Today's horse race headline: almost candidate Evan Bayh to endorse Hillary Clinton. He had all the machinery in place, including a couple dozen staffers and an always at the ready Election Day 2004 map that showed all the Bush counties he carried in his Indiana re-elect, but then surprised everyone by -- rather candidly -- admitting he couldn't break into the rock star tier. Take a trip down memory lane to his 10/1/06 Coralville visit that has a great regular guy football moment.
Other clippings:
Both (Obama and Clinton) are significantly underperforming against the generic Democratic edge in the presidential and even against party identification," Lake and Gotoff wrote.
But IMHO the multi-way race favors Hillary even though she's no one's second choice. I don't have the exact math but here's a rough approximation: There's a rock solid 40% for Clinton, dominated by the Vote For A Woman vote, and 60% pretty much ABC. If the race is straight on Clinton vs. Not, Not wins. But Not is split almost dead down the middle between Edwards and Obama, let's say maybe 25-25 with the last 10 scattered among the rest. (Again, all this is approximate)
So basically the only way anyone other than Hillary gets nominated is if either Obama or Edwards gets knocked out fast and all their support flows to the survivor. If both survive to Uber Tuesday, with one staggering like Wes Clark did in his last weeks, they split the vote, just like the fizzling Clark hurt Edwards by siphoning off anti-Kerry votes in `04. Actually, the dying Howard Dean did the sam ething to Edwards in Wisconsin. They divided, Kerry conquered with under 50%.
State Senator Steven A. Geller, the minority leader, used the news conference to rail against Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire and South Carolina, which he called “rogue states” for putting pressure on the presidential candidates to skip campaigning here for a January primary.
“If they choose not to campaign here and they lose? Not our problem,” Mr. Geller said.
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