Why the Democratic race could end in North Carolina
RALEIGH, N.C. (USA Today) — The end could be near.
Or the endgame, at least, of a surprisingly drawn-out Democratic presidential contest. Four months and 42 states after the opening Iowa caucuses, the primary in North Carolina on May 6 now looms as a pivotal final showdown between Illinois Sen. Barack Obama and New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Or the endgame, at least, of a surprisingly drawn-out Democratic presidential contest. Four months and 42 states after the opening Iowa caucuses, the primary in North Carolina on May 6 now looms as a pivotal final showdown between Illinois Sen. Barack Obama and New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.
1 Comments:
This article is nothing but content-free wishful thinking. It shoots itself in the foot. Numerically, all of North Carolina's delegates moving one way or the other cannot possibly have any affect on the outcome.
What Obama's cheerleaders continue to ignore is the fact that committed delegates are not committed to anything in the DNC's system (typical postmodernist fluff). This will be a brokered convention and the DNC will pick the candidate whom it believes will have the best chance against McCain. Obama's Magic Negroness is not as shiny as it once was, and black radicals are much scarier than feminist lesbians, as far as nervous white liberals are concerned.
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