No. 9, No. 9, No. 9…Sen. Barack Obama wins Wisconsin, the land of Feingold and the La Follettes, going away (58%-41%), and eats even deeper into Sen. Clinton’s core constituencies.
Next up, two debates, then the line in the sand: March 4, Ohio, Texas, Rhode Island, and Vermont. These are huge and crucial states, and they will dictate how much longer Sen. Obama has to face a debilitating two-front war. But, I might as well come clean. I’ve been saying this elsewhere since the Potomac primaries, and now I’ll go ahead and say it here: The math is virtually inexorable now, and Sen. Clinton has lost. Her campaign even conceded thus a week ago. It’s now just a question of how badly she and her campaign wants Obama to bleed before she drops out. (To his credit, Mitt Romney got out early so as not to hamstring his party’s candidate in the general. Sadly, I doubt we can expect the same of Sen. Clinton.)
This is not to say Ohioans, Texans, Rhode Islanders, and Vermonters, to say nothing of Pennsylvanians, Kentuckians, North Carolinians, etc., should now become complacent. Far from it — now’s the time to redouble our efforts, and end this race, sooner rather than later. The tide has turned, and, to quote my former employer (who would tell Sen. Clinton the same), “When your opponent is drowning, throw the son of a bitch an anvil.” All that being said, I just don’t see Sen. Clinton coming back at this point. And, if she somehow finds a way to wrest the nomination from Obama, it’ll have been by dragging the Democratic party so deeply through the mud of asinine smears and obvious half-truths that the nomination will be worthless. It is time for her to go.
It’s late, I’m still waiting for the Hawaii results, and I’m still pretty peeved about Clinton’s ridiculous plagiarism gambit. But, If you’ll forgive the lapse into LotR metaphors, the treason of Saruman, once the noblest and wisest of our order, is almost subdued. The Battle for Middle-Earth is only beginning.
Gore, Edwards, Feingold, and other party leaders need to step up and tell Hillary Clinton to drop out. The Democrats have a general election to win and can’t afford to any more distractions from the Clintons.
Yeah, I pretty much decided it was over after tonight too. She needed to slow down the juggernaut in WI and then find some way to win big in Texas, and instead she got waxed and Texas was already polling 50/50 beforehand, and even a really good comeback 5-10 point win there won’t win her many net delegates. That leaves her having to win OH and PA by 65% or more to even get it close enough to credibly think about stealing it at the convention, and that’s just not happening. They may not pack it in until after PA, but if Texas ends up being roughly a draw, and OH isn’t a complete blowout, it’s over. And it’s very hard to see how either of those things don’t happen, so it’s over. I look forward to seeing how they try to spin this, or how they can even go after him when attacking him plainly isn’t working. The bittersweet smell of flop sweat is in the air.