If Barack Obama were trailing in popular votes, behind in the
delegate count, widely viewed as a divisive public figure and didn’t
have a mathematical chance of becoming his party’s presidential
nominee, he’d be pressured out of the race quicker than you can say
Monica Lewinsky. Yet, Hillary Clinton continues to march down a
road that leads to nowhere and claim that she is acting in the best
interest of democracy. She is acting in the best interest of the
Republican Party but the Clinton arrogance and sense of privilege (yes,
Hillary and Bill) won’t let them see beyond their own short-sighted
obsession. Not only are the Clintons sore losers, Hillary asks to
be treated the same as the “big boys” that have been in the race yet
falls back on the gender card whenever the numbers are not falling her
way. According to the New York Times, “Mrs. Clinton told aides
that she would not be ‘bullied out’ of the race…She compared the
situation to the ‘big boys’ trying to bully a woman.” And Bill
Clinton, who knows a thing or two about girls, weighed in: “Apparently
it’s OK to say bad things about a girl. It’s OK. The only thing that
matters is what happens to you. That’s all that matters. If a
politician doesn’t want to get beat up, you shouldn’t run for office.” He should be saying that to his wife, not Obama. In
an interview with the Washington Post, Clinton said she stands a better
chance of defeating McCain in November, though most polls give the edge
to Obama. Waving the gender card, she said, “You cannot as a Democrat
win the White House without a very big women’s vote. What I believe is
that women will turn out for me.” Some critics argue that the issue is larger than that. Appearing
Sunday on “Meet the Press,” New York Times columnist David Brooks said,
“I think she should slow down the campaign, run what Mike Huckabee ran,
a dignified campaign, not attacking her opponents, go through North
Carolina and then get out.” Brooks explained, “She really has
very little opportunity to win. The Jeremiah Wright thing was big, the
big scandal, the biggest thing Barack Obama’s faced really in months.
It didn’t hurt him. We now have the polling results from poll after
poll. It’s clear that it didn’t hurt him. The voters were not
shaken off him. Michigan and Florida are not going to revote, the super
delegates are never going to overrule the pledged delegates, so her
chances are really small.” Her chances of winning are small because voters dislike Hillary Clinton, the person. This is the way “Meet the Press” moderator Tim Russert summed it up: RUSSERT:
Here's the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. Head to head,
Clinton, Obama, 45-45. It's a pick 'em. In the general election, McCain
over Clinton, 46- 44. Obama over McCain, 44-42. Both within the margin
of error. “Here's the favorable, unfavorable. Hillary Clinton. It
is now 37 positive, negative 48. Just two weeks ago, Clinton was at
45-43. She's dropped 8 points with her positive rating in two weeks.
And look at the breakdown by party. Republicans, 10 positive, 79
negative; independents, just 24 percent positive, 56 percent negative;
Democrats split 66, 17. “Obama, his positive is 49-32. Two weeks
ago, it was 51-28. A modest drop in two weeks during the whole Reverend
Wright controversy. Here's breakdown by party. His positive amongst
Republicans is 19. Remember, Clinton's was 10. Independents, it's
49. Clinton's was 24. Democrats, it's 71. Clinton's was 66. Who can
unite the country? This is all voters, Democrats, Republicans,
independents. Obama, 60 to 34; McCain, 58-35; Clinton, 46 to 50.” RUSSERT: Who do the Republicans want to run against? BROOKS: I think they still want to run against Hillary. Not because she is a “girl,” but because she is the weakest of the two remaining Democratic candidates. Democratic
National Committee Howard Dean’s proposed solution to this mess is to
have super delegates make up their minds by July 1. Why should the
party’s eventual nominee be forced to slug this out for another three
months? If we don’t know Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton by now, we
won’t ever know them. Democrats need to act now. In even more
crushing news for the Clinton camp, weekend caucus voting in Texas gave
Obama a clear victory and possibly a win for the entire state. In the
second phase of what is called the Texas 2-Step – which is actually a
three-step process – representatives of both Obama and Clinton agree
that Obama won the balloting on Saturday and Sunday, giving him a overall lead in the state. Though
Clinton won the popular vote on March 4 over Obama with a 65-61
delegate lead, Obama won 38-29 among at-large delegates over the
weekend, giving him a 5-point total delegate lead. The third and final
step comes June 6 when super delegates vote in Austin. If Obama
escapes with a win in Texas – a state Bill Clinton said Hillary must
win in order to continue in the race – no one expects Hillary to
suddenly withdraw. Neither she nor Bill has demonstrated that much
class.
Previous Column:
Racial Divides Remain, so Let's Talk - and Listen
Back To Columns |