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[b]In The Know wrote:[/b] [quote]Maybe, JK - but I fear the division will cause voters to see the party as divided. From CNN - Early exit polls indicate a distinct "age gap" in both states. Obama appealed most strongly to younger voters while older voters favored Clinton. Among Ohio Democratic primary voters aged 17 to 29, 65 percent went for Obama, and 34 percent went for Clinton. Among those age 60 and older, Clinton led Obama 67-31 percent. The same pattern held true in early exit polling from the Texas Democratic primary. Among voters aged 18 to 29, Obama led Clinton 61-39 percent, and among voters 60 and older, Clinton led Obama 63- 36 percent. --- I think the choice is clear - Obama is fresh, new, has vision, and is the future ... Clinton is old school, and cannot carry the young with her. (Whether the Dems win or not largely depends on whether they can mobilize the youth vote?)[/quote]
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D-Day for Hillary !
Max. showing the last 5 posts -
(Last post first)
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In The Know
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/03/...aign.wrap/index.html
DJones
JC
Fat chance of her doing that. I don't think she'll concede until the last vote is counted, regardless of the consequences.
In The Know
US commentators agree that if Hillary continues her campaign she will hand the election to McLoony - by splitting the Democratic vote -
edition.cnn.com/video/#/video/politics/2...lo.bitter.ending.cnn
Its looking increasing unlikely that Hillary COULD win (the nomination), so she should stand down and unite the party.
In The Know
Barack Obama won the Mississippi primary - Obama had 61 percent of the vote, compared with Clinton's 37 percent.
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