Dave Lindorff: Rounding Out the Pennsylvania Primary Story
The corporate media have been quick to buy into and promote the Hillary Clinton campaign claim that she won the Pennsylvania primary by "double digits," but the truth is, that involves a bit of creative rounding.
The final figures for the vote are that Clinton won 1,258,245 votes out of 2,300,542 cast, compared to 1,042,297 for Barack Obama.
If you do the math, that works out to 54.71 percent for Clinton, and 45.31 percent for Obama.
Now granted, if you use the convention of rounding up numbers 5 or above and rounding down numbers below 4 and below, you get 55 percent for Clinton and 45 percent for Obama. If you take the actual numbers, 54.71 and 45.31, and calculate the difference, it works out to 9.40 percent. And that is a number closer to 9 than to 10.
That is to say, it is more correct to say either that Clinton won by 9.4 percent, or, if you want to round the answer, 9 percent. Either way, it's not a "double-digit" win. It's a single-digit win.
Given that Obama came into the Pennsylvania race with polls showing Clinton ahead by a whopping 20 percent, getting that margin down below 10 percent has to be rated as a pretty impressive accomplishment. Add in the viciousness of the Clinton campaign's attacks on Obama, which played deliberately and shamelessly to the racial fears of her aging white, Catholic, working-class, less-educated female base, and it looks even more impressive.
That said, I think Obama ran a poor campaign in Pennsylvania. He relied heavily on television advertising, which has a diminishing impact the more that is spent (doubling a small number of ads can have a big impact, but doubling a large number won't accomplish much). He spent most of his time campaigning in Clinton strongholds, trying to lure Clinton voters away, and precious little time in his own strongholds -- especially in Philadelphia's large black communities, which not surprisingly failed to turn out in the record numbers that his campaign needed, and which his historic candidacy should have logically had.
In part, Obama is hemmed in by his own national strategy: He is not running as a "black" candidate, and there is certainly the danger that if he got down into the streets and worked to generate real excitement in the projects and slums of cities such as Philadelphia or Wilkes-Barre, he would simultaneously stoke the racist fears of white voters. But if he wants to win the nomination, and go on to win in November, he will clearly have to take that risk. (And it is considerable: Exit polls in Pennsylvania showed Obama losing by 5 percent, which means many people actually voted against him but didn't want to admit it to pollsters, suggesting that many didn't want to confess to casting an anti-black vote. Governor Ed Rendell, a Clinton backer, also famously noted that there are many people in Pennsylvania who "simply won't vote" for a black candidate.)
Obama has the same problem in confronting the Clinton attack machine. In the Philadelphia debate, where he was assailed from three sides, by Clinton, and by the two ABC "moderators," Charles Gibson and George Stephanopoulos, Obama tried to avoid returning the same kind of cheap-shot fire. In his six-week campaign in Philadelphia, too, he was far less willing to, and ultimately late in his counterattack against Clinton's redbaiting, race baiting, and other assaults, trying to offer what he calls a "new" kind of politics.
Again, it's clear that this "above the fray" kind of campaign strategy is not going to work -- especially going forward. Americans say they want positive, issue-oriented campaigns, but they really want blood on the floor. Clinton is delivering that blood. Obama is going to have to do the same.
Finally, if he wants to win those white, working-class voters, and the women voters who are backing Clinton, Obama needs to do more than talk about Hope and Change. He needs to start talking concretely about fighting for women's equality (he has two daughters -- the case is easy!), he needs to talk concretely about ending not just the Iraq War, but the nation's obsession with military spending, he needs to talk seriously about the crisis of global warming (not just creating green-energy jobs!), he needs to talk seriously about protecting American jobs, and he needs to talk seriously about how to break the insurance industry's grip on the health care dollar.
In short, he needs a much more aggressive and focused campaign.
He should start by questioning her "fuzzy" math in claiming a double-digit win in Pennsylvania.
DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist and columnist. His latest book is "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 2006, and now available in paperback edition). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net.
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Hillary 100.00 %---- Obama 000.00%
She is a Liar... and he needs to firmly end the drama....
Why the Difference Between 9% and 10% matters
20 does not round up to 100; 9.2 does not round up to 10. Unless you need the dough.
Let's see if Bayh now stirs up some Indiana bigotry ..
Something is starting to feel bad there - Carville was drooling all over Gov. Richardson today on Larry King, pushing and prodding to get the Governor to say that Indiana is a must for Obama. So far in every 'big' state there have been big reports of voter problems Florida, Michigan Nevada, and Ohio in particular, but yesterday in Pennsylvania too, where thousands of non-Democratic voters who did switch in time to vote were mysteriously lost in the system.
Anyone have any contacts in Indiana??
I sincerely also hope everyone is noticing which Congressional surrogates are joining in this race baiting crap from the Clintons - Bayh is a big, surprise, but, he's DLC as is Harold Ford (who at the moment is Pat Buchanans sock puppet- so watch North Caroling too)
In particular I'm disappointed at each stop they've found Democrats perfectly willing to publicy admit they'll jump ship to McCain if she doesn't win.
Well then screw em'! And screw Hillary now too. When they're willing to screw the troops by letting McCain win out of sheer selfishness - I've had it.
Doesn't sound like they were real Democrats anyway - just those in the Lieberman middle pushing for more war profits.
She winning some groups all right but not because they like her so much but because she creates hate for Obama, from first the Hispanics in the Southwest then the Jews in the Northesast and the Arians in the south. -My God what a horrible disgusting pair of power hungry bastards the Clinton duo have turned out to be.
I don't even give a crap about her qualifications any more - and they don't give a crap about the party or this country.
They truly are monsters and should never be allowed any where near the White House again.
