WASHINGTON — Barack Obama added Wisconsin and Hawaii to a primary season winning streak that now totals 10 and has put Hillary Rodham Clinton into a virtual must-win scenario in Democratic contests coming early next month in Texas and Ohio.
The former first lady now looks to a debate Thursday in Austin, Texas, to stall Obama's momentum and reinvigorate her campaign.
"The change we seek is still months and miles away," Obama told a boisterous crowd in Houston in a speech Tuesday night in which he also pledged to end the war in Iraq in his first year in office.
"I opposed this war in 2002. I will bring this war to an end in 2009. It is time to bring our troops home," he declared.
Sen. John McCain, the Republican front-runner, won a pair of primaries, in Wisconsin and Washington, to continue his march toward certain nomination.
In a race growing increasingly negative, Obama cut deeply into Clinton's political bedrock in Wisconsin, splitting the support of white women almost evenly with her. According to polling place interviews, he also ran well among working class voters in the blue collar battleground that was prelude to primaries in the larger industrial states of Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Clinton congratulated Obama on Wednesday for his two latest victories but dismissed the Illinois senator as leading a movement with little to show for his eloquence and promises.
She depicted Obama's candidacy as a "campaign about a campaign" and cast herself as a champion of the middle class in a speech to a fundraiser at New York's Hunter College. "Others might be joining a movement. I'm joining you on the night shift, on the day shift," Clinton said to applause and cheers.
In a clear sign of their relative standing in the race, most cable television networks abruptly cut away Tuesday night from coverage of Clinton speaking in Youngstown, Ohio, when Obama began to speak in Texas.
McCain easily won the Republican primary in Wisconsin with 55 percent of the vote, dispatching former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and edging closer to the 1,191 delegates he needs to clinch the GOP nomination at the party convention in St. Paul, Minn. next summer. The Arizona senator also won the primary in Washington, where 19 delegates were at stake, with 49 percent of the vote in incomplete results.
McCain's total moved to 942; Huckabee has 245, in The Associated Press count.
In scarcely veiled criticism of Obama, the Republican nominee-in-waiting said, "I will fight every moment of every day in this campaign to make sure that Americans are not deceived by an eloquent but empty call for change."
McCain stepped up his criticism of Obama on Wednesday, suggesting the Democrat doesn't have the experience or judgment on foreign policy and defense matters needed in a president.
"There are a lot of national security challenges and I know how to handle them. Senator Obama wants to bomb Pakistan without talking to the Pakistanis. I think that's dangerous," McCain said in an interview on ABC's "Good Morning America." "I think that's an important factor — experience and judgment. Ready to serve and no on the job training."
McCain's nomination has been assured since Super Tuesday three weeks ago, as first one, then another of his former rivals has dropped out and the party establishment has closed ranks behind him.
Not so in the Democratic race, where Obama and Clinton campaign seven days a week, he the strongest black presidential candidate in history, she bidding to become the first woman to sit in the White House.
Ohio and Texas vote next on March 4 — 370 convention delegates in all — and even some of Clinton's supporters concede she must win one, and possibly both, to remain competitive. Two smaller states, Vermont and Rhode Island, also have primaries that day.
With the votes counted in all but one of Wisconsin's 3,570 precincts, Obama won 58 percent of the vote to 41 percent for Clinton.
With 100 percent of the vote counted in Hawaii, Obama had 76 percent to Clinton's 24 percent.
Wisconsin offered 74 national convention delegates. There were 20 delegates at stake in Hawaii, where Obama spent much of his youth.
Washington Democrats voted in a primary, too, but their delegates were picked earlier in the month in caucuses won by Obama.
The Illinois senator's victories in Wisconsin and Hawaii left him with 1,336 delegates in The AP count, compared with 1,251 for Clinton, a margin that masks his 155-delegate lead among those picked in primaries or caucuses. It takes 2,025 to win the nomination at the party's national convention in Denver.
Obama's victory came after a week in which Clinton and her aides tried to knock him off stride. They criticized him in television commercials and accused him of plagiarism for using words first uttered by Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, a friend. He shrugged off the advertising volley, and said that while he should have given Patrick credit, the controversy didn't amount to much.
The voters seemed not to care.
Wisconsin independents cast about one-quarter of the ballots in the race between Obama and Clinton, and roughly 15 percent of the electorate were first-time voters, the survey at polling places said. Obama has run strongly among independents in earlier primaries, and among younger voters, and cited their support as evidence that he would make a stronger general election candidate in the fall.
Obama began the evening with eight straight primary and caucus victories, a remarkable run that has propelled him past Clinton in the overall delegate race and enabled him to chip away at her advantage among elected officials within the party who will have convention votes as superdelegates.
The economy and trade were key issues in the race, and seven in 10 voters said international trade has resulted in lost jobs in Wisconsin. Fewer than one in five said trade has created more jobs than it has lost.
