The news of the death of the Republican nominating process, which has dwindled from four serious candidates plus Ron Paul to two serious candidates plus Ron Paul, may have been premature. After being anointed the nominee-apparent with the withdrawal of Mitt Romney, John McCain now needs to note that he subsequently lost two primaries to Mike Huckabee. This can't be good.
McCain has not been reaching 50% in primaries; in fact, apart from 48% in his home state of Arizona, the 42% in California seems to be about his high point, though I haven't seen a chart of all of them. This is not exactly a dominating performance.
In the end, McCain needs to get more than half the votes in primaries with only one other candidate, and he hasn't been doing that. Until now, voting for Romney meant voting for Romney. Now voting for Romney may mean casting your ballot for Huckabee and keeping the thing open. There's no way Huckabee is going to get the nomination, but if he can get enough to stall McCain, remember that Romney did not withdraw. He "suspended" his campaign.
At this point, the best hope for a convention battle seems to be on the Democratic side, however. Obama and Clinton are coming so close to splitting the elected delegates that the super delegates may have the final say. That would be fun to watch.
I notice Chelsea Clinton popping up from time to time. In many parts of the world, the principal progeny of the leaders would be primed for eventual succession to the mantle of leadership. That's how it would be done in India or Pakistan. Or Massachusetts.
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment