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With his victory in the South Carolina primary Saturday, Sen. Barack Obama offered convincing proof of his ability to appeal to black voters. But to stay on course for the Democratic nomination when 22 states vote on Feb. 5, analysts say, Senator Obama will need to reach further and wider. |
After South
Carolina: Can Obama capture a wider swath of voters?
The black vote was key
to his decisive win Saturday. To be competitive in the Feb. 5
sweepstakes, he'll need a broader coalition of independents, young
people, and affluent whites, analysts say.
By Ariel Sabar | Staff writer of The Christian
Science Monitor
WASHINGTON - With his victory in the
South Carolina primary Saturday, Sen. Barack Obama offered
convincing proof of his ability to appeal to black voters. But to
stay on course for the Democratic nomination when 22 states vote on
Feb. 5, analysts say, Senator Obama will need to reach further and
wider.
African-Americans are a big part of the
Democratic vote in Georgia, Alabama, and a few other Super Tuesday
states. But experts say Obama's fortunes on Feb. 5 will hinge on the
groups of voters responsible for his only other win, in Iowa:
independents, college students, and well-educated and affluent
whites.
Also critical, experts say, will be inland
states like Kansas, Colorado, and Minnesota, where many voters are
wary of candidates, like Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, who are seen
as too partisan. Obama has already picked up a string of heartland
endorsements, including those of Sens. Ben Nelson of Nebraska and
Claire McCaskill of Missouri.
Senator Clinton, Obama's chief rival, has
built her Super Tuesday strategy around four states that account for
44 percent of the delegates up for grabs that day: New York, which
she represents in the Senate; New Jersey, next door; Arkansas, where
she was first lady; and California, where the largest cache of
delegates are in play and where polls show her with a strong lead.
Obama, however, is taking a more piecemeal
approach. Because votes in most Democratic contests are awarded
proportionally, he will need to make precision strikes within states
where Clinton is strong. Cities with many blacks, like New York, and
liberal enclaves, like the San Francisco Bay Area, are on his list
of targets, as are independents in New Jersey and California.
He is looking for a rout in his delegate-rich
home state of Illinois. But he is also courting voters in six states
caucusing on Feb. 5 – Kansas, Minnesota, Colorado, Alaska, North
Dakota, and Idaho – where an aggressive turnout drive could reprise
his success in Iowa.
"In many of these states, our opponents are
not engaged in any organizing," Obama's campaign manager, David
Plouffe, blogged earlier this month. "We firmly believe you cannot
build a caucus operation in a matter of four weeks, so we are at a
decided advantage."
If Obama captures traditionally "red"
heartland states on Feb. 5, he will no doubt argue that they reflect
his ability to unite voters across the ideological spectrum against
a Republican foe in November.
His first campaign stops after his victory
Saturday were Georgia and Alabama, states where blacks make up at
least 40 percent of the Democratic vote. Clinton was headed for
Tennessee, Connecticut, and Massachusetts.
A decisive win in South
Carolina
In South Carolina Saturday, Obama defeated
Clinton 55 percent to 27 percent. A little more than half the voters
were black, and Obama took about 80 percent of their vote. Obama
drew nearly one-quarter of the white vote, with Clinton and former
North Carolina Sen. John Edwards about evenly splitting the rest.
According to surveys of voters exiting the
polls, Obama beat Clinton among both men and women; among voters in
every age group except those over 65; and among nonblack voters
under 30.
Edwards placed third overall, at 18 percent,
a damaging setback in his native state. "I think the coffin door
will be shut on him in South Carolina," says Prof. Thomas Whalen of
Boston University, author of "A Higher Purpose: Profiles in
Presidential Courage." "That's his backyard, and if he can't win
there, forget it."
Mr. Edwards, who has yet to win a primary,
vowed Saturday night to stay in the race.
Obama's victory showed that the Iowa caucuses
on Jan. 3 were not a fluke.
But Obama could be hurt if opponents – or the
news media – portray South Carolina as a demographic quirk, analysts
say. Critics accused former President Bill Clinton of playing racial
politics at a recent campaign stop for his wife there, when he said
voters were picking candidates on "race or gender" and "that's why
people tell me Hillary doesn't have a chance of winning here."
"Obama went into South Carolina as a
candidate speaking to independents, to whites, speaking to America
across the divides – that was kind of his magic," says Lawrence
Jacobs, a political scientist at the University of Minnesota. But if
the results are perceived as racially polarized, Dr. Jacobs says,
"it could well be that South Carolina is a race that really winds up
narrowing a very broadly appealing campaign."
But others say Obama, the son of a black
father from Kenya and a white mother from Kansas, drew enough of the
white vote in a conservative Southern state to defuse those
questions.
Recent shift in the black vote
Of greater significance ahead of Super
Tuesday, say analysts, was the evidence Saturday of Obama's deep
support among African-Americans. Blacks are a key Democratic
constituency, accounting for roughly 1 in 5 primary-goers
nationally. Until the climb in Obama's poll numbers in Iowa and New
Hampshire in December, most were supporters of Clinton.
"When Obama started this campaign,
African-Americans were considered to be more in Hillary's camp than
in his camp," says David Bositis, a senior political analyst for the
Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a Washington, D.C.,
group with a focus on black issues. With a decisive victory in South
Carolina, "he can in effect, say, 'OK, I've made the case with
African-Americans. Now it's time for me to concentrate on these
other voting groups.' "
His tallest hurdle, say analysts, will be the
traditional Democrats with whom Clinton enjoys a large advantage.
"He needs to run better among older voters, more blue-collar and
middle-class voters, and more downscale white voters," says Philip
Klinkner, a government professor at Hamilton College in Clinton,
N.Y. "That's where he's losing."
Clinton leads in national polls of Democratic
voters. But if Feb. 5 fails to crown a nominee, a state-by-state war
of attrition for delegates could grind on into the spring, say
political observers.
"We've now moved into the phase where it's
not really as much about momentum as it is the delegate count," says
Jacobs. "If in 1992, the phrase was, 'It's the economy, stupid,'
it's now, 'It's the delegates, stupid.' "
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