Nationalism is not terrorism. And an adversary is not an enemy.
Hillary Clinton
I'm Woman, I'm Old, I am Obama
I don't know who the pollsters are talking to. I've lived long enough to know that we cannot believe what the newspapers say, what the talking heads on television say, and we sure as hell can't believe what the polls say. I no longer believe that our election process is sound, either. Call me a doubter, but the hack-ability of the voting machines or the counting machines has been proved, and in the almost 8 years since 2000 what reforms have truly given us a transparent, verifiable voting system?
Anyway, I will not vote for Ms. Clinton. Not in the primaries, and not in the general if she manages to grab the nomination. No, I won't vote for McCain, I'll end up writing someone in instead.
Hillary, I'm supposed to be supporting you, but I don't... I can't and I won't.
I am a Hillary supporter
I Support Hillary and Barack
Then you're not a Democra t so good riddance
Our Congress is clogged with those who place 'other' interests over this country's. That's why we want Obama in the White House - to stop the Clinton Congressional Democrats who have lost us the past 6 elections -until Dean came along.
Obama is a living breathing 50 state strategy come true! Imagine a half a dozen more new Senators to and no more King Joe.
Obama 08'
Nationalism is not terrorism. And an adversary is not an enemy.
Why wouldn't you vote for Obama?
Because he's black? (Oh-oh, that's playing the race card, isn't it? It's in the deck--deal with it.)
Because he's actually fairly honest--he hasn't been lying about snipers shooting at him and his kid (whom he courageously dragged along with him into the line of fire--and she repeatedly bragged about having done this sort of thing)?
Because he hasn't tried to mislead and deceive the public, and his own followers in particular, about history, saying that "who wins Ohio wins the White House" and ignoring the fact that the Ohio primary was lost by the two best Democratic Presidents we've ever had (JFK and FDR)?
Or because he hasn't been concealing a secret disdain for those annoying, whiny activists who happen to believe in participatory representative democracy just as this country's founders did?
Because Obama's campaign hasn't been taking pages from the Rove-Cheney-Bush playbook?
Because he's not a bellicose fear-monger?
Because he's got less testosterone in his bloodstream than wanna-be Empress Clinton?
Because he's not a Republican trotting out in Democrat clothing and dancing a delusional jig that keeps Big Money media salivating for more revenue from their coverage of the Big Fight?
Are those some of the reasons you wouldn't vote for Obama, but you would vote for Clinton?
Hillary Clinton has lost. Basically the only way she can "win" this nomination is by lying and cheating, and it sure looks like she's preparing to do just that. She's been pretty good at the lying part--the latest being that she won "big" or solidly this time, despite the fact that her single-digit margin of victory dropped to less than half of what she was polling only a month ago, in a state where virtually all the circumstances favored her (not to mention the big boost she got from ABC in the last debate).
One thing I do know: If Clinton succeeds and manages to steal the nomination, no matter what anybody--even Obama himself, whom I am supporting at this point--coughs up about "unity" after she's thrown any sense of decency and solidarity into the fire with her divisive campaign rhetoric and tactics, the Democratic Party can kiss its future goodbye.
The Race Has Been Over - She won the Battle - not the War.
ANOTHER POV OF THE MEDIA'S DARLING
FROM THE RADICAL LEFT:
The Mass Media Embraces Obama
The rhetoric of bipartisanship has played a major role in the corporate media’s embrace of Barack Obama. There has been a frenzied media campaign over the last month or so to transform Obama into an unstoppable front runner.
Obama is a conventional bourgeois politician, dependent, like his rivals, on lavish financial support from corporate interests and the wealthy.
He is not the product of any sort of genuine movement from below in American society, but rather the latest in a long line of demagogues employed to foster illusions that the big business-controlled political system can serve the interests of ordinary people.
It is noteworthy that leading lights of the Republican right have joined in the praise for Obama.
The editorialists of the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times’ Republican columnist David Brooks and such conservative media pundits as Peggy Noonan, William Bennett and Rush Limbaugh have all had good things to say about him.
On the Republican side, the promotion of Obama is motivated in part by calculations that he will be easier to defeat in the general election than Clinton.
No one should doubt that the Republican notables who are currently hailing the rise of an African-American candidate as a vindication of American democracy are prepared to conduct an unofficial campaign of virulent racism against him, especially in the South, should he win the Democratic nomination.
Those representatives of the Republican right who have sought to boost Obama have praised, in particular, his attack on what he calls “the politics of division.” Similarly, the senator’s call for bipartisan unity figures prominently in the media hype of his campaign.
The New York Times, in an extraordinary editorial postmortem of the New Hampshire primary headlined “Unite, Not Divide, Really This Time,” lashed out against Clinton, accusing her of unfairly attacking Obama and sowing divisiveness.
“The last thing they [Americans] want,” the newspaper wrote, “is for either party to drag out the old playbooks of division and anger.”
...and your point is....??
Nationalism is not terrorism. And an adversary is not an enemy.
You can't be serious
Haven't you heard?
It's true.
But.
Fact, not spin: This was a single-digit win in a state where virtually all the circumstances favored her and where up until a very short time ago she was polling a 20% or better lead. Things went as expected. Not a big win, not a comeback. Obama supporters might have hoped it would be lower, or that Obama would be able to pull a small victory, but basically nobody realistically expected that.
More facts..
Quinnipiac had it 52-36 in February. In spite of Wright, flag pins, Ayers, and Hillary's dirty kitchen sink, since Febrary Obama has risen by 9 points. Where the poor blubbering homeytown girl from Scranton only managed a lousy 3 points.
That's the real story.
Nationalism is not terrorism. And an adversary is not an enemy.