Even counting the Clinton machine’s super-delegates . He’s winning it the old-fashioned way - state by state, argument by argument, debate by debate. Clinton should consider stepping aside if tomorrow’s votes go the same way. If she couldn’t put this thing away by now - with all her party clout, all her chits, all her husband’s pull, all her big donors, and all her brand-name recognition - she’s not going to do it in the end. All she will do is put her own party through an ordeal it need not experience. But I guess the Clintons have done that before, haven’t they?
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Republican Women For Clinton?From: andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com
Post Date: 2007-10-18 17:24:00
What is Mark Penn smoking, apart from complacency? He claims a quarter of Republican women will vote for Clinton. Drudge blared it in his new role as Clinton’s publicity arm. WaPo points out that if this were to happen, Clinton would significantly outperform any Democratic candidate since 1972 among this group of voters. In exit polls from 1972 to 2004, an average of 9 percent of GOP women voted for Democratic candidates...
In the latest Post-ABC poll, 80 percent of Republican ...
more Quote For The Day IIFrom: andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com
Post Date: 2007-10-18 16:55:00
"This is like a lighthouse going on, the light shining its beam on Mitt Romney," - Albert Mohler on Hugh Hewitt’s radio show. Yes, an institution that untilo very recently banned inter-racial dating and engaged in brutal anti-Catholic bigotry is now a light shining on Mitt Romney, a man who belonged to a church which, in his lifetime, barred African-Americans from the priesthood and temple ceremonies. Ah, the GOP. They don’t even pretend any more, do they? ...
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