Obama Catches Clinton in Support From Superdelegate Lawmakers
By Nicholas Johnston and Lorraine Woellert
April 3 (Bloomberg) -- Barack Obama has pulled even with
Hillary Clinton in endorsements from top elected officials, with
a surge in support from congressional freshmen and governors
from Republican-dominated states.
Obama yesterday won the backing of Wyoming Governor Dave
Freudenthal, who became the sixth head of a Republican-leaning
state to come out for him in his bid for the Democratic
presidential nomination. In the past week, Obama picked up
support from first-term Senators Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and
Bob Casey of Pennsylvania. Clinton, backed by two governors from
Republican states, gained no superdelegates in that time.
Obama, 46, is endorsed by 16 U.S. House freshmen to
Clinton's 6, and 40 percent of his congressional allies are from
``red states,'' or those that voted for President George W. Bush
in 2004, compared with one-quarter for Clinton. That bolsters
the Obama campaign's argument that he would have broader backing
in the general election.
``If freshman Democrats in so-called `red states' and
Barack Obama were not on the same page, I would think something
is wrong,'' said Bernadette Budde, senior vice president of the
Business-Industry Political Action Committee, a Washington-based
group that works to elect pro-business lawmakers and hasn't
endorsed a presidential candidate. ``He is the highest evolution
of what the voters were looking for.''
The race for superdelegates -- elected and party officials
who automatically receive votes at the national convention --
matters most to Clinton because she trails Obama in the pledged
delegates awarded in primaries and caucuses. Among all
delegates, Obama leads Clinton 1,634 to 1,500, according to the
Associated Press, with 2,024 required to win; professional
politicians make up about 20 percent of the total.
Vanishing Lead
Obama, an Illinois senator, has the support of 99
Democratic U.S. lawmakers and governors, compared with Clinton's
96 -- a dramatic turnabout since the Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses, when
Clinton, a New York senator, had more than double Obama's
support within this group, 91 to 43.
Clinton leads Obama by four lawmakers and governors if
those from Michigan and Florida are counted; the two states held
primaries in violation of party rules and were stripped of both
superdelegates and delegates picked by voters. The party has
been unable to resolve how to count their delegates.
Clinton, 60, who has argued for the importance of
experience in a presidential candidate, is supported by some of
the most experienced chairmen in the House of Representatives,
including John Dingell of Michigan, Barney Frank of
Massachusetts and Charles Rangel of New York.
Veteran Chairmen
The seven House chairmen who back Clinton have been in
Congress an average of 24 years. Dingell, 81, who was first
elected in 1955, is the nation's longest-serving House member.
Obama has the support of five committee chairmen.
Among all House members who have endorsed a candidate,
Clinton supporters are an average of four years older than Obama
backers and have been in Congress three years longer.
Clinton spokesman Phil Singer said superdelegates comprise
a broad swath of party officials, not just lawmakers elected to
a particular office. ``There is no single metric by which to
judge the final outcome,'' Singer said.
Clinton has the support of 250 of the 794 superdelegates;
Obama has 220, according to the AP.
Freshmen lawmakers who support Obama said his candidacy
shares a lot of the characteristics of their 2006 campaigns,
which swept Democrats into congressional majorities.
``Many of us came in as a new breath of fresh air,'' said
Representative Tim Walz of Minnesota.
The People's Will
Walz endorsed Obama after his congressional district backed
the candidate in the state's Feb. 5 caucuses. ``I went with the
will of the people,'' he said.
Carol Shea-Porter, a first-term Democrat from New
Hampshire, said she also noticed similarities, such as the
enthusiasm Obama engenders in voters.
``So many people want a seat at the table,'' she said.
Obama's tally includes Senator Russell Feingold of
Wisconsin, who hasn't officially endorsed either candidate
yet has said he voted for Obama in the state's Feb. 19 primary.
Clinton's total includes Senator Barbara Boxer of
California, who has said she will cast her vote in favor of the
winner of her state's Feb. 5 primary, which was Clinton, while
remaining neutral in the race.
The tallies also include the delegate votes that Obama and
Clinton could cast for themselves, while excluding Washington,
D.C.'s two shadow senators, who aren't federal officials.
Washington's congressional delegate, Obama supporter Eleanor
Holmes Norton, who can vote in committee and participate in
floor debates, is counted.
Remaining Contests
Ten contests remain in the race for the Democratic
nomination, including elections in Pennsylvania, North Carolina
and Indiana.
In addition, Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard
Dean has been trying to settle the disputes over the Florida and
Michigan delegations.
Dean met yesterday with Florida officials to discuss ways
in which the state's delegates can be included when the party
holds its convention in August. They reached no agreement.
To contact the reporters on this story:
Nicholas Johnston in Washington at
njohnston3@bloomberg.net
;
Lorraine Woellert in Washington at
lwoellert@bloomberg.net
.
Last Updated: April 3, 2008 00:01 EDT