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Barack and Michelle Obama celebrate after a primary night rally Tuesday in St. Paul, Minn. (AP)
Last update - 11:36 04/06/2008
Obama wins enough delegates to seal nomination, but Clinton won't quit
By The Associated Press
Tags: Obama, Clinton 

Barack Obama sealed the Democratic presidential nomination Tuesday, a historic step toward his once-improbable goal of becoming the first black U.S. president. A defeated Hillary Rodham Clinton maneuvered for the vice presidential spot on his ticket without conceding her own defeat.

Obama's victory sets up a five-month campaign against Republican John McCain, a race between a 46-year-old opponent of the Iraq War and a 71-year-old former Vietnam prisoner of war and staunch supporter of the current U.S. military mission.

They will vie to succeed President George W. Bush, whose popularity has plummeted as the economy weakens, gasoline and food prices soar and the war continues in its sixth year.
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Obama, a first-term Illinois senator who was virtually unknown across America four years ago, defeated Clinton, the former first lady and one-time campaign front-runner, in a 17-month marathon for the Democratic nomination.

Obama will be crowned the Democratic nominee at the convention in August and will face McCain in November's election to choose a successor to President George W. Bush.

"Tonight, we mark the end of one historic journey with the beginning of another," Obama told a victory celebration in St. Paul, Minnesota, at the site of the Republican convention in September.

"America, this is our moment. This is our time. Our turn to turn the page on the policies of the past."



Clinton praised Obama warmly in an appearance before supporters in New York. But she neither acknowledged Obama's victory nor offered a concession of any sort.

"I am committed to uniting our party so we can move forward stronger and more ready than ever to take back the White House in November," Clinton told a cheering crowd of supporters in New York City.

The two are expected to meet soon to discuss the looming election campaign and Clinton's role.

They talked early on Wednesday, and Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs said Obama told her he would like to "sit down when it makes sense for you." But no meeting was scheduled.

Both Obama and Clinton will address a pro-Israeli lobbying group on Wednesday morning in Washington as Obama begins to focus on the November election. McCain wrapped up the Republican nomination in March.

The New York senator expressed interest in joining Obama's campaign in a conference call with the congressional delegation from her state after congresswoman Nydia Velazquez predicted Obama would have great difficulty winning the support of Hispanics and other voting blocs unless Clinton was on the ticket.

Obama's victory had been widely assumed for weeks. But Clinton's declaration of interest in becoming his running mate was unexpected.

"I am open to it if it would help the party's prospects in November," Clinton replied, according to a participant who spoke on condition of anonymity because the call was private.

Clinton's comments raised anew the prospect of what many Democrats have called a Dream Ticket that would put a black man and a woman on the same ballot, but Obama's aides were noncommittal.

"We're not in the presidential phase here. We're going to close out the nominating fight and then we'll consider that," David Axelrod, Obama's top strategist, told reporters aboard the candidate's plane en route to Minnesota.

The fast-paced developments unfolded as the long Democratic nominating struggle ended with Clinton winning a primary in South Dakota and Obama winning Montana.

Only 31 delegates were at stake Tuesday, the final few among the thousands that were once up for grabs among Obama, Clinton and six other Democratic candidates at the start of the campaign.

Obama had been on the verge of securing the 2,118 delegates needed to win the nomination heading into Tuesday's primaries. But even before polls closed, it was clear he had sealed his victory as 22 elected delegates and superdelegates - party officials and elected leaders who can vote as they please - privately confirmed their intentions to The Associated Press. Obama had 2,151 delegates by the AP count, while Clinton had 1,915.5.

The young senator's success amounted to a victory of hope over experience, earned across an enervating 56 primaries and caucuses in U.S. states and overseas territories that tested the political skills and human endurance of all involved.

Together, Obama and Clinton drew record turnouts in primary after primary - more than 34 million voters in all, independents and Republicans as well as Democrats.

Yet the race between a black man and a woman exposed deep racial and gender divisions within the party.

Obama drew strength from blacks, and from the younger, more liberal and wealthier voters in many states. Clinton was preferred by older, more downscale voters, and women.

Obama's weakness with Hispanic and white working class voters could be a serious vulnerability in the November election, especially in industrial states that are crucial to Democratic hopes.

But Obama has demonstrated his political strength through his prodigious fundraising, meticulous organizing and his theme of change aimed at an electorate opposed to the Iraq war and worried about the economy - all harnessed to his own gifts as an inspirational speaker.

With the peace and prosperity of husband Bill Clinton's presidency as a backdrop, Clinton campaigned for months as the candidate of experience, a former first lady and second-term senator ready, she said, to take over on Day One.

As the strongest female presidential candidate in U.S. history, Clinton drew large, enthusiastic audiences. Yet Obama's were bigger still. One audience, in Dallas, famously cheered when he blew his nose on stage; a crowd of 75,000 turned out in Portland, Oregon, the weekend before the state's May 20 primary.

