Clinton Defeats Obama in Pennsylvania, Vows to March On

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Hillary Clinton celebrates her Pennsylvania primary victory Tuesday in Philadelphia with Gov. Ed Rendell. (AP Photo)

Hillary Clinton declared the “tide is turning” Tuesday after scoring a critical victory in the Pennsylvania Democratic primary, pushing the race ever forward to the nine remaining contests.

With 99 percent of precincts reporting, Clinton had 55 percent and Barack Obama had 45 percent, a comfortable enough margin to deny critics their demand that she quit the race.

“Some counted me out and said to drop out,” Clinton told cheering supporters at a rally in Philadelphia. “But the American people don’t quit. And they deserve a president who doesn’t quit either.”

Having already locked down the Republican nomination after the March 4 primaries, John McCain easily coasted to victory in Pennsylvania Tuesday, pulling 73 percent with 98 percent of precincts reporting.

Clinton beat Obama in the Keystone State primary with a big boost from her core constituencies, including lower income and union households, but she also ended up overperforming among some groups that are Obama strongholds, including college-educated voters and last-minute decision makers.

Pre-election surveys cast Clinton as the favorite in Pennsylvania, but she was under pressure to win big in the state. Trailing Obama in pledged delegates, she’s trying to win over uncommitted superdelegates by arguing that she’s more electable against McCain in a general election. A big win in Pennsylvania helps strengthen her argument that she is dominating in large swing states critical to Democrats in November.

“Hillary has won all the states we have to win in the general election,” Clinton campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe told FOX News after the race was called, touting the fact that Clinton won Pennsylvania despite being largely outspent in the state by Obama.

Clinton, too, stressed that she did not have the same cash flow as Obama and urged supporters to donate to the campaign. The Clinton campaign claimed it raised $500,000 online in the first hour after polls closed Tuesday.

Obama said Tuesday night that he “closed the gap” in Pennsylvania, despite those who “didn’t think we could make this a race.”

One hundred fifty-eight delegates are at stake in Pennsylvania, the largest payoff of any contest left on the calendar.

But Indiana and North Carolina together offer more than that when those states vote May 6, and Obama was already gearing his campaign toward Indiana as results from Pennsylvania rolled in. He held his election night rally in Evansville, Ind., while Clinton held hers in Philadelphia.

Speaking in Indiana, Obama offered a warning to voters not to be distracted by political bickering — the kind that may have hurt his performance in Pennsylvania.

“After 14 long months, it’s easy to forget what this campaign is about from time to time, to lose sight of the fierce urgency of this moment. It’s easy to get caught up in the distractions and the silliness and the tit-for-tat that consumes our politics — the bickering that none of us are entirely immune to and that trivializes the profound issues: two wars, an economy in recession, a planet in peril,” he said.

Exit polls in Pennsylvania showed Clinton hanging on to key voting blocs — women, seniors, whites, union members and lower-income households. The polls showed she was leading in union households by 57 to 42 percent, and among seniors by 60 to 39 percent.

But Obama was holding a commanding lead among black and young voters, as well as among college-educated voters, who exit polls showed were breaking for Obama by a margin of 54 to 46 points. Among urban voters, he was getting 69 percent of them compared with 31 percent for Clinton.

Robert Friedrich, political science professor at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pa., said earlier Tuesday that a big margin — of at least eight or nine points — was critical for Clinton in Pennsylvania.

But Clinton said Tuesday that “a win is a win” and early on questioned why Obama was unable to turn things around.

“I think maybe the question ought to be, ‘Why can’t he close the deal with his extraordinary financial advantage?’ Why can’t he win … this one if that’s the way it turns out?” Clinton said Tuesday.

As polls showed Clinton consistently ahead in the state, Obama downplayed expectations going into the race’s final hours, and his campaign argued that the outcome of the primary will not change the dynamic of the race.

“It’s an uphill battle,” Obama said, campaigning at a Pittsburgh diner earlier in the day.

An Obama campaign memo claimed, “The Clinton campaign needs a blowout victory in Pennsylvania to get any closer to winning.”

Privately, the Clinton campaign was shooting for the big win. A large margin would help her make a significant dent in the delegate count, and help her convince uncommitted superdelegates to back her candidacy.

As of Tuesday evening, Obama claimed 1,705 delegates to Clinton’s 1,575. They’re aiming to reach 2,025 delegates to clinch the nomination.

The Pennsylvania vote came after an increasingly bitter and negative contest between the two Democratic candidates.

In the closing days of the campaign, Obama cast doubts on his rival’s honesty while Clinton questioned whether Obama was thick-skinned enough to handle the pressures of the presidency. She hammered him for telling a group of California donors recently that small-town voters “cling” to religion and guns out of bitterness over lost jobs.

Exit polls, however, showed that voters thought Clinton was the one hitting below the belt the most.

