Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

Take a look at who is buying super delegates:

Obama: $694,000 (40% of his superdelegates)
Clinton: $194,000 (12% of her superdelegates)

This folowing article  is cross-posted from:
 http://www.capitaleye.org/inside.asp?ID= 336

Seeking Superdelegates

As the Democratic Party's superdelegates decide whether to support Clinton or Obama, will they take into account the $890,000 they've received from the candidates?
By Lindsay Renick Mayer

February 14, 2008 | At this summer's Democratic National Convention, nearly 800 members of Congress, state governors and Democratic Party leaders could be the tiebreakers in the intense contest between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. If neither candidate can earn the support of at least 2,025 delegates in the primary voting process, the decision of who will represent the Democrats in November's presidential election will fall not to the will of the people but to these "superdelegates"--the candidates' friends, colleagues and even financial beneficiaries. Both contenders will be calling in favors.

And while it would be unseemly for the candidates to hand out thousands of dollars to primary voters, or to the delegates pledged to represent the will of those voters, elected officials who are superdelegates have received at least $890,000 from Obama and Clinton in the form of campaign contributions over the last three years, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.

Obama, who narrowly leads in the count of pledged, "non-super" delegates, has doled out more than $694,000 to superdelegates from his political action committee, Hope Fund, or campaign committee since 2005. Of the 81 elected officials who had announced as of Feb. 12 that their superdelegate votes would go to the Illinois senator, 34, or 40 percent of this group, have received campaign contributions from him in the 2006 or 2008 election cycles, totaling $228,000. In addition, Obama has been endorsed by 52 superdelegates who haven't held elected office recently and, therefore, didn't receive campaign contributions from him.

Clinton does not appear to have been as openhanded. Her PAC, HILLPAC, and campaign committee appear to have distributed $195,500 to superdelegates. Only 12 percent of her elected superdelegates, or 13 of 109 who have said they will back her, have received campaign contributions, totaling about $95,000 since 2005. An additional 128 unelected superdelegates support Clinton, according to a blog tracking superdelegates and their endorsements, 2008 Democratic Convention Watch.

Because superdelegates will make up around 20 percent of 4,000 delegates to the Democratic convention in August--Republicans don't have superdelegates--Clinton and Obama are aggressively wooing the more than 400 superdelegates who haven't yet made up their minds. Since 2005 Obama has given 52 of the undecided superdelegates a total of at least $363,900, while Clinton has given a total of $88,000 to 15 of them. Anticipating that their intense competition for votes in state primaries and caucuses will result in a near-tie going into the nominating convention, the two candidates are making personal calls to superdelegates now, or are recruiting other big names to do so on their behalf. With no specific rules about what can and can't be done to court these delegates, just about anything goes.

"Only the limits of human creativity could restrict the ways in which Obama and Clinton will try to be helpful to superdelegates," said Larry Sabato, a political scientist at the University of Virginia. "My guess is that if the nomination actually depends on superdelegates, the unwritten rule may be, 'ask and ye shall receive.' "

Superdelegates will make their decisions based on a number of factors, said Richard Herrera, a political scientist at Arizona State University. Some have long-time political and personal ties to Clinton or Obama, some will support the candidate they think is more likely to beat the Republican nominee and others will commit to the candidate who won their state's support. Deciding whom to support based entirely on contributions from the candidates would be a political liability, Herrera said.

"I think Democrats, both regular delegates and superdelegates, see this year as an opportunity to really take back the White House," he said, "and I don't think there's that short-term political concern that money will play that kind of role. It's a much bigger picture at this point."

The superdelegates themselves say the same thing--that any money flowing from the presidential candidates to the delegates' own campaigns hasn't had any sort of influence on their decisions. Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell received $5,000 from Clinton in the 2006 election cycle and has endorsed her, while he hasn't received anything from Obama, campaign finance records indicate. Policy and a personal relationship with the Clintons, not money, swung his vote into her camp, according to spokesman Chuck Ardo. "The governor has known Mrs. Clinton for 15 years and has certainly had a close relationship with President Clinton as well," Ardo said. "I think those are the factors that are really more relevant, especially given the small fraction of his fundraising that Clinton's contributions made. It'd be ludicrous to tie that contribution to his support."

Yet the Center for Responsive Politics has found that campaign contributions have been a generally reliable predictor of whose side a superdelegate will take. In cases where superdelegates had received contributions from both Clinton and Obama, all seven elected officials who received more money from Clinton have committed to her. Thirty-four of the 43 superdelegates who received more money from Obama, or 79 percent, are backing him. In every case the Center found in which superdelegates received money from one candidate but not the other, the superdelegate is backing the candidate who gave them money. Four superdelegates who have already pledged received the same amount of contributions from both Clinton and Obama--and all committed to Clinton.

In addition to Gov. Rendell of Pennsylvania, at least two other governors who have endorsed Clinton have also received contributions from her in the past. Ohio's Gov. Ted Strickland received $10,000 and Oregon's Gov. Ted Kulongoski received $5,000. New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who dropped out of the presidential race in January, has not endorsed a candidate but received $5,000 from Clinton in the 2006 election cycle.