The Democrats' focus on trade was certain to intensify, with primaries in Ohio in two weeks and in Pennsylvania on April 22.
Obama's campaign has already distributed mass mailings critical of Clinton on the issue in Ohio. "Bad trade deals like NAFTA hit Ohio harder than most states. Only Barack Obama consistently opposed NAFTA," it said.
Clinton's aides initially signaled she would virtually concede Wisconsin, and the former first lady spent less time in the state than Obama.
Even so, she ran a television ad that accused her rival of ducking a debate in the state and added that she had the only health care plan that would cover all Americans and the only economic plan to stop home foreclosures. "Maybe he'd prefer to give speeches than have to answer questions" the commercial said.
Obama countered with an ad of his own, saying his health care plan would cover more people.
Unlike the Democratic race, McCain was assured of the Republican nomination and concentrated on turning his primary campaign into a general election candidacy.
In one sign of progress in unifying the party, he split the conservative vote with Huckabee in Wisconsin.
Huckabee parried occasional suggestions — none of them by McCain — that he quit the race. In a move that was unorthodox if not unprecedented for a presidential contender, he left the country in recent days to make a paid speech in the Grand Cayman Islands.
McCain picked up endorsements in the days before the primary from former President George H.W. Bush and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a campaign dropout who urged his 280 delegates to swing behind the party's nominee-to-be.
He went out and talked to the people for many days, in Wisconsin. He listened to them and they responded. That's what good leadership is all about!!!
It's an Obama win. He took it, and it looks like she won't be coming within the 5% that she wanted to.
Go Obama! Can't wait to see you sworn in next year :)
Wisconsin voters are said to be concerned about globalization, the loss of jobs to overseas. If elected President, he will disappoint those who think he can stem the tide of globalization.
No one can stop globalization. They can only try to make it more beneficial to the workers.
American Jobs: Barack Obama introduced the Patriot Employer Act of 2007 to provide a tax credit to companies that maintain or increase the number of full-time workers in America relative to those outside the US; maintain their corporate headquarters in America; pay decent wages; prepare workers for retirement; provide health insurance; and support employees who serve in the military.
http://www.barackobama.com/issues/additional/
Obama talks like he will help increase jobs in the US as opposed to outsourcing.
The talking point is very well written, isn't it?
How do my comments keep getting moved down all the time until they are at the very bottom?
Woohoo! I did my part.
I cannot believe this -- I lived almost all my life in Wisconsin and the primary meant zilch because everything was already locked up by the time they got around to us. It was a real ho-hum affair because the candidates hardly even came to a fish fry or anything --
Then I move away, and bam! Suddenly WI, Bucky Badger-land, is right in the thick of it.
Of course I am happy to see Obama stick it to Hillary. He overwhelmed her.
McCain's nomination has been assured since Super Tuesday three weeks ago, as first one, then another of his former rivals has dropped out and the party establishment has closed ranks behind him.
Interestingly, Obama's getting a bigger percentage of voters in the Wisconsin Democratic primary than McCain is in the Republican primary. So maybe "the establishment" is closing ranks behind him, but less so the voters. Either that or the voters are closing ranks behind Obama.
Did anyone else hear the Jewish and "lay pipe" subliminal message during Obama's speech.
What was that interference on audio during Obama's speech? There was a "Jewish" remark and "lay the pipe" remark. Appeared to be some type of subliminal message???
its a good day!!! i hope my fellow texans will get behind obama and wrap this thing up. i hope ohio will also get on board the obama express and that he will be tough enough to take on mccain. go obama!!!!
luv,
ron
As quit as it's kept, I think even the media is just as excited as every young person is in the country. They have never enjoyed the ratings they're experiencing in the history of televising Presidential campaigns.
It's not so much that Barack Obama is a Rock "Star" as much as for the first time in my adult lifetime "HE MAKES ME" feel like one in the world of politics. Meaning, I feel he believes in a government by the people, for the people, and of the people, giving "US" the people a place at the table of ACTUALLY having a say in "OUR" government. Who can say that, who is saying that other than Barack, McCain...who is always swiping and pointing that dictator finger, will surly not invite anyone to the table, as he is more a tyrant than Mr. Bush.
I don't want to feel like a prisoner with our government listening in on my private conversations or us continuing a unwarranted war for 100 years, people suffering and not having medical coverage, and tax cuts for the rich. McCain Presidency will continue to have the world looking at us as bullies and villains creating even more of a chance for us to be attack and him ruling based on our fears.
I respect him for his many years of service, but it's time for him to leave the game before he starts forgetting his name and where he's at.
No thanks to Mr. McCain the "Dictator", and Yes to a government headed by a "Young" fresh Rock Star in Barack Obama......."ROCK ON OBAMA....ROCK ON!
Yes we can!
HE WON AND HE HAS MORE MOMMENTUM
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