With 80% of the vote reporting in the Texas Primary, the secretary of state's office is currently showing Clinton winning 63 delegates and Obama 62 delegates on a Senate district-by-Senate district basis. Breakdown is as follows:
UPDATE 1: Now 85% of the vote reporting and it's breaking 64-62 Clinton in the primary. Caucus is still 34% reporting, breaking 37-30 Obama. Net result is Obama +5 delegates in Texas.
Meanwhile in Ohio, with 95% reporting Clinton is looking like she's up +9 delegates, 75-66.
UPDATE 4: With 42% of TX caucus delegates selected, it's currently breaking 56-44 Obama. But based on where the returns are by district, I'm projecting a final total of 55-45 Obama, which should split the at-large delegates 37-30. So Obama gains +5 net in Texas, and Clinton gains +9 net in Ohio, for a net of +4 Clinton for the night.
But Obama also picked up three superdelegate endorsements on March 4, so the net for all delegates on this day is ONE delegate for Clinton.
This is her best day of the campaign.
Texas results by state senate district:
SD 1 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 2 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 3 Clinton 3 Obama 1
SD 4 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 5 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 6 Clinton 2 Obama 1
SD 7 Clinton 1 Obama 2
SD 8 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 9 Clinton 1 Obama 2
SD 10 Clinton 2 Obama 3
SD 11 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 12 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 13 Clinton 2 Obama 5
SD 14 Clinton 3 Obama 5
SD 15 Clinton 1 Obama 3
SD 16 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 17 Clinton 2 Obama 3
SD 18 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 19 Clinton 3 Obama 1
SD 20 Clinton 3 Obama 1
SD 21 Clinton 3 Obama 1
SD 22 Clinton 2 Obama 1
SD 23 Clinton 2 Obama 4
SD 24 Clinton 2 Obama 1
SD 25 Clinton 3 Obama 3
SD 26 Clinton 2 Obama 2
SD 27 Clinton 2 Obama 1
SD 28 Clinton 2 Obama 1
SD 29 Clinton 2 Obama 1
SD 30 Clinton 2 Obama 1
SD 31 Clinton 1 Obama 1
Total: Clinton 63 Obama 62
http://enr.sos.state.tx.us/...
According to Wikipedia, there are actually 126 delegates selected at the SD level in the primary, not 125 as shown. Earlier in the evening, SD 19 was showing up as a 4-delegate district instead of a 3-delegate district on the Secretary of State's web page, so that might be the reason. I don't know why it changed or what the true count is there. But if it turns out that SD 19 is 4 delegates, the race for that last delegate is very, very close with 20% of the votes still outstanding. So it could be Hillary +2 or it could be all square by tomorrow morning.
Either way, it looks like Vermont outvoted Texas.
Also, as of right now, the caucus portion of the vote is breaking 55-45 Obama with 34% of caucuses reporting. If that holds, Obama would win the caucus delegates 37-30, and pick up a net +5 to +7 in Texas as a whole.
UPDATE 1: District 19 is now back to reporting 4 delegates, breaking 3-1 Clinton, but it's still ultra close and many votes left to count. So it could be even-steven in the primary delegates by the end of the night.
UPDATE 2: Ohio is +9 for Clinton as follows:
CD 1 Clinton 2 Obama 2
CD 2 Clinton 2 Obama 2
CD 3 Clinton 2 Obama 3
CD 4 Clinton 2 Obama 2
CD 5 Clinton 2 Obama 2
CD 6 Clinton 4 Obama 1
CD 7 Clinton 2 Obama 2
CD 8 Clinton 2 Obama 2
CD 9 Clinton 3 Obama 3
CD 10 Clinton 4 Obama 2
CD 11 Clinton 2 Obama 6
CD 12 Clinton 2 Obama 3
CD 13 Clinton 3 Obama 3
CD 14 Clinton 4 Obama 2
CD 15 Clinton 2 Obama 2
CD 16 Clinton 3 Obama 2
CD 17 Clinton 4 Obama 3
CD 18 Clinton 3 Obama 2
CD totals Clinton 48 Obama 44
PLEO: Clinton 17 Obama 14
At-large: Clinton 10 Obama 8
ALL OHIO: Clinton 75 Obama 66
http://vote.sos.state.oh.us/...
So for the whole night the change is
VT: Obama +3
RI: Clinton +3
OH: Clinton +9
TX: Obama +5
After all the weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth, Clinton won a net of four delegates on March 4.