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Election 2008

Obama-Hillary Battle Hits the Potomac Primaries

By Zenitha Prince, Washington Afro. Posted February 9, 2008.


All eyes have turned to the Feb. 12 primary elections in Virginia, Maryland and Washington, D.C.
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Ryan Cooper, 23, moved through the crowd of about 75 people gathered early this morning in the unfinished office space in Largo, Md., which for the next week would be the Obama '08 headquarters in Maryland.

He handed out name and address lists, maps, pens and shiny-new pamphlets, a captain arming troops for what has become a major battle in the war over the Democratic nomination for president.

"Our goal is three fold," he told the volunteers who had come to canvass neighborhoods in Prince George's County. "Remind people to vote in the Maryland primary on Feb. 12; if they're already supporting the senator, ask them to volunteer; and if they don't know, tell them about Sen. (Barack) Obama."A1 PotomacPrimaries.JPG

The presence in Maryland of the former University of Maryland student and Obama campaign organizer, part of the team who helped Obama rout his opponents in South Carolina, was one of many signs that the battleground for the United States presidency had shifted to the Mid-Atlantic.

With Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and Obama, D-Ill., coming out of the avalanche of votes on Super Tuesday near even, all eyes have turned to the "Potomac Primaries," the Feb. 12 primary elections in Virginia, Maryland and Washington, D.C.

Both candidates have trumpeted endorsements and campaign operatives are planning appearances and have dispatched teams of paid staff and volunteers.

"This is a really tight race," said Candice Tolliver, an Obama campaign spokeswoman.

"So every delegate counts, every voter counts, every state counts."

The senator's campaign is already running three different ads in the two states and the district, one featuring Caroline Kennedy, daughter of former President John Kennedy, who endorsed Obama last week, and the others showing snippets of the senator's speeches on the campaign trail. The campaign is also targeting Latino voters through its Maryland Latinos for Obama initiative, which was launched Feb. 4. But most of the campaign involves volunteers canvassing neighborhoods and holding house parties and rallies, Tolliver said.

"The blueprint for the rest of the country is the blueprint we're following here," she said. "It's a bottom-up strategy; we're empowering people in their communities to act as agents of change and ambassadors of Sen. Obama," she said. "It's really working for us on the ground."

With 238 delegates up for grabs, the triumvirate is an attractive prize, especially for Obama.

"He moves into Maryland, D.C. and Virginia in a really strong position," said Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia.

"All three would vote for him."

Obama has already garnered some major endorsements, including, Washington Mayor Adrian Fenty, Maryland's Comptroller Peter Franchot, Attorney General Doug Gansler and Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings; Virginia's Gov. Timothy Kaine, Richmond Mayor Doug Wilder, U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott and more recently U.S. Rep. Rick Boucher, who represents the coal mining counties of Southwest Virginia, where the highest percentage -- 94 percent -- of white voters are located.

A strong African-American voter base in the three jurisdictions, particularly in Prince George's County, also bodes well for Obama, Sabato said, as does his popularity among young people like University of Maryland student Wanika Fisher, who signed up as a volunteer.


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Rebecca
Posted by: Bec59 on Feb 9, 2008 6:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Washington DC--Listen up!Bottom line--until we make elections totally publically funded, go back to the "equal time, equal access" rule in our media, (or some better version), make our voting system secure with paper ballots that we can see with our own eyes, make election day a (payed?) National Holiday so all have few excuses not to vote, make voting an act of personal pride and responsibility in the eyes of all, make elections "clean"-- do something about our crazy electoral system (win by popular vote!)in other words, make it real so that ANYONE can run for elective office in this great country of ours---not just the wealthy--then no one will have to compromise their values to get money to buy the time, to pay the fat-cat owner/ broadcasters who use OUR AIRWAVES.Until that day when we take back our power as a people who should be lighting the way as we used to be known and admired for, then we're stuck with this 'effed' up system of ours. Let's take our country back and make it right.

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» RE: ebecca Posted by: Bok
» RE: ebecca Posted by: Bec59
Tuesday's my turn
Posted by: nochicagoboys on Feb 9, 2008 10:47 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'll make my vote a write-in.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: Bec59
» RE: Tuesday's my turn Posted by: nochicagoboys
Rebecca
Posted by: Bec59 on Feb 9, 2008 11:55 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Isn't it pathetic that we are made to feel like we have some power, but then, when those delegates make their promises and then get behind that election booth curtain, they are free to vote however they want?! Enough of this baloney! Make election coverage free (and time limited) on the networks! We'd be farther ahead as Americans if the politicians would just divy up the campaign money they collect and send each citizen an outright check instead of spending it on touting themselves in useless 15 second and thirty second sound bites.Talk about fiscal stimulus package? Enough already.

