With a show of hands, the roughly 250 or so uncommitted superdelegates can stop the fight. Instead, they're cowardly holding back as Obama and Clinton duke it out until the final round on June 3.
The issue is no longer whether Obama or Clinton is more electable. Instead, it's whether the Democratic Party is willing to throw black voters under the bus as they chase after "hard-working," albeit elusive, white Democratic voters. Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, wrote:
But even if superdelegates agree with her, there's a larger reason why she is asking the impossible: The clout of African-Americans as the party's most loyal voting bloc eliminates any chance the superdelegates will stop Sen. Obama's nomination out of concern that he might lose in November.Brown added:
For the superdelegates to nominate her, they would have to forsake both the Democratic Party's long-term interests and their own personal moral code.
While blacks don't see Sen. John McCain as malevolent as Mr. Bush, there's little chance of a huge African-American protest vote for the Arizona Republican in November if Sen. Obama is denied the nomination.Question: What are these party elites waiting for? Even Stevie Wonder can see the end is near. But then again, there are none so blind as those who will not see.
Instead, millions of blacks would sit this one out. Without a large African-American turnout not just Sen. Clinton, but also Democratic congressional and gubernatorial candidates, might be toast. It would be almost impossible for them to make up the difference among white voters.


1. I'm white, and I wish they would do a poll of whites who are FOR Obama because he is Black. I think it's a beautiful thing for our country, and makes me want him to be president all the more.
...on the other hand, I would vote Obama, were he white and a woman... it's not about race, it's not about gender....it's about the person: and he's a good intellegent person who would make an excellent president.
keivn at 2:36PM on May 12th 2008