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First Read is an analysis of the day's political news, from the NBC News political unit. First Read is updated throughout the day, so check back often.

Chuck Todd, NBC Political Director

Mark Murray, NBC Deputy Political Director

Domenico Montanaro, NBC News Political Reporter



First thoughts: Obama's step forward

Posted: Friday, March 28, 2008 9:41 AM by Domenico Montanaro
Filed Under:

From Chuck Todd and Domenico Montanaro
*** Obama's Step Forward? Taking the week cumulatively, is there any other way to look at it other than a big step forward for Obama? Every piece of initial evidence from last week showing potential trouble for Obama faded, particularly on the polling front, whether nationally or in key states. Toss in the frustration the Clinton campaign is showing (why are they letting us see them sweat so much, particularly over Pelosi and Florida/Michigan?). And end it with serious flirtation with a potential running mate that could solve many of Obama's problems in fell swoop when it comes to Jewish voters and voters worried about his lack of executive experience (Michael Bloomberg), and it's been a very good week for Obama. That said, did Obama miss an opportunity this week? The media, once again, seems ready to write Clinton's campaign obit and had Obama unveiled, say, 20 to 25 superdelegate endorsements in a 24-to-48-hour period, that would have fed a Clinton obit wildfire. The fact that the Obama campaign hasn't done this means they either are being overly cautious or they just don't have as many superdelegate endorsements in their back pocket.

VIDEO: NBC Political Director Chuck Todd discusses Obama's endorsement by Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey. 
 
*** Being John McCain: One of the toughest things for a presidential candidate that is supposedly so well-known is having the discipline to re-introduce yourself to voters. McCain is doing that next week and begins, in fact, today with the unveiling of a new TV ad which emphasizes what folks probably know a little bit about, his heroism in Vietnam. The tag line in the ad -- "John McCain The American president Americans have been waiting for" -- makes it clear that the campaign plans to use the hero card a lot. And it's also a subtle reminder that if McCain is elected, he too could be a historic figure, which is something the campaign might be worried is getting lost in the Obama-Clinton euphoria in the media and the electorate. Elevating McCain on a pedestal and creating this sense of destiny appears to be part of what the campaign is hoping to create next week. More importantly, what the campaign needs to have happen following next week is a mini-surge in the polls. There's something about his small lead nationally that doesn't seem to be big enough right now. Once Democrats settle on a nominee, that candidate will see a poll surge of sorts, and McCain isn't going to want that surge to move his numbers from dead heat to 10 points down. Better that the surge goes from 10 points up to dead heat. So measure the success of next week by what kind of lead McCain starts building (if any) in the national polls.


 
*** Veepstakes: Who knew Mitt Romney was going to work so hard to get on the ticket. It's one thing to endorse McCain, he HAD to do that. But helping him raise money in multiple states and doing a mini-fly around is clearly above and beyond. While on paper it seems unlikely that McCain-Romney is a winning ticket, think about where the battleground will be in a match up with Obama: it'll be in the Midwest and West, two places where Romney could help. Obama's electoral map is much more heavy on western states and will be much more precarious in the rust belt, particularly Michigan (a Romney home state). In addition, a surge in Mormon support in places like Colorado and Nevada could help a McCain-Romney ticket hold off a surprisingly popular Obama in those states. Many a state poll has shown that Obama, more so than Clinton, has a better shot at putting three of the four corner states in play (Colorado, Nevada and New Mexico). Toss in Montana, and it's clear that McCain may indeed need to find someone who can help him in his home region.
 
*** Back to MI/FL: Need more evidence this Democratic fight could be headed to Denver? Clinton yesterday was asked on FOX how she could get the Michigan/Florida delegates seated. "We can always go to the convention -- that's what credentials fights are for," she said, assertively. And check this, a new online petition urging Howard Dean to count the votes from Florida and Michigan, which was, per Hotline, “launched by HRC bundlers." Once again, this could be Clinton supporters who think they are helping but in fact are hurting. But because there is such a level of strategic distrust between the Clinton money folks and the team running the campaign, there's a lot of freelancing going on and as much as we may know it's not something the actual Clinton campaign is pushing, that isn't the perception being left to those undecided superdelegates.   
 