Obama won a stunning victory in the first contest, the Iowa caucuses in January. Clinton came back with an upset five days later in New Hampshire that set the stage for a campaign marathon as competitive as any in the United States in the last generation.

They traded victories through the Super Tuesday contests on Feb. 5, when almost half the states voted. Then Obama had 11 straight victories and the Clinton campaign never fully recovered.

Clinton saved her candidacy once more with primary victories in Ohio and Texas on March 4, beginning a stretch in which she won in six of the next nine states on the calendar, as well as in Puerto Rico.

It was a strong run, providing glimpses of what might have been for the one-time front-runner.

Personality issues rose and receded through the campaign:
Clinton's husband, the former president, campaigned tirelessly for her but sometimes became an issue himself, to her detriment.

And Obama struggled to minimize the damage caused by the incendiary rhetoric of his former pastor in Chicago, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, an issue likely to be raised anew by Republicans in the general election campaign. In a symbolic move, Obama spoke Tuesday in the same hall where McCain will accept the
Republican nomination at his party's convention in September. Campaign officials, citing the local fire marshal, put the crowd at 17,000 inside the eXcel Energy Center, plus another 15,000 outside.

In their remarks Tuesday, Obama and McCain exchanged criticism over the war in Iraq and sought to claim the mantle of change in a country plainly tired of the status quo.

"It's not change when John McCain decided to stand with George Bush 95 percent of the time," as he did in the Senate last year, Obama said.

Speaking to supporters in New Orleans, McCain agreed with Obama that "the presidential race would focus on change. But the choice is between the right change and the wrong change, between going forward and going backward," he said.

Video courtesy of .

For more coverage of the U.S. election go to CNN.com
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  1.   Obama may have won the Democratic candidacy but not my vote. I 10:54  |  Aharon 04/06/08
  2.   Obama may have won the Democratic candidacy but not my vote. I 10:54  |  Aharon 04/06/08
  3.   Obama has won the candicacy AND he has my vote. 11:47  |  Arthur 04/06/08
  4.   3.Arthur,Hillary Clinton as of now has not yet conceded.Her 12:57  |  lakshmi 04/06/08
  5.   U.S. "mainstream" media pushing Obama into a "dream-ticket" ??? 13:11  |  Swiss (Dino) 04/06/08
  6.   # 5, SWISS (DINO) 13:31  |  indrajaya 04/06/08
  7.   Three in bed is a crowd 13:52  |  Aphemia 04/06/08
  8.   Great news! - McCain sure to win now 13:59  |  Jean Coleson 04/06/08
  9.   Swiss and Indy....Obama has chosen his VP 14:04  |  Lynn 04/06/08
  10.   Whats really going on in the US?? 14:09  |  suspicious 04/06/08
  11.   were is my responce 15:30  |  DinkiDi 04/06/08
  12.   obama as president 15:55  |  dinki di 04/06/08
  13.   DinkiDi DinkyPoo 16:00  |  Antisemite?? 04/06/08
  14.   Elections 16:03  |  Yariv 04/06/08
  15.   Fastenned your belts America 16:32  |  Max Horoskopski 04/06/08
  16.   11: DinkiDi (Antisemites) 16:33  |  Nihat 04/06/08
  17.   IF HE PICKS HER, I VOTE FOR NADER 16:37  |  Arik Silverman 04/06/08
  18.   Through trickery and cheating 16:38  |  Brod 04/06/08
  19.   Obama has my vote 16:38  |  Mc Lister 04/06/08
  20.   No way she should be VP 16:41  |  Concerned individual 04/06/08
  21.   The Obama you don`t know 17:07  |  MichaelF 04/06/08
  22.   my spelling not so hot i must admit 17:15  |  dinki di 04/06/08
  23.   Hawkish Hillary and the Jewish vote 17:16  |  johnny fairplay 04/06/08
  24.   ONLY 37 YEARS AFTER CIVIL RIGHT 17:19  |  indrajaya 04/06/08
  25.   rasist?? 17:33  |  dinki Di 04/06/08
  26.   #15 17:36  |  Alex 04/06/08
  27.   #1 Aharon 17:37  |  John 04/06/08
  28.   The worlds largest ego coexists with an over rated mind 18:20  |  Natallie Durson 04/06/08
  29.   # 6 indrajaya 18:48  |  Swiss (Dino) 04/06/08
  30.   # 9 Lynn 18:50  |  Swiss (Dino) 04/06/08
  31.   "North and South" 19:07  |  Keops 04/06/08
  32.   # 28. Natallie Durson. Quite right.. 19:35  |  Stephen. 04/06/08
  33.   # 29, SWISS (DINO) 19:48  |  indrajaya 04/06/08
  34.   # 29, SWISS (DINO) (2nd TRY, REWRITE) 20:09  |  indrajaya 04/06/08
  35.   # 33 / # 34 indrajaya 21:00  |  Swiss (Dino) 04/06/08
  36.   to all the following participants 21:39  |  dinki di 04/06/08
  37.   Black Man? 04:14  |  Dale 05/06/08
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