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Political Analysis: Dynamics of the Obama Campaign’s Historic Achievement By Dr. Martin Kilson, PhD, BckCommentator.com Editorial Board

Prologue

This is my seventh probe in real time of the course of Senator Barack Obama's campaign for the Democratic Party presidential nomination. In this article  (which I'm writing between May 20th and May 22nd), I want appraise key attributes of the Obama campaign and how they contributed to the historic achievement of the first African-American to gain a major political party's presidential nomination. I conclude the article with a critique of the Clinton campaign's cynical and tawdry race-card maneuvers that have sought to prevent the Obama campaign's historic achievement.

Now that the May 20th Kentucky and Oregon primaries have been completed (Clinton winning the former, Obama the latter) and only three primaries remain (Puerto Rico- June 1, South Dakota-Montana- June 30, it is certain that whatever the outcome of those primaries Senator Barack Obama of Illinois will gain the Democratic Party nomination in August. Interestingly enough, two days after Senator Hillary Clinton's victory by 9-percentage points in April 22nd Pennsylvania primary the Wall Street Journal columnist, Daniel Henninger, had decided that the predominate media appraisal that the Pennsylvania victory revived Clinton's chances to win the Democratic nomination was mistaken. Instead, Henninger presented an alternative and prescient prognosis—that the Democratic nomination would go to Senator Obama. 

Other than ensuring the Greatest Show on Earth will continue, does it matter that Hillary Clinton defeated Barack Obama Tuesday [April 22] in Pennsylvania by nine-plus points? Barack Obama is the nominee.  ...It's going to be McCain versus Obama in 2008.  I believe that cement set around the Clinton coffin when the Obama campaign announced it had received the support of former Sens. Sam Nunn of North Carolina and David Boren of Oklahoma. 

...Obama receiving their imprimatur is like hands reaching out from the graves of FDR, JKF and LBJ to announce: 'Enough is enough. This man is your nominee. Go forth and fight with the Republicans'.  Make no mistake: Superdelegates with sway took notice. (See Wall Street Journal ( April 24, 2008)).

It was also in the pages of the Wall Street Journal—its lead editorial no less—that the earliest prediction by a major newspaper that Senator Obama would be the Democratic nominee was offered. This occurred way back in the Wall Street Journal (February 13, 2008), following Obama's victory in the February 5th Super Tuesday 22-state primaries, and a week later in the February 12th so -called Potomac primary (Maryland-Virginia-Washington, D.C.). The editors of that great capitalist newspaper conjured something at this mid-point in the 2008 primary tea leaves that other media conjurers missed and didn't hesitate to hazard a broader meaning. To wit:

The rise and rise of Barack Obama is a remarkable political event, and to judge by last night [Potomac primary] it is only gaining speed. With three more victories in the 'Potomac primary', including a crushing rout in Virginia, the Illinois Senator must now be judged the favorite for the Democratic nomination. Let that one sink in for a moment. The rookie candidate from Illinois...is leading the most successful Democratic machine of the last generation.... [Emphasis added]

How did this Wall Street Journal prognosis become reality? How on earth could not just a rookie U.S. Senator, but an African-American political personality, fashion, on the intricate American electoral landscape, the multi-faceted capabilities to best in the 2008 Democratic Party primary contests - what the Wall Street Journal aptly dubbed “the most successful Democratic machine [the Clinton Machine] of the last generation”?

Valerie Jarrett: Engineer Of Obama Campaign

Future historians of the 2008 primary contests will no doubt identify Valerie Jarrett as an important factor in the Obama campaign's historic achievement—in fact, as the engineer of the Obama campaign.  In an Wall Street Journal (May 12, 2008) article that scooped other major newspapers, the country was informed of the virtually unknown political personality of Valerie Jarrett, whom the newspaper called “an essential member of [the Obama campaign's] inner set”.  She was also identified as “Obama's brain trust...that Barack Obama says he doesn't make a major decision without consulting adviser Valerie Jarrett.” The article continued:

'She is one of our best friends, somebody who is practically a sister' to him and his wife, Michelle, Mr. Obama said in an interview. 'I don't make any major decisions without asking her about them first.'  When she isn't traveling with him, Ms. Jarrett speaks to Mr. Obama two or three times a day, the candidate said. She is also an essential member of the coterie of advisers who have helped the couple navigate countless decisions, from whether he should run for president to how he should handle Hillary Clinton's resurgence after the Pennsylvania primary.

