Obama beats Clinton in Mississippi primary as expected
www.chinaview.cn 2008-03-12 08:32:55   Print

Special Report: U.S. presidential election 2008     

¡¤Obama had been expected to win in the state, given the demographic factors favorable to him.
¡¤Obama has been leading by between 6 and 24 percentage points in polls since last week.
¡¤Obama has swept states with large African-American electorates so far.
  

    WASHINGTON, March 11 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Democratic Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois beat Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York in Tuesday's Mississippi primary, which is racially polarized.

    With 88 percent of the precincts reporting, Obama led Clinton 59 percent to 39 percent.

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate and Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) (C) arrives to speak in Laramie, Wyoming, March 7, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate and Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) (C) arrives to speak in Laramie, Wyoming, March 7, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters File Photo)
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    Obama, an African-American, had been expected to win, given the demographic factors favorable to him.

    The state has a larger proportion of African-Americans (37 percent of the total population) than any other state in the country.

    Black voters make up nearly 70 percent of registered Democrats.

    The state's Democratic voters were sharply divided among racial lines, exit polls indicate.

    As has been the case in many primary states, Obama won overwhelming support from African-American voters. They went for him over Clinton 91-9 percent.

    But Mississippi white voters overwhelmingly backed the New York senator, supporting her over Obama 72 percent to 21 percent.

    Only two other primary states were as racially polarized -- neighboring Alabama, and Clinton's former home state of Arkansas.

    In the Tuesday's race, Obama will collect a majority of the 33 delegates at stake, but Clinton will also garner a share because the delegate allocation will be proportional, not winner take all.     

    "What we've tried to do is steadily make sure that in each state we are making the case about the need for change in this country. Obviously the people in Mississippi responded," Obama told CNN after his win.

    When asked if he thinks his contest against Clinton has gotten "too nasty," he replied:

    "I've been careful to say that I think Sen. Clinton is a capable person and that should she win the nomination, obviously I would support her," Obama said.

    "I'm not sure we've been getting that same approach from the Clinton campaign," he added.

    However, Obama said he's sure Democrats can reunite because the nation needs "a significant shift from the Bush policies" and Sen.John McCain of Arizona, the Republican presumptive nominee for president, "represents a continuation."

    Clinton's campaign issued a statement congratulating Obama on his win, and said they "look forward to campaigning in Pennsylvania and around the country as this campaign continues."

    Pennsylvania is the next battleground for the Democrats. It holds its primary on April 22 and has 158 delegates at stake.

    Obama's victory in Mississippi further demonstrated his appeal in the Deep South, but also added fuel to Clinton's argument that his success in the nomination race is built tenuously on states where Democrats face dim prospects in November.

    His win in Mississippi, together with his 24-percentage-point victory in Wyoming's caucuses last Saturday, are his latest triumphs in smaller states.

    However, if history is any guide, that will be irrelevant to Democrats in the general election.

    Mississippi has not voted for a Democrat since Jimmy Carter in 1976 while Lyndon Johnson, in 1964, was the last Democrat to win Wyoming.   

Obama refuses to be running mate of Clinton

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate and Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) (C) arrives to speak in Laramie, Wyoming, March 7, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate and Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) (C) arrives to speak in Laramie, Wyoming, March 7, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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    WASHINGTON, March 10 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Senator Barack Obama Monday flatly rejected suggestions he would be a vice presidential running mate for Senator Hillary Clinton.

    Obama made the remarks at a rally in Columbus, Mississippi, CNN reported.  Full story

Obama wins Wyoming Democratic caucuses

    BEIJING, March. 9 (Xinhuanet) -- U.S. presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama won the Wyoming caucus on Saturday, projected to be beating his rival Hillary Clinton in the state by a wide margin, U.S. media reported on Sunday.

    The victory, while in a state with only 18 delegates, was welcome news for the Obama campaign as it sought to blunt Clinton¡¯s momentum coming off her victories in Ohio and Texas on Tuesday.  Full story

Ohio becomes campaign center for Clinton, Obama

    BEIJING, March 3 -- Presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama waged a tight campaign fight across Ohio on Sunday two days before crucial voting that could virtually nail down the Democratic nomination or prolong the party battle into the spring.

    One prominent Democrat worried that extended infighting after the voting in four states on Tuesday could split the party into two camps and give a big boost to the presumptive Republican nominee, Arizona Sen. John McCain. Full story

    WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Democratic presidential front-runner Sen. Barack Obama (D-NY) received endorsement Tuesday from Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), one of his former rivals in nomination race.

    At a news conference in Cleveland, Ohio, Dodd called on fellow Democrats "to come together, to get behind this candidacy (of Obama)."  Full story

Editor: Jiang Yuxia
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