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Obama campaign rebounds
07/05/2008 10:23  - (SA)  

  • A win each for Clinton, Obama
  • Clinton claims victory
  • Edwards won't pick sides
  • Obama battles rocky period
  • Indianapolis - Barack Obama scored a crucial win over Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday in the North Carolina Democratic primary, regaining his footing after weeks of setbacks and moving closer to becoming the first black presidential nominee of a major US political party.

    With the North Carolina victory, Obama continues to expand his advantage in delegates who will choose the party's nominee and Clinton is running out of opportunities to narrow the gap.

    Obama was on pace to finish the night within 200 delegates of the 2 025 needed to secure the Democratic nomination.

    Obama's win comes as he has struggled to overcome a gaffe about "bitter" working-class voters, criticism of his relationship with a controversial pastor and questions about his patriotism because he does not wear a flag pin.

    Obama told a raucous rally in Raleigh, North Carolina, that his win was a victory against the "politics of division and the politics of distraction".

    The North Carolina and Indiana contests were the last big-delegate prizes in Obama and Clinton's marathon race for the Democratic presidential nomination.

    The long and often divisive race has led Democrats to fear that they may be undermining their prospects for capturing the White House after two terms - eight years - of Republican President George W Bush - despite Bush's unpopularity.

    Obama, an inexperienced but often-inspiring 46-year-old senator, stunned the political establishment by winning 11 consecutive contests in February. He appeared poised to defeat Clinton, who was once considered the all-but-inevitable nominee. But Clinton, while on the cusp of elimination, won major primaries in March and April.

    Clear leader

    Obama's failure to lock up the nomination has led to growing doubts about whether he can attract the white, working class voters needed for Democrats to win in the November election against the presumptive Republican nominee John McCain.

    Those doubts have been aggravated by the unending attention given to his relationship with his pastor, the Rev Jeremiah Wright, whose inflammatory remarks included suggestions that the United States brought the September 11 attacks upon itself.

    Yet Obama remains the clear leader in the count of delegates to the party's national convention in August in Denver. Obama won at least 55 delegates on Tuesday, according to an analysis of election returns by The Associated Press. Clinton won at least 46 delegates, with 86 still to be awarded.

    Overall, Obama leads with 1 800.5 delegates to 1 654 for Clinton.

    Obama acknowledged there were "bruised feelings on both sides" in the fight for the nomination.

    Still, he said, "We intend to march forward as one Democratic Party, united by a common vision for this country."

    "We can't afford to give John McCain the chance to serve out George Bush's third term," he said.

    The weak US economy has dominated the campaign and was by far the top issue in North Carolina and Indiana, according to interviews with voters as they left polling places. Record-high gas prices are a huge concern across the car-loving country.

    Racial divide

    The candidates sparred in recent days over Clinton's call for a temporary suspension of the federal gasoline tax. Clinton said it would help beleaguered drivers; Obama ridiculed the proposal as a political stunt that would cost jobs.

    Exit polls in Indiana, a midwestern state, charted a racial divide that has become familiar in a long, historic campaign pitting a black man against a white woman.

    Obama was gaining more than 90% of the black vote in Indiana, while Clinton was winning an estimated 61% of the white vote there, running ahead of her rival among white men as well as women.

    She also had 51% of independents' votes, to 49 for her rival, a statistical tie, and was winning among Democrats, 53-47.

    Obama's win in North Carolina mirrored earlier triumphs in Southern states with large black populations, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana and South Carolina among them.

    In North Carolina, Clinton won 60% of the white vote, but Obama claimed support from roughly 90% of the blacks who cast ballots.

    To a large extent, the gasoline tax eclipsed the attention surrounding Wright, his former pastor. After saying several weeks earlier that he could not disown Wright for his fiery sermons, Obama did precisely that when the minister embarked on a media tour.

    At a news conference in North Carolina last week, Obama equated Wright's comments with "giving comfort to those who prey on hate".

    Voters in both states were divided evenly when asked whether the controversy surrounding Wright was a factor in their decisions.

    The balance of the primary schedule includes West Virginia, with 28 delegates on May 13; Oregon with 52 and Kentucky with 51 a week later; Puerto Rico with 55 delegates on June 1, and Montana with 16 and South Dakota with 15 on June 3.

     
     



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