One week after the Wall Street Journal article on Valerie Jarrett, Newsweek Magazine (May 19, 2008) added to our knowledge of her relationship to Senator Obama. “When he wanted to  run for the U.S. Senate,” reports Newsweek, “he first had to convince Michelle and Jarrett that it was a good idea. He's been seeking her counsel ever since.”

It might be said that there's little that's ordinary about Valerie Jarrett as an “inner set” adviser to the presidential nominee of a major political party.  The Wall Street Journal article that first informed the country of Jarrett's existence had comparative references to Burt Lance who was a key adviser in Carter's campaign and Karen Hughes who was a key adviser to George W. Bush, but their resumes were, one might say, culturally, professionally, and politically slim compared to Jarrett's.  Why do I say this?

First, culturally Jarrett is an African-American, a fact containing-in-itself unique American life defining dimensions. She's the daughter of a medical scientist—a pathologist—who was the first African-American full-professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at University of Chicago, and the daughter too of a psychologist who was the president of the Erickson Institute, a Graduate School and Research Center in Child Psychology at the University of Chicago that was named after the famous development psychologist Eric Erickson.   Also, Jarrett's grandfather was the first African-American to direct a major city bureaucracy in the United States—the Chicago Housing Authority during the 1940s.

Jarrett, now 51 years old, gained her law degree from the University of Michigan Law School.  Like others among her generation-cohort of 20th century African-American professionals (the fifth-generation cohort), Jarrett and her Black professional peers benefited from the existence of numerous Black Mayors through whom they could gain significant experience in the public policy arena—a situation not available to previous generations of Black professionals.  As Newsweek Magazine (May 19, 2008) informs us, Valerie Jarrett “got her start [in public policy arena] working for Harold Washington, the city's first black mayor.”  And Jarrett's initial experience in the public policy arena was substantive and significant, as the Wall Street Journal (May 12, 2008) relates:

As a court-appointed overseer to the desegregation of public housing in Chicago, she negotiated between the city, residents of down-and-out housing projects such as Cabrini-Green, and real-estate developers who were replacing  the projects with mixed-income communities. [And] as the chairman of the board of the Chicago Stock Exchange, she juggled the concerns of hard-driving traders and New York bankers who bought a sizable stake in the sliding exchange.

Particularly interesting about Valerie Jarrett's public policy career since its debut in the late 1970s-and early-1980s Harold Washington Chicago Mayoralty, has been a persistent intertwining of Jarrett's policy function with African-American realities.  As the Wall Street Journal (May 12, 2008) reports: “...Most Recently, as a board member of the committee to bring the 2016 Summer Olympics to Chicago, she has forged cooperation between corporate leaders and the African-American community on the South Side, where most of the sporting and residential venues could be built.”

Furthermore, following Senator Obama's powerful rallying address to the 2004 Democratic Party National Convention when a degree of political tension surfaced between him and the influential Chicago civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson, Valerie Jarrett joined another Black professional in her generation-cohort (John Rogers, an African-American finance manager who heads Ariel Investments which manages a $7 billion fund) to negotiate successfully between the two potent personalities.

In 1995 following the publication of Senator Obama's autobiography Dreams From My Father, Jarrett gave up some 20-odd years working in the public policy arena to work for Habitat       Co., a major real-estate developer in Chicago of which she became CEO. The connections she developed at the top ranks of the Chicago business community proved crucial to Jarrett when she embarked upon her first major political role. That role was serving as chair of the finance committee of Barack Obama's victorious campaign for the U.S. Senate in 2004. But this was not Jarrett’s first interaction with Obama. That occurred in 1991, an event related vividly in the Wall Street Journal (May 12, 2008):

In 1991, Ms Jarrett....head of Chicago's sprawling 250-person planning and development department...wanted to hire a young Harvard Law School graduate from the South Side who was working in a private Chicago law practice. But the prospect, Michelle Robinson, said she first wanted her potential boss to meet her fiance, a savvy young lawyer named Barack Obama. The trio met at a restaurant for dinner. Ms. Jarrett—older than both by a few years and much more established—was grilled for two hours about Mayor Richard M. Daley's administration and who would be looking out for Michelle.

At the end of the conversation, she asked Mr. Obama 'if she had passed the test.' He smiled and said she had. Mrs. Obama worked for Ms. Jarrett for two years, and the trio trio became fast friends.

