31% | 1130 votes |
2% | 87 votes |
51% | 1851 votes |
1% | 50 votes |
1% | 33 votes |
5% | 178 votes |
6% | 226 votes |
1% | 27 votes |
1% | 18 votes |
Which extreme minority do you think I voted in?
And how did you vote? And why?
31% | 1130 votes |
2% | 87 votes |
51% | 1851 votes |
1% | 50 votes |
1% | 33 votes |
5% | 178 votes |
6% | 226 votes |
1% | 27 votes |
1% | 18 votes |
Bottom line: With just 600 delegates up for grabs and front-runner Obama 658 short of the 2,025 needed for victory, it is mathematically impossible for either candidate to clinch the nomination before the process is scheduled to end with Puerto Rico's June 7 caucuses.Obama remains in the overall delegate lead, 1,567 to 1,462, according to Associated Press estimates.
With neither candidate able to wrap up the nomination during the primary season, Clinton and Obama must try to seal the deal by courting the 350 still-uncommitted superdelegates, including 14 from Texas.
A potential wild card is the continuing battle inside the Democratic National Committee over the seating of delegates from Florida and Michigan, two states whose convention votes have been taken away because they scheduled January primaries in violation of party rules.But governors of both states are talking about arranging for a June re-vote if private funding can be arranged to cover the costs. For very different reasons, the idea unites Clinton and GOP leaders.
Republicans see these "do-overs" as an opportunity to drain Democratic resources and create additional tension between the two foes. Clinton's strategists eye an opportunity to erase Obama's edge.