Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton is counting on the almost–Super
Tuesday primaries March 4 for another comeback, as she
and rival Sen. Barack Obama both begin ads in Texas
and Ohio, the day's biggest prizes. Barring an upset
win for Clinton in the next five Democratic contests, she
could well have suffered 10 straight defeats by the
time Democrats begin voting March 4 in Texas, Ohio,
Rhode Island, and Vermont -- the biggest single day
left on the Democratic nominating calendar. The New York
senator bounced back earlier in New Hampshire after
Obama defeated her in Iowa. Now she says ''I am very
confident'' of doing much better when 370 delegates
are allocated March 4.
Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton is counting on the almost–Super
Tuesday primaries March 4 for another comeback, as she
and rival Sen. Barack Obama both begin ads in Texas
and Ohio, the day's biggest prizes.
Barring an upset
win for Clinton in the next five Democratic contests,
she could well have suffered 10 straight defeats by the time
Democrats begin voting March 4 in Texas, Ohio, Rhode
Island and Vermont -- the biggest single day left on
the Democratic nominating calendar.
The New York
senator bounced back earlier in New Hampshire after Obama
defeated her in Iowa. Now she says ''I am very confident''
of doing much better when 370 delegates are allocated
March 4.
Neither Clinton
nor Obama could win enough delegates that day to clinch
the nomination, but the outcome could sway increasingly
crucial superdelegates -- the party officials who are
not bound by primary and caucus voting and may end up
picking the nominee.
Both campaigns
planned to launch TV ads Tuesday in Texas and Ohio, where
voters will select 193 and 141 delegates, respectively.
Between them, the two states have another 55
superdelegates.
The Illinois
senator's ad targeted one of Clinton's perceived strengths
-- health care.
Her ads played on
one of her strengths, going up simultaneously in
English and Spanish, crucial in Texas, where Hispanics could
supply up to half the Democratic votes. Hispanics have
heavily favored Clinton over Obama in earlier
contests. He planned Spanish ads later in the week.
Saturating the
huge Texas media markets could cost each of them $1
million a week, but there were other places to spend money
as the neck-and-neck Democratic contenders battle over
every delegate. With three weeks to the voting, both
camps also are scrambling to build organizations in
all four states.
''It won't be as
strong of a ground game as they had in Iowa because they
had months and months and months'' to prepare for the
campaign's first contest, said Caleb Faux, executive
director of Ohio's Hamilton County Democratic Party.
The campaigns
used tickets to punk-rock concerts, deep-fried foods, and
even drinks called Hillaritas to lure volunteers who can
build databases, canvass, and staff phone banks.
''The directive
we've gotten is to do everything you can locally to
harness the energy,'' said Carter Stewart, an Obama
volunteer who has coordinated Ohio friends to wave
signs at events.
Last Friday, the
Clinton campaign, which has done better among lower-paid
workers, dispatched Ohio governor Ted Strickland to rally
support in the economically depressed Rust Belt city
of Youngstown. ''It would be very difficult for her to
proceed to eventual victory without winning Ohio,''
Strickland said Monday.
Next Friday,
Obama's camp plans to bring 2,000 new volunteers to
Cleveland, home to a significant batch of the black voters
who account for one in eight registered Ohio
Democrats. Bidding to be the first black president,
Obama has overwhelmingly won black votes in earlier
contests.
At Ohio's Bowling
Green State University, Obama volunteers combined a
punk-rock concert with a campaign sign-up.
In Rhode Island,
where voters will allocate 21 delegates, more than 250
Obama volunteers already met at a Dollar General store to go
door-to-door. The campaign was making use of Craig Robinson,
Michelle Obama's brother and the coach of Brown
University men's basketball team.
In Vermont, where
voters will decide on 15 delegates, former state
representative Mary Sullivan, an Obama supporter, has been
looking for space to house an expected influx of
workers as people in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and
New York call to volunteer. Billi Gosh, a Vermont
super delegate who supports Clinton, expressed frustration
that her campaign has relied entirely on volunteers in
Vermont and has yet to send in a staff worker. ''We
really need a staffer, and we need Bill or Hillary
Clinton to come here,'' she said.
In Dallas,
potential Clinton supporters piled into wood-paneled booths
at Metro Grill to watch Super Tuesday returns and
snack on fried red onion strings.
Clinton herself
scheduled personal appearances Tuesday and Wednesday in
El Paso, San Antonio, Corpus Christi, and McAllen, all
predominantly Latino cities where her husband, the
former president, is so popular his portrait hangs in
many Mexican restaurants.
Obama is
relatively new to Texans but held two well-attended rallies
in the past year in Austin, the state's most liberal
city. He's also been lining up notable supporters in
Houston and Dallas. Obama has time to catch up, said
Lydia Camarillo, vice president of the Southwest Voter
Registration Education Project in San Antonio. ''The
Hispanic vote is Hillary's right now. But he's made
some gains.''
Some Latino
voters could be swayed by Obama's support from the Kennedy
family, said political science professor Jerry Polinard at
the University of Texas-Pan American in Edinburg. But
Polinard added, ''He's going to have difficulty
cracking her stranglehold on the Latino vote.''
In Ohio, bus
loads of activists and their friends and neighbors rolled
into Columbus's Harrison Park Center to hear how they could
help Obama in Ohio. More than 500 came; the room
inside was set up with 120 chairs.
''The good news,
if you're running the Obama campaign, is there's a lot
of energy there and people are ready to work,'' said Ed
Helvey, chairman of Ohio's Delaware County Democratic
Party, who visited the meeting.
''The bad news?
They had their first real big meeting a month out.''
(Philip Elliott, AP)
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