As Florida and Michigan edge closer to delegate reselection compromises, the Clinton campaign should see nothing but bad news ahead. With a pledged delegate deficit that even her campaign views as insurmountable, and a superdelegate lead that appears to be narrowing by the day, the primary rationale for Clinton’s continued candidacy is uncertainty.
It is uncertainty that has prevented Clinton from being forced from the race by her party. It is uncertainty that fuels the main stream media’s coverage – the only justification for describing a race that Obama cannot lose as a virtual tie. Why, the Clinton campaign argues, should Hillary concede defeat in a race filled with so much uncertainty?
But as the race moves into its final stages, and as the Michigan and Florida sideshow is resolved, the race moves ever closer to that one thing the Clinton campaign cannot afford to accept: certainty.
It appears likely that Michigan will hold a state run primary, funded by private donors. In January, Hillary faired quite well in the primary, garnering 55% of the vote. This, of course, was at a time when Clinton had blunted Obama’s Iowa momentum with a victory in New Hampshire, a time when many wondered if Obama could possibly survive. It was also, as is well-known by now, a primary that excluded Obama’s name from the ballot, the result of a pledge taken by both candidates, but honored only by Obama.
Without another major candidate on the ballot, Clinton still won a smaller percentage in Michigan than Obama won in Alabama, Nebraska, Washington, Maine, Virginia, Maryland, Wyoming, Mississippi, Georgia, Wisconsin, and Louisiana, among others. She ran unopposed; unopposed nearly won. Michigan is especially advantageous to Obama demographically. A win for him in the state’s second effort is likely. A delegate rich victory for her is all but impossible.
Florida offers little more promise for the Clinton campaign. The vote-by-mail plan, originally floated by the state party, may not have been dead on arrival, but it was clearly mortally wounded. Neither campaign was comfortable with the option, and the entire Florida Congressional delegation expressed its opposition. For logistical reasons, neither a new primary or caucus was feasible. As of yesterday, the Florida Democratic party announced that there will not be a revote.
Senator Nelson’s recent suggestion, to seat the January delegates, but with half a vote each, seems as though it will be the only viable option. In that scenario, Clinton will net only 19 delegates. To put that in perspective, Obama netted 10 additional delegates at the Iowa county conventions last weekend, an event that passed largely under the radar. Even if Clinton enjoys the support of 75% of the Michigan and Florida superdelegates, she will only gain an additional 14 delegates.
Each available option provides Clinton with too few gains and even fewer alternative paths to the nomination. Even in the popular vote count, the addition of Michigan and Florida will be insufficient for Clinton to overtake Obama.
The Clinton campaign is running out of options and running out of time. If a compromise is not reached before the convention, the fate of Florida and Michigan’s delegations will be in the hands of the Credentials Committee, a committee guaranteed to be controlled by the Obama campaign. In such a situation, each delegation would be undoubtedly seated, but with a 50/50 split, netting zero delegates for Clinton. Hillary Clinton cannot afford to allow the
Florida/Michigan controversy to continue to the convention, but she also cannot afford to have the chaos resolved now.
Certainty has become her greatest enemy.
A compromise is on the horizon. At this point, that appears all but inevitable. But short of a miracle, or at least a major unforeseeable event, the locomotive that is Hillary Clinton’s campaign is coming perilously close to running out of tracks.