Although Valerie Jarrett is typically introduced “as one of the most powerful women in Chicago”--to quote the Wall Street Journal (May 12, 2008)-- when she enters the trenches of the day-to-day Obama campaign to interact with the “driver ants”, so to speak, Jarrett exhibits not her “power-self” but her “deep-compassionate self”.  As the Wall Street Journal puts it:

...When she speaks to young campaign volunteers she sounds like a concerned mother. Over four stops before lunch in and around Raleigh [during the North Carolina campaign], she encouraged volunteers to get out the vote and thanked them for trying. Twice she wiped tears from her eyes as she listened to the stories of supporters told her about what Mr. Obama's candidacy means to them.

When asked recently about her future role in a possible Obama presidential administration, Valerie Jarrett remarked: “I'm not thinking about that now”, she said. “We're just taking care of what's in front of us”. (Wall Street Journal (May 12, 2008)). What lies in front of Jarrett and the Obama campaign is a quest to heal-and-revitalize an American democracy that the Republican Party, its power-class and corporate minions, have rendered operationally decrepit. To heal-and-revitalize an American democracy that's out-of-sink with the massive needs of 21st century American citizens.

Owing in no small part to Valerie Jarrett, American citizens will have the unique opportunity in November 2008 to elect an African-American as president— a president who is fully capable of leading our country on a path of major democratic revitalization.  That the Obama campaign's achievement to date has been engineered by an African-American female professional reflects, I should add, a larger transformation of the overall status of women within the African-American intelligentsia.

By 2002, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that out of 7,931,000 employed Black females, some 11% (869,000) held “executive, administrator, managerial jobs”, and 15.2% (1,105,000) held “professional jobs”.  The Black female white-collar employed status outdistanced the white-collar employed status of 6,794,000 employed Black males as of 2002, of whom 8.7% (594,000) held “executive, administrator, managerial jobs”, and 9% (648,000) held “professional jobs”. Furthermore, as of 2006, Black females outdistanced Black males in higher education attainment too, earning two-thirds of all Bachelor's Degrees obtained by African-Americans—some 84,965 such degrees to Black women, and 42,879 to Black men. (See Journal of Blacks in Higher Education (Winter 2006-2007).

In my article for Black Commentator (September 27, 2007) titled “The Role of the Black Elite in Outreaching to the Black Lower Class”, I reflected on the new Black female white-collar employment status as follows:

This post-Civil Rights Movement era development in regard to the gender patterning of elite-level occupations is...of tectonic socio-political significance within African-American life. Among the possible outcomes of this new female-tilted patterning of elite-level occupations might be an expansion of liberal and even progressive leadership discourse and action in African-American society. And this possible development might, in turn, translate into an expansion of liberal African-American impacts upon American society in general.

That Valerie Jarrett has been the engineer of the 2008 Obama campaign for the Democratic Party presidential nomination is, I suggest, an unmistakable instance of  “liberal African-American impacts upon American society” here in the early 21st century. Senator Barack Obama's election as president in November will, it is hoped, facilitate the broadening of numerous revitalization advances in the depth, range, and quality of life-chances of American citizens in general and the life-chances of African-Americans in particular.

Obama Campaign's  Fund  Raising  Achievement:(I) Gaining Lots Of Money

The issue of Time Magazine (May 19, 2008), not only had Senator Barack Obama on its cover but it also contained two leading articles which identified several key ingredients of Obama's pending nomination as the Democratic Party's presidential candidate at its August convention.

In the first leading article titled “The Game Changer”, the columnist Joe Klein observed that “Barack Obama has refused to play by the old political rules. He's about to be rewarded for it.” One of the “old political rules” related to how major campaign funds are raised for the   tasks associated with a major political party's primary contests.    

