Post from Hollywood:
Clinton campaign: It's all about the delegates
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If somebody could just set up a Ustream feed and follow Terry McAuliffe around with a little camera, I could take some time off, but in the meantime, more from the Clinton campaign chairman on MSNBC, where he was asked about California:

MITCHELL: Popular vote? The popular vote in California?

MCAULIFFE: You're taking states. What I care about [is] delegates. We will have more delegates than we had going into today. This is about winning delegates and onward we go. I'm excited but I'm always excited.

Clinton Communications Director Howard Wolfson said, "This is a race for delegates…It is not a battle for individual states. As David knows, we are well past the time when any state will have a disproportionate influence on the nominating process." [Washington Post, 1/16/08]


To: Interested Parties
From: Howard Wolfson, Communications Director

Re: South Carolina, Florida, and February 5

Date: January 26, 2008


The Obama campaign has been so confident of winning South Carolina that six months ago they flatly predicted victory in the Palmetto State.


Cornell Belcher, Senator Obama’s pollster, stated explicitly to the Politico on July 25, 2007, “We are going to outright win South Carolina.”


And today, Senator Obama leads by 12, according to the Real Clear Politics average of polls taken in South Carolina over the last 10 days.


Despite Senator Obama's large lead, Senator Clinton has campaigned across the Palmetto State, reaching out and asking for each and every vote. She has heard directly from South Carolinians about their concerns and their hopes for a stronger, more prosperous America.

Regardless of today’s outcome, the race quickly shifts to Florida, where hundreds of thousands of Democrats will turn out to vote on Tuesday.

Despite efforts by the Obama campaign to ignore Floridians, their voices will be heard loud and clear across the country, as the last state to vote before Super Tuesday on February 5th.

This remains a delegate fight, with 1,681 delegates at stake on February 5th, and 2,025 needed to secure the nomination -- and we are ahead in that fight.

As Senator Clinton has said from the beginning, we have built a national campaign with the resources to compete and win across the country.

Reader Comments
  
TODAY OBAMA LEADS
By MICHAEL on The Beach Mar 20th 2008 at 11:04 am EDT
Now Obama leads in all groups-states won, elected delegates & popular vote...Let's check score after last primary...If he still has most elected delegates then I say he gets the nomination...CALL ME A MAVERICK!
Re: TODAY OBAMA LEADS
By Darlene (DEC) Mar 20th 2008 at 11:19 am EDT
I say Obama loses the nomination. More than anything else the Democratic Party wants a win in November. Call me a realist.
Re: TODAY OBAMA LEADS
By MICHAEL on The Beach Mar 20th 2008 at 11:24 am EDT
If Hillary can pull HUGE numbers in remaining states she could win...But she needs to approach 70% of vote with big turnouts...
Re: TODAY OBAMA LEADS
By Mike Barack Hussein Mar 20th 2008 at 11:25 am EDT
So you believe we should just "award" Clinton the nomination because she was married to a president, I guess.

I didn't know we still had a monarch over America, though the last 20 years would make you wonder.
Disparaging comments will not be tolerated.
Re: TODAY OBAMA LEADS
By MICHAEL on The Beach Mar 20th 2008 at 12:01 pm EDT
Rich RNC is praying Hillary get the nomination..
Disparaging comments will not be tolerated.
Re: TODAY OBAMA LEADS
By Hollywood Mar 21st 2008 at 7:28 am EDT
You mean like San Francisco?