ELECTION 2008: Ten Things We learned On Super Tuesday
The biggest single primary day in American history
stretched across 24 states, pushed Republican John McCain within reach of his partys nomination and gave Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton a major lift in her battle with Barack Obama.
Clinton and Obama traded wins over the course of a dramatic election night yesterday that unfolded across the time zones -- but shortly after midnight, Clinton added California to New York to claim the nights two biggest prizes.
Obamas wins in 11 states allowed him to scoop up enough convention delegates to stay in the hunt through April and perhaps beyond. But he comes out of the night with a weeklong surge in momentum blunted by Clintons coast-to-coast victories.
McCain appeared set to add California to his column late last night and appeared on his way toward racking up an insurmountable delegate lead, perhaps enough to knock Mitt Romney from the race, as Mike Huckabee scored wins in the South.
1
A stalemate for Clinton, Obama
Super Tuesday turned into a super standoff between Clinton and Obama, who each racked up critical wins to keep their nomination hopes alive - and their nomination battle going for weeks if not months.
Clinton racked up a major Northeastern trifecta - New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts, where the Kennedy clan went all out for Obama but came up short. But Obama matched her six wins with eight of his own - turning a night of history and drama between a woman and an African-American fighting for the presidency into a tussle for convention delegates.
2
Republicans' family fued isn't over
John McCain got ahead of himself when he started predicting he'd wrap up the nomination last night - but he took a big step toward that goal, picking up 198 out of the 1,191 delegates needed for the nomination in a sweep of just four Northeastern states. All signs still point to his becoming the Republican nominee, but Bible Belt wins by Mike Huckabee and a pledge to go on from a faltering Mitt Romney show the Republican family feud isn't over yet.
3
It's a win-win situation in New York
Hillary Rodham Clinton really does own favorite-daughter status in the state she has served as a U.S. senator since 2001 - especially as exit polls showed she could dominate among Hispanic and white female voters. John McCain has the ability, as reflected in polls of recent weeks, to seamlessly replace Rudy Giuliani as favorite among New York Republicans. Both state major party organizations win the day.
4
Long Island tally shows the way for state
As Long Island goes, so goes much of New York State - with Hillary Rodham Clinton and John McCain rolling up big margins here. The vote tallies look like they should yield Clinton twice as many national convention delegates as Barack Obama, from congressional districts covering Nassau and Suffolk. Because GOP rules differ, McCain automatically carries most of the state's delegates as a result of winning the popular vote.
5
Kennedy name didn't win
Endorsements do not guarantee votes - and that includes endorsements from a famous Democratic family. In Massachusetts, veteran Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's backing of Obama won big attention, but Clinton won big in the state's primary. Other Kennedy-family Obama backers included Maria Shriver and John F. Kennedy's daughter Caroline - while Clinton had support from survivors of onetime New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
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