In the second article titled “The Mistakes She [Hillary Clinton] Made”, five such mistakes are delineated: “She Misjudged The [National] Mood”; “She Didn't Master The Rules”; “She Underestimated The Caucus States”; “She Relied On Old Money”; and “She Never Counted On A Long Haul”. Elaborating the significance of mistake No. 4, the articles author—Karen Tumulty--observed, “For a decade or more, the Clintons set the standard for political fund-raising in the Democratic Party....  Her donors were typically big-check writers. But something had happened to fund-raising that Team Clinton didn't fully grasp: the Internet.”  On the other hand, Barack Obama embraced the Internet.  As Tumulty puts it:

Obama relied instead on a different model: the 800,000 plus people who had signed up on his website and could continue sending money his way $5, $10 and $50 at a time. (The campaign has raised more than $100 million on line, better than half its total.) Meanwhile, the Clintons were forced to tap the $100 million-plus fortune they had acquired since he left the White House—first for $5million in January to make it to Super Tuesday and then $6.4 million to get her through Indiana and North Carolina. (Emphasis Added)

Another perceptive characterization of what has differentiated the Obama campaign from the “play-it-by-old-political-rules” Clinton campaign was provided in a data-rich article in the Wall Street Journal (May 8, 2008). Like the articles in Time Magazine (May 19, 2008), the Wall Street Journal article singled-out the fund-raising dynamics as crucial in defining the two campaigns.

The political battle between the two candidates has been framed as one of experience versus youth, old against new. In the money hunt, Sen. Clinton has focused on the tried-and-true practice of bundling, which relies on a few hundred well-connected money raisers to wrench maximum contributions [$2,300] from donors. Sen. Obama has largely abandoned bundling, instead drawing on a Web-based cadre of hundreds of thousands of more modest givers. Sen. Obama overtook Sen. Clinton in total fund raising in February and had has raised more since. The New York senator, meanwhile, has loaned herself $6.4 million.

As numerous articles probing the fund-raising dynamics that have distinguished the Obama campaign, those dynamics derived from the grassroots Web campaign first employed by Vermont Governor Howard Dean during his quest for the Democratic Party presidential nomination in 2004. Favoring donors who give $100 or less, the Obama campaign amasses emails from donors and from the many thousands attending Obama's campaign rallies, such as the 35,000 record-setting attendees in Philadelphia during the Pennsylvania primary and another record-setting 75,000 attendees at an Obama rally in Portland during the Oregon primary. Emails so collected are, in turn, transformed into a rolling list for future fund-raising appeals.

This rolling list numbers over one million individuals. Furthermore, thousands of them become part of the Obama campaign's mass volunteer army, so to speak, citizens who perform an array of both basic and technical functions for the Obama campaign at zero cost to the campaign's budget. A more formal, data-based understanding of what Time Magazine columnist Joe Klein dubbed the Obama campaign's “Game Changer” dynamics as they relate to fund-raising is provided in TABLE I  and TABLE II.

 

By the end of March and entering April when the major primary in Pennsylvania (151 delegates) would take place, numerous newspaper articles were focused on the crucial fund-raising dynamics in the 2008 primary contests.  Typical of such articles was a data-rich one in the Boston Globe (April 10, 2008), which observed “Obama and Clinton have aggressively cultivated these armies of [low-dollar] supporters, turning to them again and again in times of need.”  The article noted, however, that what differentiated the two campaigns was the much greater fund-raising track record of the Obama campaign. As the Boston Globe article's author, Scott Helman, put it: “...While small donors are fundamental to both campaigns, they are the backbone of Obama's candidacy---the reason he has shattered fund-raising records and out-raised Clinton and the Republican candidates.”  

Another newspaper article in the Wall Street Journal (April 8, 2008) offered similar celebration of the Obama campaign's fund-raising track record, observing that “A key component in the Democratic presidential race is all but decided: In fund raising, victory belongs to Sen. Barack Obama”. The article continued:

Fund-raising data from March, the latest available, tell much of the story. The Obama campaign raised more than $220,000 on every day of the month from donors contributing $200 or more. It raised at least $1 million on each of nine different days. The total haul: $40 million.  ....The Clinton campaign...surpassed $1 million on only three days. For the month it raised $20 million, not counting a $5 million loan the candidate made to herself. 

Furthermore, as the month of April was closing down and May commenced, the fund-raising track record of the Obama campaign was producing multifaceted stresses within the Clinton campaign. An article in the Wall Street Journal (April 24, 2008) by its newest columnist, Karl Rove (former deputy chief of staff to President George W. Bush), pointed out that the Clinton-campaign “path gets tougher”. Referring to upcoming primaries in Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia, Oregon, Montana, etc., Karl Rove observed that “...Mrs. Clinton will be outspent badly. She entered April with $9.3 million in cash, but debts of $10.3 million.  Mr. Obama had $42.5 million but only $663,000 in unpaid bills.” 

