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View Full Version : West Virginia told ya Dems! RUN THAT GIRL!



Deanna's Daydreamer
05-14-2008, 04:03 AM
West Virginia is telling ya true, democrats!

RUN THE GIRL!

I actually think.... she can win it ALL if you guys will run her!

She's right in her victory speech-- ya gotta win swing states if you want to beat McCain! And she WINS those states! Hillary wins Sixty four.... to Obama's 28 percent! West Virginia.... IS America, democrats! It looks like a microcosm... OF America! You gain a level of caucasion male voters WITH Hillary... that you DON'T get with Obama. You get a level of caucasion female votes.... WITH Hillary... that you don't get with Obama. You get a section of HISPANIC voters... WITH Hillary... that you don't get with Obama. You get more of the ELDERLY vote.... WITH Hillary... that you don't get with Obama. She's the more moderate democrat than he is, which will help with crossovers and independents. She's got more EXPERIENCE than he has;-- the guy's got a couple of years as a United States Senator! Elderly people VOTE, democrats... and I can tell you... they KNOW that it is IMPORTANT for a candidate to have EXPERIENCE in order to BE a good president,

and the elderly voters already can see that Obama does not have the experience to be president! They'll vote in DROVES.... for McCain!

If you run Obama? So will caucasion males! They will vote for McCain in DROVES... democrats!

RUN HILLARY... democrats. We have seen enough of the Dukakis' and Mondale's.

And don't forget that while conservatives will probably find some character issue or another about whichEVER one you run? There's one thing that everyone in America knows about Hillary Clinton. When Bill was caught getting a blowjob from a 22 year old intern? When everyone... when EVERYONE... IN THIS COUNTRY.... knew that he had lied, and that he had done it? When all eyes were on her?

She stood by him.........................SHE STOOD BY HIM. That might actually count for something that has YET to actually BE defined, democrats! The whole concept. We don't know very much about Obama, and he has not stated exactly what he is about. The country DOES know HER, warts and all. The fact that she stood by her man might help her.... years after the fact. Don't overlook that, democrats:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DwBirf4BWew

All of the signs... point to running Hillary. The right has moved toward the middle with McCain; you don't run a far LEFT guy against that! You run a moderate, or atleast a candidate who is PERCEIVED as more moderate... which Hillary IS being perceived as! Her voting record will reveal it to be true as well; Obama's record in the senate is far FAR left.

Run Hillary!

You guys might wake up November 5th

to a democratic president.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jiHYzPuq0KI
__________________________________
Clinton presses ahead in longshot campaign By CHARLES BABINGTON and CALVIN WOODWARD, Associated Press Writers

An embattled Hillary Rodham Clinton is urging the party leaders who are key to the Democratic presidential race to take a hard look at her West Virginia win and slow their march to Barack Obama.

Clinton trounced her rival Tuesday in a primary that did little if anything to knock Obama off stride as he approaches the delegate totals needed to give him the nomination.

It did, however, expose in stark terms his disadvantage with blue-collar voters, fueling Clinton's last-gasp argument to party VIPs that she's the Democrat with broad appeal against Republican John McCain.

"Choose who you believe will make the strongest candidate in the fall," she said at her Charleston rally in a pitch aimed at superdelegates. She was returning to Washington to meet Wednesday with some of them.

"The White House is won in the swing states," she said, "and I am winning the swing states."

Obama isn't ceding the latter point.

He was campaigning Wednesday in Michigan, keenly aware of the need to recapture the unifying promise of his earlier primary and caucus wins, which transcended geography, parties and even racial divisions at times.

Specifically, he arranged to visit workers at a Chrysler factory in Macomb County, bellwether of bellwethers, and rally in Grand Rapids.

"This is our chance to build a new majority of Democrats and independents and Republicans," Obama said in Missouri, a November battleground.

With votes from 98 percent of West Virginia's precincts counted, Clinton was winning 67 percent of the vote, to 26 percent for Obama. Nearly a quarter of the voters were 60 or older, and a similar share had no education beyond high school, exit polls indicated. More than half were in families with incomes of $50,000 or less, and the former first lady was winning nearly 70 percent of their votes.

Clinton won 20 of the 28 delegates at stake in West Virginia and Obama won eight.

That left Obama with 1,883.5 delegates, to 1,717 for Clinton, out of 2,026 needed to clinch the nomination at the party convention in Denver this summer. The Democratic win on Tuesday in a Mississippi special election increased by one the number of delegates needed to win the nomination.

He added a symbolic victory Tuesday, defeating Clinton in Nebraska's nonbinding primary by a 49-47 percent margin. Nebraska already held caucuses three months ago and Obama locked up most of the delegates in that contest.

Obama picked up about 30 superdelegates in the last week, altogether a bigger prize than West Virginia offered either candidate in the lopsided primary.

Superdelegates are elected officials and other prominent Democrats who can vote as they choose, without regard to primaries or caucuses. About 250 have not declared their support.

Obama has tapped the crucial superdelegate pool to considerable effect and in the last week overcame Clinton's campaign-long advantage with that group. They've proved resistant to Clinton's recent entreaties, but she was trying again Wednesday.

"This race isn't over yet," she said.

The New York senator also planned to meet members of her finance committee. Her campaign is facing more than $20 million in debt.

Still ahead are five primaries, beginning next week in Kentucky and Oregon, then Puerto Rico on June 1 and Montana and South Dakota two days later.

Obama is favored in Oregon and South Dakota, with Montana apparently more competitive and the others looking solid for Clinton.

On May 31, a convention committee will hear Clinton's appeal to seat delegations from disputed primaries in Florida and Michigan.

Clinton wants the delegates seated — a decision that would cut into Obama's advantage — even though the primaries were held so early in the year that they violated Democratic party rules.

Obama has indicated a willingness to compromise on that matter now that he's more confident of ultimate victory.

The Illinois senator picked up four superdelegates Tuesday, including Roy Romer, former Democratic Party chairman.

"This race, I believe, is over," Romer said

Hi Top
05-23-2008, 07:58 AM
http://us.f373.mail.yahoo.com/ya/download/us/ShowLetter?box=Inbox&MsgId=7222_645869_904281_2078_191377_0_38927_25734 1_337246305&bodyPart=2.2&YY=16391&y5beta=yes&y5beta=yes&order=down&sort=date&pos=0&view=a&head=b&Idx=5

jeffx
05-23-2008, 09:39 AM
i've been to west virginia. they ain't got shit to say to me.

Pan
05-23-2008, 04:39 PM
Oh My Gawd! He's Exactly Right!

Someone Call Obama Quick! He NEEDS To Drop Out!

We NEED To Listen To Everything DDD Says Because We KNOW He Only Has The Best Interests Of The Democrat Party In Mind!

HURRY! BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE!

We Folks Here At KnoxBlab Are The Only Ones Who Can Stop This! Why Else Would DDD Be Encouraging Us Thusly???!!!!























































































































Likewise, someone should tell the Republicans to run Ron Paul instead of McCain. He outpolls McCain by 10% in West Virginia!!!


:)