channelnewsasia.com - Obama seeks more wins over Clinton in 'Potomac Primary'
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
World News

 
 

Obama seeks more wins over Clinton in 'Potomac Primary'
Posted: 11 February 2008 0434 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 
Related News
Obama pummels Clinton in White House clean sweep
Democrats slug it out as Huckabee takes Kansas in White House race
McCain seeks conservative support for Republican bid
Special Report
Super Tuesday


WASHINGTON : Democrat Barack Obama looked Sunday to ride a wave of weekend wins to deal Hillary Clinton new defeats in the "Potomac Primary," a trio of contests that have gained importance in the tight White House race.

Buoyed by four victories on Saturday, Obama was campaigning in Virginia, which holds primaries on Tuesday along with its Potomac river neighbors, Maryland and the US capital Washington.

Obama, who seeks to become the first black US president, is considered the favorite to take Maryland and Washington, which have large African-American population.

The former first lady also looks vulnerable in Virginia as an average of opinion polls by RealClearPolitics.com, an independent poll-tracking website, showed Obama leading by 17 percentage points.

The closest Democratic nomination race in recent memory has made every caucus and primary a crucial contest, as Obama and Clinton battle for every single delegate who will formally crown the nominee in the party's convention.

After their battle ended in a stalemate on the 22-state Super Tuesday, Obama won big on Saturday in Washington state, Nebraska, Louisiana, and the Virgin Islands, outscoring the former first lady by 2 to 1.

"We won north, we won south, we won in between," Obama, 46, told 6,000 cheering guests in an electrifying speech at a Democratic dinner in Virginia.

"People want to turn the page. They want to write a new chapter in American history. And today the voters from the west coast to the Gulf coast to the heart of America stood up to say yes, we can."

Clinton, 60, was also pumping up the crowds at the Jefferson-Jackson dinner in Richmond, Virginia, asking: "Are you ready to take back the White House and take back our country?"

Caucuses were being held in Maine on Sunday. But Saturday's losses have raised the stakes for Clinton, who badly needs a win column to gain momentum before bigger prizes, Texas and Ohio, vote on March 4.

Virginia is the biggest prize of the Potomac Primary with 83 delegates, while Maryland counts 70 of them. The US capital, which is not part of any state, offers 15 delegates.

Clinton and Obama are locked in a tussle for delegates to the party's convention in Denver, Colorado, in August, chasing the 2,025 delegates needed to win the nomination for November's presidential elections.

A RealClearPolitics.com count of delegates shows that Obama narrowed Clinton's slim lead following Saturday's contests. The New York senator has 1,121 delegates compared to 1,106 for Obama.

On the Republican side, John McCain failed to win in Kansas and Louisiana, proving he has yet to convince many conservatives despite becoming the likely party nominee after main rival Mitt Romney quit the race last week.

The two states went to ordained Baptist minister Mike Huckabee, who has vowed to fight on despite having little chance of overcoming McCain's huge delegate lead. He took Kansas by 60 percent and snatched Louisiana with 44 percent to 42 percent for McCain.

McCain won the Republican caucuses in Washington state, but his narrow victory -- 26 percent against 24 percent for Huckabee and 21 percent for Texas Congressman Ron Paul -- showed conservatives remain suspicious of him.

A Vietnam war hero, McCain, 71, has some 724 delegates to 234 for Huckabee. A total of 1,191 are needed for the nomination.

But Huckabee has been doing well in conservative, rural states.

"I majored in miracles, and I still believe in them," he told supporters Saturday, warning McCain "the game is on."

- AFP /ls

 

 



Other world News
Floods, mudslides kill 124 in El Salvador as Ida rages on
US Army appeals for help in Fort Hood inquiry
Wall anniversary celebrations kick off in Berlin
Colombia to seek UN help as Chavez readies army for war
Obama to meet with Israel's Netanyahu on Monday
Honduras president, de facto leader spar over deal
Fort Hood investigators see suspect as lone gunman
Iraq approves 2010 election law
Obama wins big as House approves health care overhaul
Hurricane Ida floods kill 91 in El Salvador
London Mayor Saves Filmmaker from Mugging
Iraq's explosives detection gadget does not work, says US general
Rebels shoot down Yemen warplane as fighting rages
Iran MP says UN-proposed nuclear deal still on table

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions