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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
01.04.2008
Credit Where Due

Amid the steady (if not exactly frenzied) march of superdelegates toward Obama these last few weeks, it's worth asking what accounts for his relative success here. My favorite theory, courtesy of the New Democratic Network's super-sharp president, Simon Rosenberg, has to do with the sheer amount of time between March 4 and Pennsylvania.

One view of this interregnum held that it would be bad for Obama, since it gave the press nothing to do but scrutinize him and gave the Clinton campaign time to soften him up. In light of the Jeremiah Wright controversy, that wasn't completely wrong. But, as Rosenberg explained it to me last month, the seven-week layoff* would be even worse for Hillary. The reason: It deprived her campaign of a potential source of momentum (primary victories) and left pundits and superdelegates with nothing to chew over but delegate-math, which looks increasingly tough for her. "The difficulty of her ability to win is becoming more widely understood than it would be if we had a week-to-week horse race," Rosenberg told me. 

In retrospect, I think this is exactly right. Since March 4th, Hillary's daunting odds have become conventional wisdom. As a result, many (if not most) superdelegates now feel like the only thing she can achieve by staying in the race is to damage Obama's chances against McCain. Which is somewhat counter-intuitive, since it was Hillary who won the last big round of primaries, and who will likely win the next round.

Anyway, hats off to Rosenberg for anticipating this scenario. (And, for the record, he had the confidence to stick with it even as the Wright scandal was unfolding.)

*Obviously Wyoming and Mississippi happened after March 4. I'm limiting the analysis to constests that draw major media coverage.

--Noam Scheiber

Posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2008 2:00 PM with 8 comment(s)

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scottlooper said:

Great post.  Thanks, Noam.

April 1, 2008 2:30 PM

kgrant1054 said:

Right - two more states that don't really count because of their small populations or racial makeup.  Pay no attention to such places.  Oh, and they will never vote for a Democratic candidate in the general, so feel free to dismiss them out of hand.

Of course, pay no attention to the fact that Obama picked up more delegates in Texas either.  Nope, that was the result of a caucus, so it doesn't really count.  In March, what is the tally for delegates?  Obama 205, Clinton 205.  An astounding amount of momentum for Clinton, I must say.  Oh, and that is only pledged (I mean, oh hell, I don't know what she is calling them today) delegates, not superdelegates (same problem).  

April 1, 2008 3:11 PM

blackton said:

and maybe, just maybe (and I will get killed for this) but Hillary really doesn't wear well with superdelegates, her overbearing and arrogant manner, her shrill hectoring tone, her fake plastered on smile that is reminiscent of a cheap beauty contest where she dabs her teeth with Vaseline, her outright lies and defensive posture when confronted with it, and her recent dalliances with Fox News, Scaife, Rush, etc. also sends them a clear message. Hillary is all tactics, no strategy and will never be President.

Rhub. it is tied now? Good lord, what a train wreck is the Clinton Campaign

April 1, 2008 3:30 PM

guyminuslife said:

Blackton, we don't have to hate her smile. None of us really knows the off-the-record Hillary. Remember when they said "Gore's actually an amiable guy in person?" and everyone laughed at the thought of Pinocchio coming to life? That crowd is different, more guarded, less human when they're on camera.

April 1, 2008 4:28 PM

roidubouloi said:

Mr. Scheiber,

I am quite mystified by your claim that Hillary won the last big round of primaries.  Hardly.

April 1, 2008 5:46 PM

tkozal said:

Blackton, your post makes my day!

And Hillary is the one Pol I would bet is not more human off camera. I mean she has to go deep below the sea to recharge herself on radiation.

April 2, 2008 8:54 AM

sportdoc62 said:

If a tenth of what Christopher Hitchens said about her on Slate on Monday is true (i.e. that she persuaded Bill to hold off on intervention in Bosnia, in order to presumably not doom her [doomed] heatlh care plan), she is even more calculating and cold behind the scenes.

April 2, 2008 1:15 PM

Annabella2 said:

Never mind calculating and cold...One cold live with that.  It might even be good qualities in a President in hard times... it is the awful judgment always.  The inability ever to pack it in on anything.  Read Ted Marmor et al on her misjudgments on health care, which she is still insisting in this campaign, 16, yes 16 years later that she was right on and by gum she is going to prove it, if she has to force it down everyone's throats.  She makes Nixon look good and didn't someone compare her potential campaign to that of nNxon in 1968... can't win on likability will have to win on sheer doggedness.  Well it just ain't playing as well.  And Obama is far more able as a pol and yes as an organizer than Humphrey was.

Think about just how brilliant and innovative his campaign has been, from the fund raising, to the organizing, to the use of the internet (and not just for fundraising) to recognizing she was going to ignore the caucus states.

HRC strategy was flawed from the start.  And it was clear as the get go from NH on... the Democratic Party simply could not turn its back to its most loyal constituency to go awooing the Reagan Democrats, who might not even vote for HRC in November in all events.  Of course they have to take a flyer on Obama and hope that he can pull it off as miraculously in November as he has until now and do it by forging a new base for the Democratic party, based on the future rather than a past core group that has been remarkably disloyal anyway:  The Reagan Democrats.

April 2, 2008 11:19 PM