Super Tuesday: McCain Triumphs, Hillary Not So Much |
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by Marty Beckerman, February 6, 2008 |
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Super Tuesday was a clear victory for Sen. John McCain, who now has 300 more delegates than former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. After the landslide McCain boasted, "Although I've never minded the role of the underdog ... I think we must get used to the idea that we are the Republican Party front-runner." (Apparently McCain is now using the Royal "We.")
On the Democratic side things are far less certain. Sen. Hillary Clinton captured the big prizes -- California and New York -- but Sen. Barack Obama scored more delegates. Major media outlets are crowning Hillary as the Super Tuesday winner, but she had previously sworn to have the nomination locked up by now. Time is much kinder to Obama, and a possible Gore/Edwards endorsement could seal the deal.
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee performed much better than expected, capturing many states in the South. Prior to Super Tuesday prominent analysts believed that Huckabee would drop out of the race today, but he has vowed to continue his campaign, angering the Romney camp because splitting the vote makes McCain's cakewalk that much cakier.
(In related news, at this very moment Mike Huckabee moaned with a drool-oozing grin: "Mmmmmmm.... caaaaaake....")
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Marty Beckerman is the author of Dumbocracy More... |
zbird
So this show just keeps going on? The agony!
--Z
Cavanaugh
Collaboration
There's something not very straight-talking about "Straight Talker" McCain's collaboration with Huckabee, where he's on record asking his supporters in states he can't win to vote for Huckabee to help slow Romney down. I wonder if there's some kind of VP deal in the offing... or if Huckabee thinks there is and is being strung along.
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