Why bother if obama hasn't even won the primary definitavely?
Right, why worry? McCain's got it in the bag.
Why bother if obama hasn't even won the primary definitavely?
It's called the Dimm-o-crap convention. Neither candidate, Obama or
Clinton will have a lock on anything until that convention occurs. The
Clintons are not stupid. Liars, cheats and conniving, but not stupid.
Obama's numbers on the different groups are just not that great or good.
He has made a lot of folks angry here in the past few months and his
lack of wins has shown that. And the internal numbers in polls show he
will have a hard time in the general election.
But Obama has a couple of things in his favor. One, he is black and no
one wants to be called a racist by voting against him, openly. Two.
McCain is ripping his drawers big time with lots of folks in the Republican
party with his stupid environmental crap and other utterances.
Exactly. McCain 08.
Thank you for proving me right.
Thank you for agreeing with what I said first.
McCain is the likely winner for prez i agree.![]()
I hope you are right, but he keeps talking and what he is saying sounds just
like the dimm-o-craps.
McCain is only pandering to the independents he's supposed to pander too. No surprises here.
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She's obviously still trying for a brokered convention for a VP slot...but she keeps shooting herself in the foot attacking Obama...there's just no way that's gonna happen...also, she owes $20 million and counting, enough to cost her her Senate seat....so she's trying to extort money from the cash-rich Obama campaign while raising money from her delusional supporters...
- Senator Hillary Clinton."I'm going to do everything I can to make sure that anyone who supported me -- the 17 million people who have voted for me -- understand what a grave error it would be not to vote for Sen. McCain . . . uh, Sen. Obama, and against Sen. McCain,"
McCain sound just like Bush and that is going to cost him. And don't forget though, he's YOUR candidate. If I were you I'd be glad he isn't your typical republicrap candidate.
He is not my candidate. Just the lesser of three evils.
I wont be voting for him but against your candidate. As a
matter of fact I am considering on voting for Obama and
let me do his thingy. But with a dimm-o-crap Congress
full of idiots, radicals and misfits I don't if our country
would survive. The dimms, the party of defeat.
Operation Chaos continues...
- Mars
Operation Obama picks up 5 more supers today!
delegate watch
I fixed it for you or have you forgotten your party is 0-3 in special elections this year? Get used to it 'cause they'll be more repugnants losing in November.
Wall Street JournalHowever, faced with growing pressure to drop out of the race, Sen. Clinton is getting hit with conflicting advice from within her own camp. Some of her top strategists are warning that she is injuring her political future by staying in. Others -- notably her husband, former President Bill Clinton, and strategist Mark Penn -- are urging her to remain in the race. She has beaten Sen. Barack Obama in key swing states, they argue.
...snip....
Inside her campaign, Sen. Clinton isn't asking for advice, forcing advisers to hold off discussions on what she wants from the process if she loses -- from dealing with campaign debt, to her role in an Obama bid for the White House. "The campaign has broken down to those who drink the Kool-Aid that Hillary can still win, and those who don't, and are considering their options," one operative said.
...snip....
In an effort to keep financial backers in the tent, Sen. Clinton hosted them at a tail party at her Washington, D.C., residence last week. When she came downstairs to greet the 50 or so guests, Sen. Clinton laid out how she could still win the nomination: Beat Sen. Obama in the popular vote, then persuade the superdelegates to vote for her on the theory that she would be better able to beat Sen. McCain in November. According to two attendees, she said, "I'd get out if I believed he had a better chance to win than I do."
Some big donors have told her campaign that it's getting tough to raise more money. "It's very difficult to get any new major donors at this point," said one important backer. "There will be no more million-dollar events."
Meantime, Roger Altman -- the investment banker and former deputy Treasury Secretary under Bill Clinton -- has advised Sen. Clinton that the time has come for her to drop out of the race, according to people close to the campaign.
She's delusional....
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