By the second week of May, the Clinton campaign's lagging position vis-ŕ-vis the Obama campaign in regard to fund-raising was producing headlines throughout the news media like the one in the New York Times (May 9, 2008): “Clinton Finds Herself In Cash-Strapped Effort”.  The article bearing this headline observed that “The once-formidable fund-raising machine of Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton has begun to sputter at the worst possible moment for Mrs. Clinton's presidential campaign, Clinton advisers and donors said Thursday [May 8th], with spending curtailed on political events and advertising as Mrs. Clinton seeks to compete in the last six nominating contests.”  This depressing characterization of the condition of the Clinton campaign came two days after Senator Obama's 14-percentage point victory in the North Carolina primary.  As the New York Times (May 9, 2008) article informs us:

Mrs. Clinton's diminished political momentum, following Tuesday's loss in the North Carolina primary and her narrow victory in Indiana, appears to have had a dampening effect on her fund-raising, aides said, increasing the likelihood that Mrs. Clinton will lend her campaign more of her own money beyond the $11 million she has already provided. ...The campaign is clearly running low on cash, although advisers would not say how much money—or how little—Mrs. Clinton currently has.

Obama Campaign's Fund-Raising Achievement: (II) Democratizing Political Money   

Thus, I've tried to demonstrate in the foregoing discussion of fund-raising dynamics in the 2008 primary contests that Senator Barack Obama's campaign has been what Time Magazine has correctly characterized as a “Game Changer”.  But not only has the Obama campaign's “Game Changer” dynamics been associated with the primary fund-raising function of amassing more financial wherewithal than any previous presidential-primary campaign.  Another crucial and unique aspect of the Obama campaign's savvy fund-raising is what might be called “the democratization of political fund raising”. 

My first insight into this crucial and unique feature of the Obama campaign's savvy fund raising was provided by a perceptive article in the Boston Globe (April 10, 2008) by its correspondent Scott Helman titled “Small Donors Fuel Camps With Cash”.  Helman informs us of what I call “the democratization of political fund raising” through his report of an address by Senator Barack Obama to his campaign volunteers on May 8.  As Senator Obama formulated this new phenomenon:

We have created a parallel public financing system where the American people decide if they want to support a campaign, they can get on the Internet and finance it. And they will have as much access and influence over the course and direction of our campaign that has traditionally [been] reserved for the wealthy and the powerful.

On the basis of his research into the day-to-day operation of the Obama campaign, Scott Helman amassed evidence to provide a detailed description of that campaign's “democratization of political fund raising”. “These small donors,” says Helman, “...are retirees, teachers, church organists, priests, and firefighters. They are young and old, and they share a conviction that the future of their country is at stake.” Helman continued his description of the Obama campaign's “democratization of political fund raising” as follows:

Some wait for payday, Social Security or pension checks before sending another $10 or $25, often over the Internet. Many have given five or 10 times and plan to keep giving. And they are more than just funders—many go on to volunteer as door-knockers and recruiters for their candidates. Barbara Bird, a 60-year old librarian in Hingham [Massachusetts] who had given $253 to Obama through February, recalled seeing Obama tout his low-dollar donors on TV recently. 'I was yelling to the TV, 'That's me! That's me!'

A report on fund-raising in the New York Times (May 21, 2008) following Senator Obama's victory in the May 20th Oregon primary commenced with the headline: “Obama's April Fund-Raising Passes $31 million, Besting Clinton And McCain”.   The article noted, “Over all, Mr. Obama has raised $268 million, and he has spent it liberally in the battle for the Democratic nomination”. The article then offers what might be called an update regarding what I've dubbed the important Obama campaign achievement of “democratizing political money”. As the author of the article, Leslie Wayne, informs us:

Much of the money he takes in continues to come from small donors, with the average donation $91 in April. That month, the campaign also attracted 200,000 new donors, 94 percentage of whom gave less than $200. Nearly l.5 million people have donated to Mr. Obama, the campaign said. (Emphasis Added)

Perhaps an interesting way to end this discussion of the importance of the Obama campaign's fund-raising achievement in the 2008 presidential primary contests is to refer to observations by the columnist Daniel Henninger. These observations were in his column in the Wall Street Journal (April 24, 2008):

Once [Obama] proved conclusively that he could raise big-time cash, the Clintons' strongest tie to their machine began to unravel. Today he's got $42 million banked. She's got a few million north of nothing. But it's more than that. Barack Obama's Web-based fund-raising apparatus is, if one may say so, respectable. The Clintons' 'donor base' has been something else.

