How many times I got to tell you young fools, HE CAN"T WIN. Stop chasing your tail fools!!

She wins CALI< NY< NJ< TENN< MASS...thats where all the delegates are fool


WHAT RACE ARE YOU WATCHING
Clinton, Obama Split Wins in Biggest Primaries Day (Update1)
By Kristin Jensen and Ken Fireman
Feb. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama split victories as voters yesterday took part in the biggest day of voting in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Clinton won Arizona, Arkansas, California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma and Tennessee, while Obama took Alabama, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Minnesota, North Dakota and Utah, according to projections from television networks and the Associated Press. Fox News projected that Obama also won Missouri.
Voters in 22 states participated in yesterday's Democratic nominating contests; results are still being tallied. New York, Illinois and California are among the biggest prizes, though a candidate can take a portion of the delegates in any state without winning the contest there outright.
With the vote so closely matched, officials in both campaigns say they expect the battle for the nomination to extend for weeks beyond the so-called Super Tuesday balloting. Obama, an Illinois senator, and Clinton, a New York senator, had each won two of the four contested elections before yesterday.
``The take-away for the Democratic race is that the party has two very strong and very attractive candidates,'' said Julian Zelizer, a history and public affairs professor at Princeton University in New Jersey. ``This one will go down to the wire.''
Making History
Democrats are poised to make history by nominating either the first woman or the first black man as their presidential nominee. Clinton, 60, alluded to that fact when she rallied her supporters in New York and mentioned that her mother was born before women could even vote in the U.S.
``Together, we're going to take back America,'' she said. ``You voted not to just make history but to remake America.''
Obama, meanwhile, told supporters in Illinois that his campaign represents a ``movement'' that is picking up steam across the country.
``Our time has come,'' said Obama, 46. ``Our movement is real, and change is coming to America.''
Obama was doing the best among black voters, men and Americans under the age of 50, MSNBC said, citing exit polls.
Obama got 80 percent of the black vote nationwide compared with 17 percent for Clinton, according to the exit polls. Among whites, Clinton led 51 percent to 44 percent. Obama got 53 percent of men to Clinton's 42 percent. Clinton led among women who made up 57 percent of Democratic voters yesterday, 51 percent to 46 percent, MSNBC said.
Deadlocked
Clinton was leading in polls of voters in most Feb. 5 states until Obama won a landslide victory in South Carolina on Jan. 26. In recent days, Obama closed the gap with Clinton in a number of states or moved ahead; they are deadlocked in national polls.
While the AP originally called Missouri as a win for Clinton, it rescinded that projection as the vote count continued. With 98 percent of precincts reporting, Obama had 48.9 percent of the vote and Clinton had 48.3 percent.
In California, Clinton may have gotten help from a large population of Hispanic voters. Exit polls cited by MSNBC showed that she was winning 61 percent of the Hispanic vote nationwide.
Clinton was ahead in California with 55 percent of the vote, compared with 33 percent for Obama, with 15 percent of precincts reporting.
The Clinton campaign trumpeted its projected win in Massachusetts, where Governor Deval Patrick and Senators Edward Kennedy and John Kerry backed Obama. Clinton led in the state with 57 percent of the vote to 40 percent for Obama with 87 percent of precincts reporting.
`Very Big Deal'
The win was ``a very big deal,'' said Clinton spokesman Jay Carson. ``What we've seen tonight is what we've been predicting - - this is going to be a very close election,'' Carson said.
Clinton's campaign was already looking ahead. Her top adviser yesterday called for weekly debates with Obama until March 4, when nominating contests are held in Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas and Vermont. Obama hasn't ruled out debates as the primary battle continues, said David Plouffe, his campaign manager.
A candidate needs 2,025 votes at the Democratic convention in August to win the nomination, and Obama was leading in the number of delegates elected through primaries and caucuses. Before yesterday, he had 63 to Clinton's 48, according to The Green Papers, a nonpartisan Web site that compiles election statistics.
Plouffe said late yesterday that the Obama campaign exceeded its expectations for the number of delegates it needed to win on Super Tuesday to eventually win the nomination.
`Huge Head Start'
Plouffe said on Feb. 4 that he expected Clinton to win California and a larger share of delegates because of ``her huge head start'' among the Super Tuesday states. ``If we were to be within 100 delegates on that day and win a number of states, we will have met our threshold for success,'' Plouffe said.
Clinton has an edge among so-called super delegates, Democratic officeholders and party officials who get a vote at the convention and aren't bound by election results. Coming into yesterday, Clinton had 190 of those delegates in her corner compared with 104 for Obama, according to The Green Papers.
``With pledged and super delegates, we expect to be ahead of Senator Obama'' after the Super Tuesday results are in, said Guy Cecil, Clinton's political field director, during a conference call with reporters yesterday. ``This contest is going to continue, and it will likely continue for some time.''
Obama won the first contest of the nominating race, with a victory in the Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses. Clinton then won the Jan. 8 New Hampshire primary and Jan. 19 Nevada caucuses.
To contact the reporters on this story: Kristin Jensen in Washington at
kjensen@bloomberg.net ; Ken Fireman in Washington at
Kfireman1@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: February 6, 2008 00:39 EST