Gerard Baker
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Hillary Clinton's sensational return to contention for the Democratic presidential nomination will ensure the party’s intensely competitive battle goes on for at least another seven weeks, until the next big contest in Pennsylvania in April.
It was a big night for Mrs Clinton, a vital restorative to a campaign that had been written off in the last few weeks. Though she still trails Barack Obama, the frontrunner, in terms of delegates to the party’s nominating convention, there was a definite sense that the momentum had changed yet again in the Democratic race. Her victories should at least be enough to reassure some of her more nervous supporters that she can still win the nomination.
Mrs Clinton won the primary election in Ohio by a comfortable margin and edged out Mr Obama in a close fight in Texas. She also won the Rhode Island primary while Mr Obama’s sole victory of the night was in the smallest state - Vermont.
Mrs Clinton’s wins only slightly dented Mr Obama’s lead in delegates for the convention. In fact, with votes still being counted in separate caucuses in Texas, it was possible that she would actually lose the delegate contest there. But, despite Mr Obama’s continuing lead, it is clear that neither candidate can win enough delegates from the primary contests that remain to clinch the nomination. The ultimate decision then will be made by hundreds of “superdelegates” – senior party officials – who get special votes in the nominating process. In the last few weeks, as Mr Obama had won eleven contests in a row, growing numbers of these delegates had been plumping for the Illinois senator. But there is now a good chance that those voters will wait awhile, at least until the outcome of the next contest in Pennsylvania on April 22. With her victories on Tuesday Mrs Clinton could make a strong case that she had won all the big states to have voted so far – California, Texas, Ohio, New York and New Jersey. Her campaign will also redouble its efforts to allow delegates from Michigan and Florida, two other big states Mrs Clinton won but whose votes were disqualified because the two broke Democratic party rules.
Most encouraging for Mrs Clinton was that she seemed to have reconstituted her coalition of traditional Democratic voters. These voters – blue collar workers, union members, women, older voters and Hispanics had been the keys to her victories in earlier states but she seemed to have lost her edge among them during Mr Obama’s recent winning streak.
But in both Texas and Ohio, according to the exit polls, Mrs Clinton won those voters back. She enjoyed clear majorities among women, among lower-income voters and especially among the old. She also won heavily among white men. In Texas where there is a large Latino population, she took more than 60 per cent of the Hispanic vote. In Ohio she won 70 per cent of the vote of those over 65.
There was further encouragement for Mrs Clinton in some evidence from the polling that the campaign pendulum may have swung her way in the last few days. By a margin of two to one those voters who said they made up their minds in the final few days of the campaign chose Mrs Clinton.
This might suggest that her opponent’s stumbles in the last week may have turned the tide slightly against him. Mr Obama was caught telling voters this week that he strongly opposed Nafta (the North American Free Trade Agreement) while his aides were telling the Canadian government that his position was just campaign rhetoric and would not signal a real change in policy should he win the White House. Also this week, Mr Obama’s former financial backer Tony Rezko went on trial in Chicago on charges of fraud. Mrs Clinton may also have scored with one of the most talked-about political advertisements of the campaign so far, one that, by asking the question, “Who picks up the phone in the White House at 3 O’Clock in the morning?” directly questioned Mr Obama’s experience for the presidency.
The Clinton campaign hopes that these kind of stumbles might proliferate in the next few weeks and remind both ordinary voters and the party’s superdelegates that Mr Obama, for all his charisma, is just too big a risk to take in the general election in November.
While the Democratic contest got a new lease of life on Tuesday, the Republican primary came to an end when John McCain won all four states that voted and notched up a simple majority of the delegates needed to win the nomination. Mike Huckabee, his last remaining serious opponent, graciously withdrew from the race and Sen McCain will today appear with President Bush in the Rose Garden at the White House to receive the formal benediction of the incumbent for November’s election.
While the Democrats seem condemned to battle on at least until Pennsylvania, Mr McCain has some breathing space. His first job will be to mop up remaining opposition within the Republican party from diehard conservatives. That won’t be easy and he will clearly suffer to some extent in November from continuing right-wing bitterness and disillusionment with his triumph.
But the McCain camp are confident that in the end not many conservatives are seriously going to risk allowing Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton into the White House and, for that reason, Mr McCain has already begun an eight-month long campaign of pummelling his Democratic opponent – whomever that may be.