...For modern Democrats, winning the White House always requires some sort of magic to get near 50%. For the Clintons, that bag is empty. The Democrats have a new magician. It's Obama.

Delegate Dynamics In  Obama  Campaign: (I) The Issues

What might be called the “Delegate Dynamics” that define the ultimate measuring-rod for which of the candidates in the 2008 Democratic Party primaries gains the Democratic Party presidential nomination, are not merely “technical-ingredients” for the ultimate measuring-rod. They are also “political-ingredients” for the final measuring-rod, and they are political-ingredients directly related to the African-American Civil Rights Movement. As I pointed out in my third article on the Obama campaign for Black Commentator (February 21, 2008) titled “Obama Between Super Tuesday and the Ohio-Texas Primaries”, leading figures of the Civil Rights Movement—especially Rev. Jesse Jackson—initiated the civil rights activism at the 1972 Democratic Party Convention (Senator George McGovern was the successful nominee) that eventually produced a proportional representation allocating mechanism for delegates to the Nominating Convention.

The current application of the proportional representation mechanism—which also involves a key decision-making function for so-called “Superdelegates”--was devised and agreed upon at the 1980 Democratic Party Convention, which selected Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis as presidential nominee. Governor Dukakis played a major role, in conjunction with Rev. Jesse Jackson, in fashioning the political compromises underlying today's Democratic Party “Delegates Dynamics”.

Above all, there is little doubt that without the initiating role of civil rights activism in persuading the Democratic Party Nominating Convention to scrap the “winner-take-all” delegate allocation mechanism (the mechanism still used by the Republican Party), the chances would have been slim-to-nil that Senator Obama would be the presumptive Democratic Party presidential nominee in mid-May 2008.  In order to gain the Democratic nomination, a candidate must muster some 2,025 delegates. Some 1,230 delegates are allocated through the grueling primary election contests, while the remaining 795 are superdelegates.  The Obama campaign nursed a slim advantage in delegates at the end of January—thanks significantly to Obama's large 85% share of the Black voter bloc in South Carolina's primary.

In fact, from the South Carolina primary onward, the persistent Black voter-bloc maximal support reinforced Obama’s quest for pledged delegates. Accordingly, the Obama campaign breathed more easily regarding the Delegate Dynamics by late February.  This was so especially because of Obama's strong 17-percentage point victory in the February 19th Wisconsin primary (58% Obama, 41% Clinton), which brought him nearly 200,000 more votes than Clinton that translated into 41 pledged delegates for Obama, 28 pledged delegates for Clinton. Thus the Associated Press calculations had an overall Delegate Count at the end of February as follows: Obama with 1,316 delegates to 1,241 for Clinton—a 75 Obama advantage in pledged delegates.

Although Obama lost to Clinton by a 2-percentage point margin in the March 4th Texas primary and by a 10-percentage point margin in the March 4th Ohio primary, Obama won enough delegates owing to proportional allocation to sustain his overall lead in the Delegate Count—namely, 1,579 Obama pledged delegates to 1,468 for Clinton.  Again, owing to the Democratic Party's proportional allocation mechanism for primary elections, Clinton’s 9-percentage point victory in the April 22nd Pennsylvania primary—which involved 151 delegates—did not overcome Obama's overall lead in Delegate Count.

Accordingly, Obama's lead in Delegate Count got consolidated in what might be called the “watershed North Carolina primary” on May 6th.  As the lead article on the North Carolina primary in the USA Today (May 7, 2008) observed:

Obama's double-digit win in North Carolina [56% to 42% Clinton] widened  his  lead  among pledged delegates and put him on pace to  finish  the  night  within  200 of  the  2,025 delegates needed for nomination.  More importantly, his resounding victory in one state [North Carolina] and strong finish in the other [Indiana—losing by just 2-percentage points] could convince party leaders known as superdelegates that he had weathered questions about his electability and a controversy over inflammatory comments by his former pastor.

It might be said that what facilitated the watershed role of the North Carolina primary in regard to providing Senator Obama a big advance in the Delegate Count was a broader process of the “democratization of primary politics”. This “democratization of primary politics” in the case of North Carolina was reflected in the crucial role of new voter-blocs, especially the young voter-bloc and the Black voter-bloc. “In capturing North Carolina,” observed the USA Today (May 7, 2008), “Obama relied on voters such as these—students voting for the first time and African-Americans—for his core support.  Blacks, who made up a third of the Democratic electorate in the Tar Heel State, backed Obama 13-to- 1... [and] voters under 30 supported the Illinois senator nearly 3-to-l”.

Delegate Dynamics In  Obama Campaign:(II) From Oregon Primary Onward

Be that as it may, the above-mentioned USA Today prognosis as regards the impact of Senator Obama's strong victory in North Carolina on his eventual victory in the Delegate Count has been born out. This occurred two weeks later in the May 20th Oregon primary in which Obama won 58% of the votes to Clinton's 42%. As the headline of the major report on the Oregon primary in the Boston Globe (May 21, 2008) put it: “Obama Captures Oregon, Holds A Majority Of Pledged

Delegates”.  Today, then, the Delegate Count is 1,965 for Obama and 1,769 for Clinton—an Obama advantage that's now out-of-reach for Hillary Clinton. Elaborating on the Boston Globe headline, the author of the article, Joseph Williams, observed thus:

Senator Barack Obama last night passed a key, though symbolic, milestone in his historic quest for the White House—winning a majority of all pledged delegates at stake in primaries and caucuses....  That gave him more than half of the 3,253 delegates being  chosen  by  voters  in  the  long  season   of  primaries  and causes—and left him within about 70 delegates of clinching the nomination. (Emphasis Added)

However, the Oregon victory for Obama does not yet settle the Delegate Count contest defined in its fulsome range, because the special status of superdelegates must be considered.  Accordingly, Hillary Clinton's victory in the May 20th Kentucky primary (65% Clinton, 30% Obama) keeps her gritty Obama-disrespecting campaign alive. As the Boston Globe put it: “...Clinton's resounding win in Kentucky gave her justification to keep challenging him through the last contests on June 3 [South Dakota-Montana] and perhaps raised further doubts about Obama's reach to white working-class voters, a constituency crucial to Democrats' hopes in the fall.”

I will make some critical observations in a future article regarding the media-hype given the presumed life-and-death Democratic Party reliance on working-class White voters who are, shall we say, disinclined to vote for the African-American candidate Barack Obama in the November election. Note how this spurious and phony issue is formulated in the report on the Oregon-Kentucky primaries in the Boston Globe (May 21,2008): “Clinton supporters point to her landslide wins in white, working-class states like Kentucky, and they say it's evidence that she is the stronger candidate among a core Democratic constituency. The woman-of-the-people message seemed to resonate with [white] voters in those states [Kentucky-West Virginia-Pennsylvania], where residents struggle as quality hourly-wage jobs vanish”.

Although the Delegate Count situation following the May 20th Oregon primary—regardless of Clinton's win in the Kentucky primary—indisputably gives the pledged-delegates edge to Senator Obama in gaining the Democratic nomination, the status of superdelegates remains operative. Because of this, a fascinating stubbornness reigns at the heart of the Clinton campaign--betraying a special kind of political arrogance—which theoretically can cause the formal designation of a Democratic nominee to await the August Democratic Convention. The purpose underlying Hillary

Clinton's clinging militantly to what the Boston Globe (May 21, 2008) dubbed her view as “the stronger candidate” , was formulated by the political correspondent Patrick Healy  in the New York Times (May 21, 2008) Oregon-Kentucky  article as follows.

Mrs. Clinton wants to increase her popular vote total in the final three primaries [Puerto Rico-South Dakota-Montana] in hopes that if a small margin separates her and Mr. Obama, it may be enough to sway some uncommitted superdelegates to support her at the last minute.

Furthermore, Patrick Healy's article probed what strikes me as the “dark side” of Hillary Clinton's current bid to “sway uncommitted superdelegates”. It seems impossible to characterize the following Healy analysis otherwise:

While Mrs. Clinton believes that winning the nomination is a long shot at this point, she is also staying in the race because, in her experience , electoral politics can be a chaotic and unpredictable enterprise, scandals can emerge from nowhere, and Mr. Obama's candidacy could still suffer a self-inflicted or unexpected wound. Picking up more primary votes [in Puerto Rico-South Dakota-Montana] could only strengthen her position if the party wants or needs to find an alternative to Mr. Obama.

