I also read that 20% said that race played a factor in their decision and 21% said that gender played a factor in their decision.
what's also interesting is that Clinton won the white vote by a 60-40 split.
PA is going exactly the way that Ohio and Texas went. He wins in the cities and with those with higher education. She wins in the rural areas and small towns and those with a lower level of completed education.
I also heard on the radio that exit polls show 92% of black voters voted for Obama.
I thought that was intersting.
I hate the race thing, why is he considered a blackman? He is part white, why is he not a whiteman?
Why is Tiger woods considered a black golfer? He is half Asian, why is he not considered an Asian golfer?
Sorry the race thing just bugs me, we are all HUMANS it should not matter what color our skin is.
I hate the race thing, why is he considered a blackman? He is part white, why is he not a whiteman?
Why is Tiger woods considered a black golfer? He is half Asian, why is he not considered an Asian golfer?
Sorry the race thing just bugs me, we are all HUMANS it should not matter what color our skin is.
I think Tiger technically calls himself "Cablasian" or something like that.
__________________
"I've made it with a woman. Inform the men."
Interesting. With 91% of the vote in, Clinton is ahead 55% to 45%. According to CNN's delegate count, she has 40 and he has 37. I know it's nowhere near final, but that's not so much difference in the number of delegates. If you look at CNN's page http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/pri...ults/state/#PA and scroll down to the map, you can see what areas Obama won. If you go to: http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pitt...news/election/ and scroll down to their map it seems like all things are not equal in Pennsylvania. There are some areas that are allocated a larger number of delegates and it's not dependent on the number of voters. It may work in Obama's favor - not that he'd come out of it with more delegates, but just that it might not be a significant win for Clinton in terms of getting the numbers that she needs.
__________________ "You can't have a light without a dark to stick it in." -- Arlo Guthrie
That's been the point that Obama and much of the party leadership have been hammering on as they've tried to get Hillary to give it up. There is basically no way that she can regain the lead in the delegate count, unless she wins by massive amounts.
Because they do the delegates proportionally by congressional district, it's almost impossible for Clinton to even catch up, let alone pull ahead by August.