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EV_Ares Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-27-08 07:57 AM
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Electoral map favors a Democrat, has McCain playing defense
Edited on Sun Apr-27-08 07:59 AM by EV_Ares
By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer
Sun Apr 27, 4:39 AM ET

With this article & the other article I posted on how McCain lost in PA, you can see that all is not doom & gloom for the democrats. Granted we must be vigilant and continue to fight like there is no other day because we know how the republicans play this game and will cheat or do whatever it takes for them to win in November. However these two article are uplifting in what they show.

WASHINGTON - The electoral road to the White House favors Democrats this fall — either Barack Obama or Hillary Rodham Clinton — and has Republican John McCain playing defense to thwart a presidential power shift.

A downtrodden economy, the war in Iraq and a public call for change have created an Electoral College outlook and a political environment filled with extraordinary opportunity for the Democrats and enormous challenge for the GOP nominee-in-waiting.

Both parties count on victory in dozens of states that long have voted their way. The competition to reach the 270 electoral votes needed to win is expected to play out primarily in 14 states. All but one saw the greatest action in 2004. The exception is Virginia, a longtime Republican stronghold where Democrats have made inroads.

Eight of the states went for President Bush four years ago, including the crown jewels Ohio and Florida. Six, including big-prize Pennsylvania, voted for Democrat John Kerry. In the battlegrounds, far more electoral votes, 97, are up for grabs for Democrats than the 69 available for McCain to go after. Twice as many of the closest states — decided by 2 or fewer percentage points — voted Republican in 2004; they include New Mexico and Iowa, which the GOP won by 1 point.

Both sides argue that their candidates can expand the playing field by making more states competitive than in previous elections. But they likely will only spend time and money to test that theory once they feel confident about higher priority states.

Read entire article @ link below:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080427/ap_on_el_pr/road_to270;_ylt=AoX0kjb8veud7_bbVAKNbftp24cA

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EV_Ares Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-27-08 10:41 AM
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1. Also Obama is flush with cash and Hillary has big money problems.
Apr 21st, 2008 | WASHINGTON -- Barack Obama began the month of April with a 5-1 cash advantage over a debt-saddled Hillary Rodham Clinton, setting the stage for his lopsided spending in the crucial primary state of Pennsylvania.

Financial reports filed Sunday by the Democratic presidential candidates with the Federal Election Commission show Clinton had $10.3 million in debts at the start of the month and only about $9 million cash on hand for the primaries. Obama reported having $42 million for the primary.

Clinton's red ink poses yet another obstacle to her campaign as she seeks to end the primary season with a string of victories. She trails Obama in delegates, states won and popular votes. And she can't dent Obama's superior fundraising.

The March money positioned Obama to undertake an expensive April campaign in Pennsylvania, where he has spent at least twice as much as Clinton and cut into her lead. Pennsylvania votes on Tuesday.

Clinton, who had kept pace with Obama financially throughout last year, had even less cash on hand than Republican John McCain. McCain raised $15.2 million in March and had $11.6 million in the bank at the start of April. It was his best fundraising performance of the campaign, coming after he had essentially secured his party's presidential nomination.

With the Democratic contest still in full boil, McCain has been on the sidelines, saving his money and completing payments on a loan.

Rest of Salon article @ link below:

http://www.salon.com/wires/ap/2008/04/21/D9064ING0_camp ...


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