Politics

After Pennsylvania, still a close race

Sen. Hillary Clinton won decisively, but she's still trailing Sen. Barack Obama in delegates. Next: North Carolina and Indiana.

After Pennsylvania, still a close race
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by

Ted Van Dyk

Sen. Hillary Clinton won decisively, but she's still trailing Sen. Barack Obama in delegates. Next: North Carolina and Indiana.

The Tuesday, April 22, Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary, won handily by New York Sen. Hillary Clinton, went exactly as anticipated and confirmed patterns that have deepened as the process has proceeded.

Short term, Clinton's victory kept her in the nominating race and will provide a respectable point of departure going into the North Carolina and Indiana primaries May 6. It was particularly noteworthy because she was outspent 2.5-to-1 in Pennsylvania by Illinois Sen. Barack Obama — and despite the fact that a strong majority of Pennsylvania Democrats said they expected Obama to win the nomination.

What comes next?

Both candidates will campaign intensely in North Carolina and Indiana. North Carolina, with a big African-American vote, is expected to go to Obama by at least 10 percentage points. Indiana, at this stage, is a tossup.

Media pundits and many Democratic party leaders have urged Clinton to concede on the basis that, without Michigan and Florida victories, there is no way she can collect enough delegates to win the nomination. Rank-and-file Democratic voters have not shown similar sentiment and appear in no hurry to settle things. As noted, even though a majority in Pennsylvania expected an eventual Obama nomination, they nonetheless gave Clinton a handsome popular-vote victory (even though the division of delegates will be far narrower).

This reflects a syndrome that normally takes place in Democratic presidential nominating processes. Whether reflecting buyer's remorse, or a desire to play the full nine innings of the nominating process, voters traditionally in later primary contests have provided strong showings and even victories to runners-up. Clinton could be the beneficiary of this syndrome in 2008 — especially if voters feel she faces undue pressure to withdraw.

I noted in an earlier article that the Obama-Clinton contest has been far tamer and more civil than, for instance, the Democratic nominating contests of 1948, 1960, 1968, 1972, 1976, 1980, 1984, or 2004. Anxiety that Obama and Clinton will destroy themselves before their party's August convention seems overblown. It mainly appears to be based on Democrats' fears that their nominee might blow what appeared earlier to be an almost certain victory this fall.

The Obama-Clinton contest can and will go forward. Obama remains the favorite for the nomination. But Clinton remains within striking distance and could benefit from a major Obama blunder or scandal. Obama will not wrap things up until or unless he finishes with decisive victories between now and the last contest, June 3.

Obama's problem: He has convinced Democrats he is a nice guy and a unifier. But he also has shown he lacks a killer instinct. Hillary's problem: Everyone knows she has a killer instinct. But nice-gal unifying is not her game.

McCain, in meantime, is beginning to get heretofore absent media scrutiny of his public and private records. Washington Post and New York Times stories over the past few days have stressed his unpleasant hair-trigger temper and his ties to Arizona special interests.

All this serves to remind that our would-be leaders — and our presidents, once elected — are not larger-than-life super people but more like the rest of us than can be imagined. Better to have no illusions going in.

Ted Van Dyk

By Ted Van Dyk

Ted Van Dyk has been active in national policy and politics since 1961, serving in the White House and State Department and as policy director of several Democratic presidential campaigns. He is auth