Hispanics
Give Hillary Nevada Win
LAS
VEGAS (By Shailagh Murray and Anne E.
Kornblut, Washington Post) January 20,
2008 —
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton
won
Nevada's Democratic caucuses
on Saturday, handing
Sen. Barack Obama a second
consecutive setback in a volatile
nominating contest that is now poised to
become a coast-to-coast battle.
Competing in the first state with
significant blocs of minority voters,
Clinton won 51 percent of the vote,
Obama took 45 percent and former
senator John Edwards garnered
4 percent, the result of a colorful and
at times chaotic process that included
caucuses held in casinos on the
Las Vegas Strip. Clinton won
almost every casino site and dominated
among women and Hispanic voters, while
Obama drew overwhelming support from
blacks — a potential foreshadowing of
how the contest could play out when
almost two dozen states vote on Feb. 5.
"I
guess this is how the West was won,"
Clinton declared at a victory rally in
Las Vegas.
Obama's campaign argued that the outcome
in Nevada was a shared victory and laid
claim to 13 delegates, compared with 12
for Clinton, because of the way his
support was distributed around the
state. Obama aides also complained of
what they said were voter-suppression
tactics. "We're not treating this as a
loss," said senior adviser
David Axelrod. "We'll keep
letting them spin the victories, and
we'll keep taking the delegates." Obama
left the state without delivering a
concession speech, and his campaign sent
messages to supporters heralding the
edge in delegates.
Clinton officials rejected the delegate
claim out of hand, arguing that the
count has not been finalized.
The
debate over the details of delegate
allotment reflected the growing
intensity of the competition. After
three contests in as many weeks, Clinton
and Obama are still struggling for the
upper hand in the race for the
nomination, neither having gained
sustained momentum as they have
struggled through a series of fierce
back-and-forths.
Clinton scored her latest victory after
an especially bitter exchange last
weekend over racial divisions, and after
her husband took on an even more visible
role as both a glad-handing surrogate on
the Vegas Strip and a sharp critic of
Obama. In one notable exchange on the
eve of the vote,
Bill Clinton lambasted a
reporter who asked about a recent court
ruling on the caucus arrangements; the
incident, replayed repeatedly on
television, bore echoes of his comment
the night before the
New Hampshire primary that
Obama's stance on the
Iraq war is a "fairy tale."
In both states, his wife won.
The
Nevada results contained some worrisome
signs for Obama along demographic lines.
The heavy support that Clinton won among
Hispanics suggested that he could face
an uphill climb to win that important
group in
California,
New York and
New Jersey, the three most
populous states with primaries on Feb.
5. In the first contest in which race
has played an important role, white
caucus goers in Nevada backed Clinton
over Obama, 52 percent to 34 percent,
and nearly two-thirds of Hispanics chose
Clinton. Black voters broke heavily for
Obama over Clinton, 83 percent to 14
percent.
In
the two weeks since her stinging
third-place defeat in
Iowa, Clinton has sharpened
her differences with Obama to emphasize
her experience and the economy, while
honing in on her advantage among
Hispanic voters. Yet even as she
campaigned in Nevada — and played down
expectations for how she would do here,
with her advisers predicting as late as
Saturday morning that the setup would
favor Obama — Clinton kept an eye on
California, detouring for a day of
campaigning there and ramping up her
statewide operation.
As
the two candidates head to
South Carolina, they are
planning to focus increasingly on nearby
Feb. 5 states such as
Arkansas and
Georgia, turning the
Democratic nomination into a truly
national race.
Racial divides could trigger renewed
friction within the
Democratic Party as the two
sides rush to pick up support from
blacks and Hispanics. Although leaders
of a "black-brown" coalition have
sponsored Democratic debates focused on
minority issues, the two groups have a
history of mutual mistrust in politics
and could find themselves in a
tug-of-war between Obama and Clinton.
Already, the campaign has been engulfed
by identity politics after remarks by
Clinton about the legacy of the
Rev. Martin Luther King, and
after Spanish-language ads, run by a
union backing Obama, questioned
Clinton's support for Hispanics.
Saturday, Clinton continued to
outperform Obama among women, a trend
that began with her victory in New
Hampshire on Jan. 8 — in contrast to
Obama's early victory among women in
Iowa. According to network entrance
polling, women made up 59 percent of all
caucus goers in Nevada, and they went
into the caucuses favoring the senator
from New York over Obama, 51 percent to
38 percent, similar to the advantage
among women she enjoyed in New
Hampshire. Winning strong support from
women has been the cornerstone of her
strategy for winning the Democratic
nomination.
Despite a late endorsement by the
powerful Culinary Workers Union, Obama
did not win enough support from Nevada's
hourly laborers — or any single
demographic — to produce new momentum
after his initial burst of success in
Iowa. Since his first-place finish
there, the senator from
Illinois has struggled to
outpace Clinton in consecutive contests
and is now banking heavily on a victory
next Saturday in South Carolina, where
as much as half of the Democratic
electorate will be African American.
But
Obama's advisers said that, under the
complex apportionment rules governing
the Nevada caucus process, he will wind
up ahead of Clinton by one delegate in
the state. Clinton currently leads in
the overall national delegate count,
including the "super delegates" who can
choose their preferred nominee without
waiting for any individual state results
but may also change their minds at any
time.
The
caucuses yesterday met to select about
11,000 delegates for a series of local
and state party nominating conventions
later this year, leading up to the
decision on awarding the state's 25
delegates to the
Democratic National Convention
this summer.
David Plouffe, the Obama
campaign manager, expressed confidence
that Obama will take the majority. "This
is a very close contest, and we
obviously both did a good job at turning
out voters," Plouffe said, adding, "I do
think that increasingly this is going to
turn into a contest of delegates, and I
think that's an important measure."
Clinton spokesman
Howard Wolfson rejected the
rival camp's claim. "Hillary Clinton won
the Nevada caucuses today by winning a
majority of the delegates at stake," he
said. "The Obama campaign is wrong.
Delegates for the national convention
will not be determined until April 20."
Perhaps the clearest winner of the
Nevada caucuses was
Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid,
who secured the early spot on the
calendar for his state and boldly
predicted turnout of 100,000 — more than
10 times the Democratic turnout in the
2004 Nevada caucuses. That forecast
appeared to come true, with upwards of
114,000 caucus goers reported. Reid was
neutral in the race, but his son,
Clark County Commission
Chairman Rory Reid, served as Clinton's
Nevada chairman and helped her to lock
down support from the Democratic
establishment.
Turnout was less
impressive along the Strip, where the
famous skyline of soaring casinos and
neon-lighted hotels drew hundreds,
rather than thousands, at nine at-large
sites. Clinton won the caucus at the New
York-New York Hotel and Casino 93 to 69,
for example; at the Wynn, which had
expected 1,000 participants, Clinton won
189 to 187. Obama won at
Caesars Palace 82 to 79 and
also carried the
Luxor.