The winner of tomorrow's primary in Pennsylvania will be determined by the margin. As James Carville would say, "It's the margin stupid." If Senator Obama (disclaimer: I am a supporter of Senator Obama) loses by less than 5 points, he could make the case that Senator Clinton has no chance whatsoever to catch up to him (in terms of pledged delegates and/or popular vote), and that all the recent controversies, from Rev. Wright to his alleged association with William Ayers, have not had a lasting impact on his candidacy.
However, if Senator Clinton wins by 10 points or more, not only she would live to fight another day, but there would be serious concerns among several democrats, myself included, about the ability of Senator Obama to win in the fall.
More importantly, if Senator Obama loses by 10 points or more tomorrow while outspending Senator Clinton by a ratio of almost 3-1 in Pennsylvania, there would be serious and legitimate question raised about his fall strategy and the electoral map that would allow him to defeat Senator McCain. His inability to win in key states such as Ohio and Pennsylvania would be troublesome especially if we take into consideration the margin of his defeat and the demographic groups that seem impermeable to his message. Furthermore, it would also mean that Senator Obama could not take advantage of his superior fund-raising capabilities against Senator Clinton, and probably his money advantage would not be a serious weapon against Senator McCain in the fall in these key states. Finally, a 10 point defeat would certainly mean that all the controversies that have plagued his campaign recently, such as Rev. Wright's remarks and so forth, have had some serious and lasting impact on the electorate.
Therefore, a deeper and more careful breakdown of Senator Obama defeat would certainly give us a better idea of the lacunae of the Senator. How he would do in key demographic groups such as white middle class folks earning <50K and rural voters is a serious indicator of how these groups would behave and vote in the fall. If Senator Obama could not convince white middle class democrats of the merit of his candidacy in a democratic primary in a key states such as Pennsylvania and Ohio [Rasmussen survey shows McCain with a 7% lead over Obama in Ohio, by 10% over Obama in Florida, and he trails McCain badly in Virginia, which has been trending blue recently. Also McCain currently is narrowly ahead of Obama in New Hampshire, New Jersey, Wisconsin and Michigan. What is worrisome is a Marist poll released last week that shows McCain ahead of Obama by 2% in New York. The same poll reminds the reads that in early April in 2004 Kerry was up by 18% in NY state. In the same polls, Clinton leads McCain in all these states and in some of them by double digits], it would be hard to imagine that he would do better in the general elections.
Let's cooler heads prevail tomorrow after we see and digest the results. Let us refrain from insulting and blaming each other tomorrow, and let us keep our eyes on the prize, which is the White House. This is our ultimate goal and objective. Finally, tomorrow's results would indicate one way or another the feasibility and necessity of a united ticket of Obama-Clinton or Clinton-Obama. We will know the answer whether the dream ticket would become the necessity ticket.
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