In his victory speech on Tuesday night in Dallas, he tried a new tack – attacking the Democrats on the economy, which voters in Ohio and Texas said was the biggest issue on their minds and which right now, with the country on the brink of a recession, is toxic for Republicans.
Mr McCain said the Democrats would abrogate trade treaties, raise taxes and hurt American business.
This is brave – and, it should be said, accurate – stuff. But it’s not clear how much traction he will get with this pro-free market line in a country that has rather soured on the market of late.
Much more important for Mr McCain will be his national security arguments. He repeated these too in his speech on Tuesday night, saying he had been as firm in his support for the war in Iraq as he had been critical of its conduct, and insisting that he had been right to support the surge of troops in Iraq last year and that the Democrats had been wrong to oppose it.
It’s a tricky strategy. The aim is to distance himself from President Bush on the war’s conduct, but claim authorship of the late surge – the one aspect of military strategy in the last few years that has worked. If the situation in Iraq continues to improve then he has a chance to attack Democrats for opposing the surge. The odds on his succeeding are long, but then again the odds on his winning the Republican nomination were even longer six months ago.

Gerard Baker is United States Editor and an Assistant Editor of The Times. He joined in 2004 from the Financial Times, where he had spent over ten years as Tokyo correspondent and Washington Bureau Chief. His weekly oped column appears on Fridays
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Why Clinton can't win.
She simply can't catch up with Obama's lead in the popular vote. If she were to "steal" the nomination with the superdelegates you would see such an uproar among afro-americans the party would never recover. McCain would win by a landslide.
If she cared for the democratic party instead of her own ambitions she would and should drop out!
America has had enough of her kind of politics.
Jim Goodrich, Athens, Georgia
I would have to agree with Anton, and I am aware that this is a view from a distance. Hillary Clinton offers the most reasonable choice for a change. Obama is too light weight for me and offers nothing concrete apart from "charisma". It's too big a risk when most of the affairs around the world have US fingerprints on them! As for McCain, I await to see how he pitches his presidential campaign. He has a difficult task ahead of him though. Sufficiently not Bush but holding on to the bits of Bush that Republicans like? Tough ask!
Nick, Dublin, Ireland
elisabeth, sorry if this seems pompous, but history does not repeat itself. That's only said by people who don't know the facts.
From this side of the pond the campaigns have seemed to rejuvenate the US political process. McCain is inestimably the best GOP candidate and the struggle between Obama and Clinton is fascinating.
As a liberal I have a lot of time for McCain but I'm delighted Hillary is back on track. Whatever happens I think November is going to be very close.
Joe, Leeds,
The Democratic Party is a collage of special interest groups. Obama has the backing of African-Americans and affluent liberal white males. Hillary's supporters are educated women, Hispanics, labor union households and senior citizens. The Dem super delegates can't afford to antaganize the special interest groups behind Hillary. I dont think they will rally behind Obama as long as Hillary has a shot at the nominations.
The rank and file social conservatives don't have a problem with McCain's positions on social issues. It is the leadership (Pat Roberson, James Dobson etc.), talk radio hosts like Rush Limbaugh and the activists have in the past fought with McCain over campaign financing of Political Action Committees.
It should be easy for McCain to the social conservatives aka religious right to vote for him.
Jay_in Connecticut, Middletown, USA / CT
Of the three effective candidates still in the running for the White House McCain walks in the shadow of the Bush administration and should, to a sensible population, be unelectable. Obama has little or no experience of International politics and could potentially be a global, not just a US disaster in the event of a world crisis - Iran, China and Terrorism are just three issues with which he could not deal. That leaves Clinton. She has charisma, the experience of eight years alongside the encumbent in the White House,a strong senatortial record on domestic and foreign issues and would satisfy the need for America to show it can elect a woman as president. It is not important that the president should be a woman but it is important that a woman shows that she can be elected president. I sincerely hope for the sake for the US and the rest of us that she makes it.
Anton Wills-Eve, West Kirby,Wirral, England
this is proving the fact that ultimately every nation has the government it deserves. Americans have not changed and therefore cant possibly want change. The majority is ignorant and ill-educated. They dont know a chance to learn when they see it....decline in every aspect is just a matter of time. History always repeats itself.
elisabeth, calabasas, california