Our projections show the most likely outcome of yesterday’s elections
will be that Hillary Clinton gained 187 delegates, and we gained 183.
That’s a net gain of 4 delegates out of more than 370 delegates available
from all the states that voted.
For comparison, that’s less than half our net gain of 9 delegates
from the District of Columbia alone. It’s also less than our net gain of 8
from Nebraska, or 12 from Washington State. And it’s considerably less than
our net gain of 33 delegates from Georgia.
The task for the Clinton campaign yesterday was clear. In order to
have a plausible path to the nomination, they needed to score huge delegate
victories and cut into our lead.
They failed.
It’s clear, though, that Senator Clinton wants to continue an increasingly
desperate, increasingly negative — and increasingly expensive — campaign
to tear us down.
That’s her decision. But it’s not stopping John McCain, who clinched
the Republican nomination last night, from going on the offensive. He’s
already made news attacking Barack, and that will only become more frequent
in the coming days.
Right now, it’s essential for every single supporter of Barack Obama
to step up and help fight this two-front battle. In the face of attacks
from Hillary Clinton and John McCain, we need to be ready to take them on.
Will you make an online donation of $25 right now?
https://donate.barackobama.com/math
The chatter among pundits may have gotten better for the Clinton
campaign after last night, but by failing to cut into our lead, the math —
and their chances of winning — got considerably worse.
Today, we still have a lead of more than 150 delegates, and there
are only 611 pledged delegates left to win in the upcoming contests.
By a week from today, we will have competed in Wyoming and Mississippi.
Two more states and 45 more delegates will be off the table.
But if Senator Clinton wants to continue this, let’s show that we’re
ready.
Make an online donation of $25 now to show you’re willing to fight
for this:
https://donate.barackobama.com/math
This nomination process is an opportunity to decide what our party
needs to stand for in this election.
We can either take on John McCain with a candidate who’s already
united Republicans and Independents against us, or we can do it with a campaign
that’s united Americans from all parties around a common purpose.
We can debate John McCain about who can clean up Washington by nominating
a candidate who’s taken more money from lobbyists than he has, or we can
do it with a campaign that hasn’t taken a dime of their money because we’ve
been funded by you.
We can present the American people with a candidate who stood shoulder-to-shoulder
with McCain on the worst foreign policy disaster of our generation, and
agrees with him that George Bush deserves the benefit of the doubt on Iran,
or we can nominate someone who opposed the war in Iraq from the beginning
and will not support a march to war with Iran.
John McCain may have a long history of straight talk and independent
thinking, but he has made the decision in this campaign to offer four more
years of the very same policies that have failed us for the last eight.
We need a Democratic candidate who will present the starkest contrast
to those failed policies of the past.
And that candidate is Barack Obama.
Please make a donation of $25 now:
https://donate.barackobama.com/math
Thank you,
David
David Plouffe
Campaign Manager
Obama for America