The eerie and mendacious cynicism that informs Hillary Clinton's last-ditch strategy for overcoming Senator Obama's pledged-delegate lead is of Frankenstinian dimensions, I dare say.  One can imagine the Clinton Machine fabricating or facilitating a “chaotic and unpredictable enterprise” or  “scandals” that might do-in Senator Obama, that might cause him an “unexpected wound”.  It takes, indeed, a certain kind of “Clintonian mentality” even to engage in a discussion of these “scenarios” with a New York Times correspondent! Patrick Healy's account of his interview with Senator Clinton after the Kentucky primary will no doubt acquire a special place in what might be called the “ annals of candidates' skulduggery” during American presidential primary elections.

In this connection, it should be noted that the 795 superdelegates category is composed of two subdivisions—a high-status and ordinary-status category, so to speak. The high-status category comprises “elected officials”, made up of 234 House of Representative members, 49 Senators, and sundry state officeholders and big-city mayors. The ordinary -status category comprises “non-elected officials”, made up of over 400 state and national officers of the Democratic National Committee.

As the 2008 primary season commenced in January, the Obama campaign didn't even have its foot-in-the-superdelegates'-door, so to speak. But with Obama's victory in South Carolina and subsequent victories in Super Tuesday primaries onward, the situation for Obama among superdelegates changed. As the Wall Street Journal (April 27, 2008) reported: “While Sen. Clinton began the year far ahead among superdelegates, Sen. Obama has closed the gap. Since the Super Tuesday contests on Feb. 5, when he began a winning streak, his endorsements from party leaders outnumbered hers by a ratio of 14 to l.”

Moreover, by the start of May, Barack Obama continued to edge-out Hillary Clinton among the high-status category of superdelegates. This was reported in a highly informed article by the Wall Street Journal correspondent Jackie Calmes titled “Obama Heads For Superdelegate Edge” (Wall Street Journal  (April 29, 2008)):

Sen. Obama has taken the lead among elected officials, and Monday [he] got the endorsement of New Mexico Sen. Jeff Bingaman.... Among elected officials, Sen. Obama leads in endorsements from governors and senators. He is behind among House members by one, but both camps expect him to pull ahead unless he does badly in next Tuesday's  [May 4th] Indiana and North Carolina primaries. If he doesn't stumble, enough elected Democrats are expected to back Sen. Obama after the last primaries June 3 to give him the delegate majority needed for the nomination.

As shown in TABLE III,  as of the first week of May just before the important primaries in North Carolina and Indiana, some 291 superdelegates remained uncommitted.  Leading Democratic Party officials such as Howard Dean, chair of the Democratic National Committee, have urged uncommitted superdelegates to make a choice between Clinton and Obama.  A public statement made in April by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that superdelegates should make their choice based on voters' decisions regarding pledged delegates, annoyed the Clinton campaign, but Pelosi did not retract her statement.

Be that as it may, the important issue regarding how the remaining undecided superdelegates will decide as between Clinton and Obama remains in doubt as of the May 20th primaries in Oregon and Kentucky. An numeration of the status of superdelegates by the Wall Street Journal (May 9, 2008) concluded, “About 250 superdelegates have yet to take sides, of whom about 90 are Washington politicians. Most of these politicians are running in the fall. ...Many of the politicians sitting on the fence are from conservative states or mostly white, rural districts, where Sen. Obama has had the least success”

Finally, while it appears that the issue of a disinclination among working-class and poor White voters to support an African-American presidential candidate is operative in the undecided status of some superdelegates, there are nevertheless countervailing forces at work in this matter. The well-informed study of the superdelegates crisis by Jackie Calmes in the Wall Street Journal (April 29, 2008) put forth a reasonable formulation regarding how the crisis can be resolved: “Many superdelegates increasingly seem to share the view that ultimately they should support the candidate with the most pledged delegates. Almost certainly that will be Sen. Obama.”

Clinton's Race-Card Maneuvers As Insult To Black Voter-Bloc

As I remarked above, there's an eerie and mendacious cynicism that informs Hillary Clinton's last-ditch strategy in challenging Barack Obama's pledged-delegate lead. The roots of this current last-ditch strategy extend back in time to an early phase in the 2008 primary season. Back to her Fox News Television interview (January 7th) in which she proclaimed, “Dr. King's dream began to be realized when President Lyndon Johnson passed