 PM   #8 (permalink)
nuttyjoe
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Katczinsky View Post
Actually, Obama can get enough delegates after the remaining states and the factoring in of the remaining superdelegates who haven't declared support.

Clinton, however, short of overwhelming landslide victories in all the remaining states, cannot.

Her continued presence is probably hurting the Democratic Party's chances in November, but dropping out might hurt it too. I think it's best for Clinton to stay in the race but to stop throwing bullshit and hoping it sticks.
Agreed, Kat. This is what hurts Clinton's credibility. And she has never won a really large victory margin. I think this is why she is getting the pressure to quit. With Pennslyvania coming up next- and with Senator Bob Casey's endorsement of Obama- the big victory she needs looks very dim. This may be the telling day for Hillary; because as I've said before, each passing day that Obama stays ahead is another day that more and more superdelegates will commit to Obama. He is getting another endorsement today from a Minnesota senator; a superdelegate. I cannot recall her name; but I'm sure we will see it on CNN.
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