Thursday, March 13, 2008

Opinion: Republicans are in, Dems still have a battle

Ian Black
Staff Reporter

The March 5 primaries and caucuses in Ohio, Texas, Vermont, and Rhode Island wrapped up Arizona Senator John McCain’s dominating GOP campaign as he was solidified as the Republican nominee for President. Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee was finally forced out of the election after McCain nabbed the necessary 1,191 Republican delegates to clinch the nomination. It was comical that even though Huckabee never had a chance at the nomination after the first several primaries, he would never publicly admit any sort of defeat. However in the end, the miracle that Huckabee was hoping for never came and he bowed out graciously after the inevitable news reached his campaign headquarters; his fifteen minutes of spotlight were over.

However on the Democratic side, Senator Hillary Clinton broke Senator Barack Obama’s eleven state primary winning streak when she won three of the four states’ delegates including Ohio and Rhode Island, as well as a surprising victory in Texas. This was a disappointment to the Obama campaign which hoped that a victory in either Texas or Ohio would lead to Clinton’s suspension of her campaign.

Yet Clinton’s wins in Texas and Ohio, which hold 193 and 162 delegates respectively, moves her closer to Obama’s delegate total. However because of the proportional delegate nature of the primaries, Clinton’s 51% to 47% victory in Texas and the 55% to 43% in Ohio has not yet given her enough delegates to catch up to Obama, but has given life to her withering campaign. Both candidates are still more than 500 delegates away from clinching the 2,025 necessary to get the nomination.

This was an obvious disappointment for political analysts who smelled blood in the water and hoped that another Obama sweep would wrap up the nomination and embarrass Hillary to the point of the suspension of her campaign.

Yet with her new boost of confidence coming out of the primaries, Clinton is expected to continue her campaign with as much vigor as ever. At this point in time there is no end in sight for the Democratic Party to find their candidate. Unless one candidate makes great strides in the upcoming election, some political analysts are predicting that the nomination will go all the way to the Democratic National Convention in August.

Consequently, it seems that this extension of the Democratic race is actually beneficial to the party. With many more months of media attention to come as the primaries continue, the candidates will have increased time to convince more and more undecided voters to side with Democratic policy.

Regardless of who ultimately wins the nomination, the Democratic Party is excited about a possible Obama-Clinton or Clinton-Obama president and vice-president combination for the 2008 election. Many are calling this possibility a “dream ticket” for the Democrats with one of the strongest duos in the party’s history.

The next major test for the Democratic candidates is the Pennsylvania primary to be held on April 22.

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