James Forsyth says that Super Tuesday did not give the Illinois senator the mandate he craved. But, with money, time and inspiration on his side, he can still beat Hillary
Super Tuesday was meant to be the decisive day in the Obama–Clinton contest. Instead it was an indecisive super-muddle. Both candidates did only what they needed to do and no more. After California was called for Clinton, Missouri ended up going for Obama — a turnaround which ensured that the evening ended in a score draw but with Obama leading on away goals.
It was meant to be the night that Hillary Clinton was anointed as the Democratic nominee presumptive. The Clintonite establishment — which played such a crucial role in setting up a schedule where more than 20 states voted on one day — did not believe that any challenger could survive what was effectively a national primary against a candidate with 100 per cent name-recognition.
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David Tang reflects on his visits to Beijing in the run-up to the Games, where Western expertise has been harnessed to the ruthless efficiency of China’s government machine
The economist Richard Thaler — a favourite of the Cameron and Obama camps — talks to James Forsyth about the power of ‘nudging’: small transformative acts of persuasion
Fraser Nelson on the coming political week
Lloyd Evans joins the dissident movement in a ritual exercise near the Chinese Embassy. He is unsettled to find himself understanding why China’s rulers get so paranoid about them
Mark Leonard, Britain’s pre-eminent analyst of modern China, says the Olympic genie is out of the bottle. The prospect of global scrutiny has actually increased repression as the authorities try to stamp out dissent. But digital technology is impossible to police
Rod Liddle says the Commons vote securing the 24-week limit is no more than a craven politician’s fudge, designed to postpone the day when the law of the land finally catches up with the indisputable findings of science
Fraser Nelson says that the 38-year-old Work and Pensions Secretary is the best candidate to succeed Gordon Brown. Already surging ahead at his department, he has the gift of sounding like an ordinary human being — and he understands the Cameron Conservative party
Shakespeare’s birthday celebrations in Stratford-upon-Avon may be a small-town affair, but it is one of the very few non-London dates that involves the diplomatic corps.
Alan Milburn gives his first interview since Brown became PM, and tells Fraser Nelson that Gordon has converted to Blairism too late. Something new is needed now
Gays are law-abiding, better-educated than the norm, economically productive and tend to be less of a drain on the state, says Rod Liddle. They don’t stand a chance in this country
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Bill Murray
February 8th, 2008 8:36pm"It was meant to be the night that Hillary Clinton was anointed as the Democratic nominee presumptive." This was certainly the presumption very early in the campaign. However, even before South Carolina, it was clear to both pundits and "we the people" that this could easily go all the way to the convention. The outcome of Super Duper Tuesday would have been a surprise a couple of months ago, but it certainly wasn't one on the night. The really good news is that the convention will play its original role for the first time in decades. With the ascendancy of McCain over the usual rabid right wing nutters, America has a real, viable choice for the first time since 1992. My own objective: I'd like to see some competence in the White House. Before 2000, I would have considered this to be a very modest objective.
Patricia Wilson
February 12th, 2008 11:24pmDon't go away!! Things may be changing despite Clinton's plans. She has been following the OLD method of using the big high populous states and forgetting the small ones. Howard Dean talked about the necessity of including EVERYBODY in the Democratic process and Obama has taken that up as his and Guess what--it's working. Many--myself included--become disenchanted with Clinton when she considers only the big states to be the important ones and one of her advisers constantly repeats it. "we got the important ones; they are the only ones that count". I may come from one of those Big states but I still prefer THE UNITED STATES. I hope Obama continues on his roll of picking up delegates from all the little states and parts of all the BIG ones. If Clinton gets less than 35% of any small state, the delegates all go to Obama. This past weekend he gained all four states and the Virgin Islands to add and will mostlikely get most if not all of them in Virginia, Washington,DC, and Maryland. That puts him almost equal to her in delegates. The "super" ones should go home and wait until June. No one but Clinton is counting on them and they may make some turn away from her since that group of 800 count may make a mess of everyone else's vote. That will put a lot of Democrats against her in either November's general election or in the Congress where the Senators and representatives can make mincemeat of her proposals just to get back at her. She already has many that disapprove of her tactics of wait and then pounce in law making. Obama--according to today's NYTimes--has already put advertisements in Texas and Ohio. Again money is talking and without the slurs and backstabbing so prominent with Bush. Obama may become the nominee without the supers and also president for 2009. What many here and in UK/EU must remember he's not perfect and he's not going to do everything he is hoping to. Even getting half of everything up and running and our image slightly out of the world's mud will be quite an accomplishment. I can't see Clinton doing it. She doesn't have the knowledge or the poise to negotiate with diplomacy and take some but lose others gracefully.