Asked which side was fighting unfairly, 68 percent said Clinton and just under 50 percent said Obama.

Meanwhile, near-record turnout was the expectation in Pennsylvania, similar to other states that have seen voters flood the polls.

Pedro A. Cortes, Pennsylvania secretary of state, said he expected turnout to be between 40 and 50 percent. Turnout exceeded 2.25 million Democratic voters.

“This feels like a general election, not a primary,” he said.

About one-third that many Republicans went to the polls in the mostly ceremonial GOP vote.

FOX News’ Aaron Bruns, Bonney Kapp, Caroline Shively and Judson Berger and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

124 Responses to “Clinton Defeats Obama in Pennsylvania, Vows to March On”

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Comment by Not Obama lol

Wow, the Republicans in Penn. that temporarily switched parties for primary season pulled it off voting for the weaker candidate (Obama) so that McCain will have a better chance at winning for sure come November.

 
Comment by DCBill

These are some of the best and objective comments I have read on this web site since the primary season started. I am especially impressed with Bill Adams’ posting. I for one have sometimes let my anger out when posting and will be the first to admit my apathy toward the Clintons. This apathy first and foremost exists because I am a Vietnam veteran, quite proud of being one, and I highly resent their attitude toward the military and veterans as a whole.. I am also a Conservative and voted only once for a Democrat (for Congress). There are however Democrats I do admire such as Sam Nunn, the late Scoop Jackson, and others. I also admired Hubert Humphrey not for his politics (never wold have voted for him) but Hubert Humphrey the man. The truth is Hillary has a significant credibility factor. In other words people do not trust her and this was pointed out in Pennsylvania or she would have won by a bigger margin. Obama has far too much baggage and totally lacks experience. His baggage includes some he has associated with (Wright, Ayers/Dorn, etc.) and this recent endorsement of Michael Moore is no help. He is way too far to the left and would be an ineffective leader even more so than Jimmy Carter.

General Patton said it all when stating “Americans will not tolerate a loser.” The opening scene of the George C. Scott film is a reenactment of an actual speech given by this famous general and to this day is in many ways representative of main stream America. It boils down to McCain is a living example of a winner and talks like one. Hillary and Obama project the image of losers and both are very negative. Both are out of touch with main stream America whereas McCain is mainstream America.

 
Comment by steve

At least count the popular vote from Florida even if they won’t count the delegate votes.

so at least the people in florida won’t feel completely left out.

if not for stupid howard dean this race would be tied

 
Comment by CD

Hopefully this is a a wakeup call (that didn’t come to late) for Obama. Someone apparantly told him he was already the nominee and that he could stand above it all, while Clinton is willing to do anything to de-thrown him. He had better come off that throne and get into the fight. He can’t take Hillary for granted…it’s not over til the fat lady sings.

 
Comment by Robert Davidson

God Bless “Operation Chaos!” It’s obvious the crossover Republicans propelled Senator Clinton to the double digit victory in Pennsylvania.

 
Comment by Len Firewood

HRC’s win was in SINGLE DIGITS not the 10 percentage points quoted here and elsewhere in the media!!! The actual gap with over 99% of the vote in is a mere 8.5%!!!
No doubt her win is being rounded up because all too many in the media had been saying that any win in the single digits wouldn’t be credible enough to justify continuing what has already been a vbruising campaign for the DNC party. Now I wonder why many in the media now seem to want encourage the fight to go on….answers on a postcard…

 
Comment by Joyce

It has been so much fun watching the Democratic Party self-destruct never to be a viable Party again! I hope Obama and Clinton keep on clawing at each other as everyday they are showing exactly how unqualified they are for the Presidency.

 
Comment by jimbo

” NO HE CAN’T” - that should be the headline. Even after outspending Clinton 3 to 1 Obama still CANNOT win over the blue collar workers and he CANNOT win a big State outside of Illinois. Wake up America. He does not represent the average american and the good people of Pa showed him the door. Obama flew out of there as fast as he could - with his tail between his legs. Good Riddens !
Go Hillary !!!!

 
Comment by Marilyn

For every movment forward that hillary makes, our country goes further away from decency.

That disgusting, lying woman, and her obnoxious husband are disgraces.

WAKE UP AMERICA!

The time for the lying, cheating horrible clinton due IS WAY OVER!

 
Comment by K.F. Miller

Hillary is now ahead in the popular vote (counting in MI and FL). If you leave out MI, she and Obama are basically tied. She is ahead in the electoral vote count of states won. If the Democrats used a winner-take-all format, she would be ahead. To get his tiny lead in delegates, Obama has relied on caucuses and demographically-favorable states, a strategy that will not work in November. If the Wright/bitter scandals had hit in January, he would be out of the race by now. Superdelegates - wake up! Don’t let animosity toward the Clintons allow you to give up the election in the fall. Obama is manifestly unqualified and cannot win. Hillary is the party’s only choice.

 

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