Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton claimed a convincing win over Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) in today's Puerto Rico primary, a victory that may well be her last in her fading bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Polls closed in Puerto Rico at 3 p.m. Eastern time and the race was called for Clinton almost immediately by the major television networks and the Associated Press.
For Clinton, the win provides a quick bounce-back from her campaign's resounding setback on Saturday at the hands of the Democratic National Committee's Rules and Bylaws Committee, which ruled in Obama's favor in a dispute over the seating of the Florida and Michigan delegations, but does little to change the overarching dynamic of the primary fight.
While Clinton will win a clear majority of Puerto Rico's 55 delegates, she will still stand well behind Obama in the overall count. Coming into today's vote, Obama had 2,052 delegates, 66 short of clinching the nomination. Clinton had a total of 1,877 delegates.
Clinton launched new ads in South Dakota and Montana on Sunday asserting that she is the popular vote leader, securing more votes than any previous primary candidate. "Some say there isn't a single reason for Hillary to be the Democratic nominee," says the ad's narrator. "They're right. There are over 17 million of them."
Bill Burton, a spokesman for the Obama campaign, responded by noting that "both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have gotten more votes than any presidential campaign in primary history", adding: "We are, however, ahead in the popular vote now and will be ahead when all of the votes are counted Tuesday."
According to Real Clear Politics, Obama actually has 166,186 vote lead over Clinton in the popular vote -- 17,267,658 to 17,101,472. If Michigan's primary is included, where Clinton received 328,307 votes and Obama none due to the fact he removed his name from the ballot, Clinton takes a 162,123 vote lead.
The popular vote debate is largely a semantic and symbolic one at this point, however, as the nominee for the party is selected by delegates and Obama appears to be all-but-certain to reach the magic number of 2,118 sometime soon after Tuesday's primaries in South Dakota and Montana.
What I find especially amazing is that both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama generated over 17 million votes each in the states' primaries and caucuses. Both candidates fought hard battles against each other, creating an incredibly energized and enthusiastic Democratic voting base that supported both of these candidates. We're looking at a combined 34 million Democratic votes here--an incredible number for a primary battle. I would certainly hope that those same 34 million Democratic voters will come back to send a Democrat into the White House after eight years of a disastrous Bush presidency.
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