Wednesday, May 21, 2008

What is Clinton's argument now?

Hillary Clinton does not lack for victories. She has had several recently.

What she lacks is a way to make her victories meaningful. What she lacks is an argument.

What is the game-changing argument that will cause the superdelegates, who will decide the Democratic nomination, to vote for her?

That she has won Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania, Indiana, West Virginia and Kentucky in the last few weeks? OK, yeah, they know that. They saw that on TV.

That she can win key states in November? Yep, so she says.

That she leads in the popular vote? Well, that depends on how you do the math.

That she continues to win white, working-class voters? Yawn.

Hillary Clinton won a huge victory in Kentucky on Tuesday night, and you know what happens next? Nothing probably. Nothing good. Not for her, anyway. Not if the past is prologue.

Last week, Clinton won West Virginia by an incredible 41 percentage points — a quadruple landslide! — and since then Barack Obama has picked up 22 superdelegates and Clinton has picked up four.


And when you are in a place where your victories don’t matter, then you are in a very bad place.

The party insiders look at her victories and shrug. They see a different math. They see what Obama sees: a pledged delegate victory that will not be overturned by the superdelegates.

Obama put it in a measured way Tuesday night in his speech from Des Moines. “We have returned to Iowa with a majority of delegates elected by the American people,” he said, “and you have put us within reach of the Democratic nomination for president of the United States.”

Clinton’s victory speech was tough — almost defiant — when she promised to continue to campaign “by never giving up and never giving in.”

But it also had the elements of concession speech. “No matter what happens, I will work as hard as I can to elect a Democratic president this fall,” she said. “We will come together as a party, united by common values and common cause. And when we do, there will be no stopping us. We won’t just unite our party, we will unite our country.”

Even though Obama won Oregon on Tuesday night, he chose to make his victory speech in Iowa for symbolic reasons: Iowa, the very first contest of the primary campaign season, is where his victory put the first chink in Clinton’s “inevitability” armor.

Gordon Fischer, a former chairman of the Iowa Democratic Party who had endorsed Obama when he was trailing in the polls last year, told me Tuesday night: “Some candidates under the harsh spotlight and intense scrutiny actually wilt, but let’s face it, Obama has grown, and his coalition has grown, but his Iowa win gave him the rocket fuel he needed.”

Obama, in his speech near the Iowa state capitol, was extremely gracious to Clinton (though it is easy to be gracious when you’ve virtually won). “The road here has been long, and that is partly because we’ve traveled it with one of the most formidable candidates to ever run for this office,” Obama said. “No matter how this primary ends, Sen. Clinton has shattered myths and broken barriers and changed the America in which my daughters and yours will come of age.”

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