*** The delegate count: With Sen. Bob Casey’s (D-PA) endorsement of Obama (and joining of his bus tour), Obama has now picked up three superdelegates since Wednesday (Don Williams of CT and Dan Lipinski of IL are the other two). By the way, Rahm “I’m staying neutral” Emanuel is now the ONLY remaining elected superdelegate from Illinois NOT to endorse. Here’s the count: Obama leads among pledged delegates 1408-1251; Clinton leads now among superdelegates, 255-221. Added together, Obama's overall delegate lead is 123: 1629-1506. BTW, on the Casey front, it actually shouldn't be that surprising. Casey and Rendell are usually on opposite sides. What's ironic about the endorsement is that Casey actually needs to emulate the electoral victory of Rendell in that contentious Rendell-Casey '02 Dem GOV race more so than Casey, whose voters are probably leaning more Clinton. 
 
*** On the trail: Clinton makes four stops in Indiana with three town halls and one roundtable, all focused on the economy; McCain raises money in Las Vegas, then spends the weekend down in Phoenix; Obama appears on The View and campaigns in Pittsburgh and holds a town hall in Greensburg; and Bill Clinton is in North Carolina.
 
Greensburg; and Bill Clinton is in North Carolina.
Countdown to Pennsylvania: 25 days
Countdown to North Carolina, Indiana: 39 days
Countdown to Election Day 2008: 221 days
Countdown to Inauguration Day 2009: 298 days
 
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Comments

David-NY___I have been wondering the same thing for weeks,the comment that Ed Rendell said"People of Penn,I don't think they will vote for a black candidate "He was not held to these type of  statements and he is out stumping everyday for Hillbilly.Why the people of Penn.don't hold this guy responsible?Is he the Gov or campaigning For Hill 24/7.He is also named in the Peter Paul trial in Calf,as are many of Hills campaigners
Jaime, Lantana, FL
it is not true, he hasnt been consistent, he first said that he never hear the alegation, later that he was nto in the service that day, later bla bla bla... at the end, he said in his speach about "race"  i cant desert him becaseu ....
please, Obama is jsut playing.  he said the same thing about his advisor talkign with Canada goverment, he said the same thing in many other situation, and only accept it when he was confronted and then apologize.  Lets face teh true here, Obama is just another player. AND GOOD PLAYER, using AA emotion and some young student for his momentum, nothing else, but guess what, he has nothing on the table, just words of promises, it remind me Bush with his message of changes.  ja ja ja ja ja.  Obama is de third Bush, just on democrat version
you can hate obama how much you can but hes the generation gift ! plaese guys  stop blamin obama for no reason ! just go ahead and vote for whoever you love and leave this guy alone ! i am white woman ! ill dont care about hes black or green ! we  need someone in our house who can deal with a many crazy things ! remember this unite state of american republicans for obama in pa abama you got our vote me and my friends god obamerica 08
To David Kolva, NY....

I think Pennsylvania is getting a bad rap over their so called "racist" voting trend being portrayed.  I'm a white male from Minnesota and our NFL Football team sent the Steelers team a black head coach (Mike Tomlin).

I know, what does this have to do with anything?  The Steelers fans are some of the most passionate in the entire league, just about everyone in their state watches the games.  I remember when they hired Tomlin, there were some "racist" comments being thrown around and some premature views about how this guy wasn't smart enough to lead this storied franchise.  After just one year of coaching the team, the fans are on board and in fact, Tomlin's approval rating is higher than their previous coaches ever were.  What that tells me is that they ARE capable of supporting a black man regardless of their short sided perspectives sometimes.

