I am sure we all saw this coming. BHO is going to fill the gap of pledged delegates with superdelegates
that are committing to him in swarms today. he could likely use the national media exposure that the
the final primaries will be getting tonight to
claim the nomination with one of his patented Obamations.
with this possible turn of events hanging over her, hillary could wind up retracting her retraction about
conceding tonight. I'm sure it would sting less if she was allowed to concede before he claimed victory.
it would certainly be smarter for the dem party. anything that looks like ill treatment of her will just piss
off her supporters.
Superdelegates surge to Obama
A tsunami of superdelegates is poised to rush to Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) over the next 12 hours, giving him a mathematical lock on his party’s presidential nomination.
The superdelegate surge is likely to swamp a few holdouts within the camp of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) who have been resisting a prompt concession.
Aides say Clinton does not plan to concede or bid supporters farewell when she speaks in New York tonight, but instead will salute her supporters and argue for the strength of her candidacy.
But her clout is ebbing by the hour. At 6:56 a.m. Eastern time, the Obama campaign announced the first of the day’s slew of endorsements by superdelegates – the Democratic Party officials who have a vote on the nominee and will determine who it is, since neither Obama nor Clinton have won enough delegates in primaries and caucuses to put them over the top.
Clinton campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe said on NBC’s “Today†show: “If Senator Obama gets the number, I think Hillary Clinton will congratulate him, call him the nominee. We haven't gotten to that number yet.â€
Obama needs only about 36 more delegates, and he told The Associated Press in an interview that he expects to get about 15 of those in today’s primaries in South Dakota and Montana. Superdelegates will finish the job.
“A lot of people recognize that it is going to be time for us to pivot and move on,†he said.
Robert Gibbs, Obama’s campaign communications director, said on CNN’s “American Morning†that the campaign is “still working the phones and talking to people.â€
“I think there's a pretty good chance that by the time Barack Obama walks out on the stage tonight, we'll walk out as Democratic nominee as president of the United States,†Gibbs said. “We'll begin a new phase in this campaign and talk about what's next for this country and what direction we can take it in — the type of change that you can believe in.â€
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