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Out here in Hampton Roads, VA
Posted by: maxpayne on Feb 9, 2008 10:07 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama will get plenty of nice support from Norfolk, Newport News, and Hampton while Hillary might win VA Beach, Chesapeake, and Suffolk. In any case, neither of these two or for that matter McPAIN are any different on most policies when all push comes to shove. At this point with Kucinich out and Gravel rendered to nowhere status, it's just a "choice" among the corporatist puppets ! Obama is known by many as Big O(reo) by many older blacks while a lot of fundies and gun-toting cons are desperately doing their darndest to put Hillary over the top in the primaries. Gawd, it will be so sickening to watch the Clintons vs the rightwing all over again at a time when America is getting ready to REJECT the Reagan/Bush/Cheney ideology !

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» RE: Out here in Hampton Roads, VA Posted by: Prairie Waif
The Bottom Line
Posted by: SufiLizard on Feb 10, 2008 6:07 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think this election is SO important so I'm going to keep hammering on this point. We can't let John McCain win in November.

And though I wasn't originally a supporter of either Obama or Clinton, I have to say there is only one way to beat McCain in November -- elect Obama as our nominee.

I just talked to my sister yesterday who has voted Republican in every election of her life and she said she's considering voting for Obama, but wouldn't even consider voting for Hillary. Members of my wife's family who are left leaning independents feel the same way -- some of us would vote for Hillary if we had to, but many members of her family just plain won't vote for Hillary Clinton.

Sure their views may be unfair, uninformed, the result of shameful Republican smear tactics, but the bottom line is that those are the views that most moderate Republicans and Independents have.

I have a lot of concerns about Obama, but of the two candidates we have left, I really think he's the only one who has a chance to beat John McCain.

No matter what, we progressives need to not take a vacation after the November election. It is going to take full-on activism no matter who's in the White House to get real progressive change to happen.

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Boomlet: Obama-Kennedy
Posted by: jmooney on Feb 10, 2008 4:31 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was just watching "60 Minutes" and saw one of the scenes of Ted Kennedy sitting behind Obama, and it occurred tome, why not an Obama-Kennedy ticket? I mean, Obama is channeling JFK a bit (I know, I know, they are't the same people, JFK wasn't always the great liberal we would have liked him to be, blah, blah, but I'm talking about his tapping into youthful hope and a new sense of hope, etc.)

So, with Obama channeling some of that, and Teddy willing to actually, for one of the rare times in his career, associate another candidate with his beloved brother, and with Kennedy's great tentacles throughout the Democratic party, his grasp of foreign policy, his ties to labor, hispanics, etc., why not Obama-Kennedy.

Kennedy once was asked, years after his presidential hopes had died, if he still thought of being president. And he said something along the lines of, "Not often, just every other day."

He'll never be president (well, if he were VP I guess there'd be a chance), but why not have this elder statesman helping a young, dynamic guy like Obama in that role. Oh, I know, Cheney is in that role now, but he's Darth Vader. Kennedy isn't cut of that same cloth. He's had some personal issues and stuff like that, but he's not steeped in that secrecy and intrigue like Cheney.

Obama-Kennedy. Interesting. I plan to start posting regularly on this and see if others comment. But, I'll stick to stories on Obama, of course, so in as to not inappropriately post on Alternet. I respect Alternet too much to just lurk on all sorts of stories and post my Obama-Kennedy stuff everywhere.

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I have a right
Posted by: zeitgeist1979 on Feb 10, 2008 5:09 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OK so I will end the "Hillary Bashing' (big emphasis on the quotation marks) ... although I have got to say that I find it pretty offensive that my commentaries are sometimes dismissed as being "sexist" regardless of the actual validity to them ... & I guess I'm supposed to be the one that is blind & naive (& hence by implication stupid) because I support Obama? C'mon people give me some credit ... I am actually a smart person ... Jesus Christ! I mean did you ever see ME defending Alberto Gonzalez just because he happened to be Hispanic? that's a big NO!!!! God damn it ... I am angry about the Iraq Occupation and you bet that I HAVE A RIGHT TO BE ANGRY and the right to be angry at Hillary for her support of the Iraq Occupation and her continued refusal to even admit that she was wrong on it!!! I am an American and this is what America is supposed to be about: to make your voice heard!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Regardless, let me say this: I will do EVERYTHING in my power to make sure John McCain does NOT become our next President. He WILL be George Bush Part 2 to the max. Period. Where does Hillary fit into all this? Frankly, I still don't know. She still needs to show me something ... at least throw me a bone ... now is that too much to ask? Or am I supposed to just fall in line and become a Billarybot because she's a woman AND a Democrat AND a Clinton? Anyway, check out the video about McCain below:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3oj_YtY-EZQ

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» RE: I have a right Posted by: jmooney
Protest the super delegates
Posted by: bloosqr on Feb 12, 2008 11:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The issue of super delegates and the democratic party is unconscionable. Currently Obama is ahead in the popular vote and behind in the delegate vote. We can not have 800 party insiders decide the primaries for us! I have created a protest page here

http://www.popularprimaryvotenow.com

If you think this is an issue please add a comment to the protest page of the website. I will print out all the comments and give them to the Democratic party

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