Mike Tomlin will go down in history as one of the greats and we here in MN are sorry to have seen him go.  If the people of PA have the same passion for politics as they do football, they will do their due dilligence and listen to what Obama has to say and like Tomlin, I think they will grow to love him just as much.
So women over 50 overwhelmingly support Hillary! One question for them. She has been on the national scene for 16 years the Equal Rights Admendment has not been passed durning that time. Now I know it is short a few states and it is at state level that it needs to pass. Still as these supporters of her so identify her as their leader, why is it we have not seen her out front on this, I mean really pushing it for women?
For all you non military people really think about this; THERE HAVE BEEN MANY CASES WHERE MEN WHO SERVED OR DID NOT SERVE IN VIET NAM HAVE CLAIMED TO HAVE COME UNDER LIVE FIRE! THESE MEN HAVE BEEN PROSECUTED FOR SUCH LIES. I see where she is going to be in Fayetteville, NC this week; It is home to the 82nd Airborne Division I served in, it is one of our most Elite units, the troops there should really blast her over this, it is so disrespectful of those who have actually been under live fire serving their country to boost that you had too, went you had not. It is unpatriotic, certainly not HONORABLE and no military person should let her get away from feeling how disrespectful she has been....
you are wrong to say that democrats that will not vote for Obama are really republicans.You need to get out more.
H I L L A R Y C L I N T O N . C O M , COME VISIT US NOW FOR UP TO DATE INFORMATION. : )
Related to Blog?  I'm convinced MSNBC and many other of the media crowd are, and have been from the beginning, biased against Hillary. Is it the Old Boys' Club working again?? Obama may be "black" and making history (of some sort) but he's still one of the "boys".
Barack's best position in a primary is to come from behind. If he takes the lead too early, it puts her in a position she has proven to be most skilled and comfortable at, "The Clinton Comeback".
You don't want to put a woman runningmate on the defensive a week before the primary because it pulls in a primal sympathy vote that is hard to keep in check.
Hey, Brother Odd - you cannot say that MSNBC is biased.  I think there are enough pundits to balance everything out.  Dan Abrams says he's not partial, but seems to defend Clinton A LOT, many times on things that I do not think he should (e.g. "mis-speaking" about Bosnia).  Keith seems a little partial toward Obama, but he is still ENTERTAINING, which I think is what his newscast is about, presenting the news in an entertaining way without getting into satire like "The Daily Show".  Chris Matthews is, well, Chris Matthews.  Chucky T. (as Joe Scarborough calls him) and Tim Russert are not biased.  Joe is a REPUBLICAN for heaven's sake, and he is ALWAYS defending Clinton.  Good grief, people.  You are allowing your OWN biases to cloud your judgment.  I  would rather watch MSNBC than any of the other networks.  
MSNBC are a bunch of way left liberals who need you to know at every minute that all those white dudes are not racists.  There all for the black dude.  It's sickening to watch.  the reality is that if Obama wins the nomination it will be in part because the media gave him a pass all the time worrying if they came after him they would be l;ooked at as racist.  On the other hand they kill Hillary at every chance(but she is a woman so I guess they could get away with that).  If Hillary does not win the nomination I look forward to seeing Obama and these looney liberals sit there and call the country racist and not ready for a black President when obama loses in a landslide.  Hillary is our only chance.  Wake up dems.. general elections are won in the middle.  Obama is falling off the left cliff
I don't think you can draw the conclusion that Obama is being either "excessively cautious", or that he doesn't have 20-25 delegates to unveil.

The Pennsylvania primary is coming up, and Hillary Clinton is undoubtedly going to win it.  What good would it be to "write Clinton's campaign obit" only to have her wrack up a huge victory in Pennsylvania afterwards?  If I were advising Senator Obama I'd wait until after Pennsylvania before lowering the boom.
Once again the obama camp is running their LOSING campaign based on what the hyped up polls by WSJNBC and Chris Matthews tells them.
This reminds me of when Marcia Clark and Chris Darden was trying their entire murder case against OJ Simpsom based on what they saw and heard on court tv. Then Johnny Cochran realize this and egged on Chris Darden to push for OJ Simpsom to try on the glove over latex........ we know the outcome of that one..

So obama keep ignoring Hillary and go after Mccain and keep ignoring Jeremiah Wright Anti-America, Anti- Israel and hate speech and keep listening to your many infatuated media pundits and keep believing your own inflated press polls and doting coverage that the American people will not hold you resposibly for his comments but instead accept your "BLAME YOU PEOPLE AND BLAME AMERICA" for your pastor and mentor.

THE PROOF WILL BE IN THE PUDDING COME PRIMARY DAY.

predictions:.. Hillary will be ahead in popular vote and will be about 63 delegates short of obama and SHE WILL WIN NORTH CAROLINA, INDIANA, OREGON AND ABOUT 9 OUT OF THE 10 REMAINING PRIMARIES.


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