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This is an archive article published on February 11, 2008

Obama gets convincing wins in 3 states

Senator Barack Obama won decisive victories over Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in Washington, Louisiana and Nebraska...

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Senator Barack Obama won decisive victories over Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in Washington, Louisiana and Nebraska on Saturday, giving him an impressive sweep going into a month when the Democratic nominating contests are expected to favor him.

The successes come just as Obama is building a strong advantage over Clinton in raising money, providing important fuel for the nominating contests ahead. Still, the results were expected to do little to settle the muddle in the delegate race that resulted after the wave of contests last Tuesday in which the two candidates split up states from coast to coast.

In Republican contests on Saturday, Mike Huckabee won in Kansas, an embarrassing setback for Senator John McCain as he tries to rally the party around him as the nominee. While Obama had been expected to win the contests on Saturday, the margin of victories were surprising, particularly in Nebraska and Washington, which offered the day’s biggest trove of delegates. In both states, he captured 68 percent of the vote in caucuses, compared with Clinton’s roughly 32 percent.

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“We won in Louisiana, we won in Nebraska, we won in Washington state,” Obama said at the Virginia Democrats’ Jefferson-Jackson Dinner in Richmond. “We won North, we won South, we won in between. And I believe that we can win in Virginia on Tuesday if you’re ready to stand for change.” While Obama’s victories were significant, the Democratic Party awards delegates proportionally, so Clinton stands to walk away from the contests with a sizable number.

The nominating fight now turns to Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia, which hold their primaries on Tuesday. Obama is considered well positioned in those states.

On Saturday, with the contest so close, excitement ran high, as did turnout. In Nebraska, The Omaha World-Herald reported that organisers at two caucus sites had been so overrun by crowds that they abandoned traditional caucusing and asked voters to drop makeshift scrap-paper ballots into a box instead. In Sarpy County, in suburban Omaha, traffic backed up on Highway 370 when thousands of voters showed up at a precinct where organizers had planned for hundreds.

In Washington, the Democratic party reported record-breaking numbers of caucusgoers, with early totals suggesting turnout would be nearly double what it was in 2004–itself a record year–when 100,000 Democrats caucused. Clinton’s advisers had predicted she might not win any of the contests in February, and said she was looking ahead to March 4, when voters in Rhode Island and particularly Ohio and Texas will decide the next big bloc of delegates.

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But Maine, which holds its caucuses Sunday, may favour Clinton, though there have been no polls. A win there could help blunt the edge of what are expected to be a string of victories for Obama in the 10 contests between last Tuesday and March 4.

“Although the next several states that hold nominating contests this month are more favorable to the Obama campaign, we will continue to compete in them and hope to secure as many delegates as we can before the race turns to Ohio, Texas and Pennsylvania,” said a Clinton spokesman, Phil Singer. The results on the Republican side provided some surprise, particularly since Huckabee’s showings in Kansas and Louisiana came as McCain seemed headed to the nomination. Huckabee declared that the voters had been heard from. “They spoke with one voice,” he said. “They said I am the authentic conservative in this race.”

The McCain campaign played down Huckabee’s victories, saying they had been expected. “John McCain is the presumptive nominee in this race and our path forward is unchanged by today’s results,” a spokeswoman, Jill Hazelbaker, said. Even before any results were in Saturday, Huckabee told reporters he was not pulling out of the race.

Huckabee, a pastor before he became governor of Arkansas, said: “I didn’t major in math. I majored in miracles, and I still believe in them, too.”

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