Absolutely not!!!
Outside of the Obama Fan Club, very few people think Clinton should quit from the Primary Race.
Here is a poll conducted by SUSA.
This poll was conducted before the PA results were counted - i.e. the question asked here was - regardless of the PA outcome should Clinton quit?
SurveyUSA has the results of a just-conducted nationwide poll that says 55% of Americans say Clinton should remain in the race, even if she should lose in Pennsylvania.
Among Democrats, 59% say Clinton should remain in the race if she loses the Keystone State; 39% say she should drop out.
Among Republicans, 49% say Clinton should remain in the race if she loses tonight; 48% say she should drop out.
Among Independents, 54% say Clinton should remain in the race if she fails to win PA; 40% say she should drop out.
That was before the PA outcome. Now Clinton also has a PA win Bump as per the Gallup Poll
Support for Clinton is significantly higher in these post-primary interviews than it was just prior to her Pennsylvania victory, clearly suggesting that Clinton's win there is the catalyst for her increased national support.
Obama's lead dwindled steadily all week, falling from a high of 10 percentage points in interviewing conducted in the three days just prior to the Pennsylvania primary
Since this contains 1 day of polling before the PA results, I expect, tommorow's Gallup results to be even better for Clinton.
Do the remaining superdelegates think Clinton should quit?
I doubt it. If they thought so, enough of them would have come out in favour of Obama to make it a no-contest.
Do Hillary supporters think Hillary should quit?
Of course not, she is still raising money from her supporters.
Here is an article from the Washington Post which debunks the "Math" meme.
Given that reality, the overarching question facing party activists and elected officials (read: superdelegates) over the next five weeks is whether or not Clinton has a legitimate and plausible path to the nomination.
The answer to that question is clearly: Yes.
To be clear: The most likely scenario is that Obama's lead in pledged delegates and the popular vote continues as the two Democrats split up the remaining nine contests.
But a path does exist for Clinton.
By the way is anyone up for a debate?
Indiana's biggest newspaper says
As such, the candidates need to engage Indiana voters and one another in a forum that stretches beyond glossy TV commercials, showy campaign stops and rote speeches delivered in city after city.
In short, the candidates need to meet for a debate in Indiana in the next few days.