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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



Delegate count: Good news, bad news

Posted: Friday, April 04, 2008 9:04 AM by Domenico Montanaro

The latest New York Times/CBS poll is a half full/half empty kind of survey. On the face of it, the Obama folks should feel good that they still hold a narrow lead in the primary and lead McCain narrowly in the general. He also sports a high favorable rating. BUT... "Obama’s support among Democrats nationally has softened over the last month, particularly among men and upper-income voters, as voters have taken a slightly less positive view of him than they did after his burst of victories in February… Obama’s favorability rating among Democratic primary voters has dropped seven percentage points, to 62 percent, since the last Times/CBS News survey, in late February. While that figure is by any measure high, the decline came in a month during which he endured withering attacks from Mrs. Clinton and responded to reports that his former pastor had made politically inflammatory statements from his church’s pulpit in Chicago.”

“Still, the events of the last month do not appear to have fundamentally altered the race for the party’s nomination or provided what Mrs. Clinton’s campaign has been seeking: evidence of a collapse in Mr. Obama’s standing or an overwhelming preference voiced for Mrs. Clinton by Democratic voters in polls, developments that could be used to persuade uncommitted superdelegates to sign on with her."

The Clinton campaign is probably somewhat surprised to get a "Stay in it" op-ed from Dem strategist Bob Shrum. "She has very little chance of winning, but Hillary Clinton has no reason to get out of the race for the Democratic presidential nomination -- for now. A long shot isn’t the same as no chance at all. And an extended campaign doesn’t have to wound the nominee, assuming a measure of self-restraint on both sides. ... If instead she insists on protracting the race, calls in June for her to quit would be right in principle and right for the party. But we are not at that stage yet. Calls for her to concede now, before the race is lost, are premature."

Meet the super supers. “Some of those presidential superdelegates Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton are pursuing are more super than others,” the AP writes. “One delegate, one vote doesn't apply to them. These prominent Democrats can name additional superdelegates, giving them control over multiple convention votes, and that could be the difference in a race that may not be decided until the August convention.

“76 percent of respondents said America is ready for a black president -- and that number has grown from 62 percent in December as Barack Obama's candidacy has surged,” a survey by Opinion Research for CNN and Essence Magazine. “Whites were even more confident on the point, with 78 percent saying the country is ready, compared to 69 percent of African-Americans. Only 63 percent said America is ready for a woman as president, virtually unchanged from December.”
Director Rob Reiner, at Hillary Clinton’s Los Angeles fundraiser last night, told the crowd of 1,500 that when all the votes are counted, that Clinton will have more votes, NBC’s John Boxley says. Giving the audience a primer on the Electoral Map, Reiner said that the key will not be the big states or the little states, but the swing states like Ohio, Michigan, Florida, etc -- states that the Dems must win in November. Clinton then told the enthusiastic crowd, "I believe that this country is worth fighting for and we need a fighter in the White House again." Other celebrities at the fundraisers included Ted Danson, his wife Mary Steenburgen, Fran Drescher, and former California Gov. Gray Davis. In all, the Clinton campaign says it raised almost $1 million at four events in Northern and Southern California.

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Comments

charlie said "won't AA vite more then 90% of the time..they're the highest and moost reliable group the party..get your facts right..they vote 95% for John Kerry and 93% for bill clinton..thats goes to show how nuch you reakky know"

WHERE IN THE WORLD DID YOU GET THAT?  ARE YOU READING VENUS NEWSPAPER? I AM PRETY SURE, IT IS NOT USA NEWSPAPER, everybody knows that Obama is getting over 90% of AA vote.  

so, what are you talkinga bout?
Can anyone tell me why Hillary is still in the race? Why would she think the rules of the superdelegates will be changed for her lying self?Set out and stay out...
Blacks vote for the democratic nominee by greater than 85% in the general election anyway.  I do not want to hear anything about all blacks supporting Obama because of his color.  Hillary had a chance to maintain the support among blacks that she did earlier in the primary season.  But like Tuzla, she would not let that LBJ did as much for blacks than MLK comment go.  She played the race card and got played.  Just think of it as the blacks are coalescing around the future nominee early.
Blacks vote for the democratic nominee by greater than 85% in the general election anyway.  I do not want to hear anything about all blacks supporting Obama because of his color.  Hillary had a chance to maintain the support among blacks that she did earlier in the primary season.  But like Tuzla, she would not let that LBJ did as much for blacks than MLK comment go.  She played the race card and got played.  Just think of it as the blacks are coalescing around the future nominee early.
There are ten remaining primaries, Michigan, Florida and super delegates amounting to about 1,000 delegates. Clinton is now leading in Indiana, where she was down by 20 points at one time. She leads in Pennslyvnania, Ky, West Virginia, Oregon and Puerto Rico and she still can win, not only the popular vote, but the delegate vote as well.
The"Bosnia" is less then minor thing comparing with Rev.Wright. He is a 'life style' comparing with 'incident'. Hate in the God's house...no excuse for that.Who ever teach and preach hate should be incarcerated.
First of all, I am an Obama supporter as are my daughters and my diehard Republican Mom and about 40 of her Republican female friends.  

We would love to see a woman as President of The United States, however, not at any cost.  Now don't get me wrong, I'm sure Hillary is a good woman deep down but she has a character flaw that keeps surfacing.  She skirts the truth whenever it suits her purpose. The Clinton's have a 'say or do anything to win' trait that I believe has been the standard in politics for the past 16 years.  Enough is enough.

I propose that Democrats come together and support the one candidate who can realy bring about change.  Sen. Obama is honest, has enormous integrity and he's the one person who can bring this country together.  He will give UNITED in The United States new meaning.

Electing Clinton as the first female President by using underhanded, mean spirited political tactics, lies and embellishments does not reflect well on women.  It will be viewed by the world at large as business as usual in Washington, it will adversely affect the American people and last but not least, it will make it impossible for another woman to run for the highest office in the forseeable future.

I would like change we can believe in, Obama 08.


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