Hillary Wins.
As an Obama supporter, I am disappointed by the results in Pennsylvania. But unlike many others, I don’t think Clinton’s campaign was in any way surprising or out of line with its vitriol. Politics is indeed a contact sport, not for the faint or fuzzy of heart. I watched Hillary Clinton in an interview with Ann Curry the other night. And Clinton said, point blank, “I have to win.” That’s clarity. She did not say she has to make the country better, she did not say she wanted to inspire us or preserve the Democratic party. She said, “I have to win.”
And Barack Obama made it too easy for her in Pennsylvania. I missed much of the live debate, but heard some of it on the radio and then watched the West Coast feed. I cringed for my candidate a few times. Yes Stephanopoulos and Gibson were an embarrassment to my former professional home, but Obama was prickly, inarticulate and unsure. Every point in this match swings a vote. Obama may need to explain “bitter” and his relationship with Rev. Jeremiah Wright a thousand times even before this primary battle is over. So what? Ideally, I would want Obama to greet that reality with enthusiasm not dismissal. “Here it is. I’ve got another chance to talk to the American people. I’ve got another chance to prove to them that I stand for unity and America’s highest good and that I will fight for their interests and that they can trust me.” That’s where Obama’s gold is. It’s in the trust factor. But every time Obama expresses impatience with dealing with the Rev. Wright controversy he seems less stellar; existing on the same plane as every other politician running.





