The money that Clinton and Obama have contributed to the superdelegates who may now determine their fate has come from three sources: the candidates' campaign accounts for president and, before that, Senate, and from their leadership PACs. These PACs exist precisely to support other politicians in their elections--and, thus, to make friends and collect chits. Leadership PACs are supposed to go dormant after a presidential candidate officially enters the race.

Contributions to candidates for federal office are relatively easy to track, but money given to state and local officials is harder to spot. Campaign finance reports from Senate candidate committees are still filed on paper, making it difficult to know who is receiving money from them. For that reason it's possible that Obama and Clinton have given superdelegates even more than the $890,000 the Center for Responsive Politics has identified. While Obama has received the support of numerous state governors, state legislators and local officials, it does not appear that his leadership PAC or presidential candidate committee has contributed to any of them. His PAC did make one interesting contribution in 2006: for her Senate re-election, Hillary Clinton received a $4,200 contribution from Obama.

Another senator running for office in 2006, Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, collected $10,000 from both Clinton and Obama. As a superdelegate, Whitehouse is backing Clinton for the White House. "His decision was based on his relationship with the Clintons. President Clinton nominated him to be United States attorney in 1994, in Rhode Island, and he believes Sen. Clinton is the strongest candidate," said spokeswoman Alex Swartsel, adding that money wasn't a factor in Whitehouse's decision. "We were a top targeted Senate race in 2006 and we received a number of contributions, including those from Clinton and Obama."

Though it might seem undemocratic to allow elected officials who have received money from the candidates to have such power in picking their party's nominee, the process was not meant to be democratic, Arizona State's Herrera said. "If anything, it was meant to take it out of the democratic process. In 1982 [the party] said they needed to have some professionals making decisions here to blunt the potential effects of what they perceived as amateur delegates making decisions--those who vote with their heart and not their head."

CRP Researchers Douglas Weber and Luke Rosiak contributed to this report.

Tags: Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Super Delegates. (all tags)

Comments

57 Comments

Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS!

Go Hillary.

by bdog 2008-02-14 03:04PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

Actions speak louder than words! I love it.

One can say they are against special interests, but when they let a nuclear regulatory industry, a big contributor, form their nuclear industry legislation and when they sign off on president bush's energy plan...those are actions that belie the no special interests claim.

I don't understand why people don't see how politic and calculating Obama is...he's old school.

by seattlegonz 2008-02-14 03:09PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

Most of Obama's endorsers, including Dem leaders and newspapers, cite his "hope" and "unity" mantra as reasons for their endorsements.
IIRC - none of them have specifically cited his rhetoric about the influence of lobbyists.

And the media's corporate sponsors certainly wouldn't allow the media corps to promote Obama 24/7 if they thought he'd really "change Washington."  

by annefrank 2008-02-14 03:48PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

I assume you're referring to Exelon, the same nuclear energy firm from which Mark Penn made hundreds of thousands of dollars as a consultant?

by doschi 2008-02-14 06:37PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

If actions speak louder than words, then John Lewis switching from Clinton to Obama is like a cherry bomb.

Lewis switching comes at the same time that Obama picks up endorsements from two of the biggest unions in the nation.  On top of the ground game, Lewis sets the precedent that will tell the other Clinton SD's that they can switch.

I expect some people here to be very bitter about this.

by alvernon 2008-02-14 06:43PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

This diary is nonsense. I'm sure Obama was thinking about buying these superdelegates when he donated to their campaign 2-4 years ago. And i'm sure he knew all along it would  come down to super delegates. Just ridiculous.

by mecarr 2008-02-14 03:05PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

I don't feel that this is ridiculous. This is especially grave for a candidate that said that superdelegates should be following the will of the people.

by HillaryKnight08 2008-02-14 03:09PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

This diary is cowardly, inarticulate, misinformative, petty, and vindictive. If you want to troll rate me for saying so fine. Doesn't change the fact that is true.

I have lost any respect I might have had for you.

by JDF 2008-02-14 06:39PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

i have sympathy for you, it will be hard to swallow the truth.

by JoeySky18 2008-02-14 03:12PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

Surely you don't believe Obama only began plotting his prez run in 2006.

by annefrank 2008-02-14 03:50PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

No it began in kindergarten! He was already building his slush fund back then with the aid of his secret Islamic allies! I read about it on mydd or maybe it was Free Republic? Don't remember which as it's getting hard to tell the difference.

by hankg 2008-02-15 02:49AM | 0 recs
Not surprise

More truth starts to come out.   The more I know him, the less I have respect for him.  His actions are far from what he said he stands for.

by JoeySky18 2008-02-14 03:11PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

This is about the most misleading post I've seen in quite some time.  

Give a minute of thought to 1) who many of the superdelegates are (Democratic elected officials) and 2) when the contributions were made (during campaigns).

The narrative here is Obama supports fellow democrats seeking to gain or keep their offices and Clinton thinks about herself.  

Please people, think for a minute would you.  

by ruskin 2008-02-14 03:16PM | 0 recs
Obama Supporting Democratic Candidates!!

I guess the headline just wasn't as breathlessly outraged at Obama supporting the party.

by beanbagz 2008-02-14 03:24PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Supporting Democratic Candidates!!

true- in fact i don't think any democrats who may run for president in the future should do anything to help elect more democrats to congress, because it looks so unseemly.

by loolool 2008-02-14 04:28PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Supporting Democratic Candidates!!

Well, I'm not sure I buy into the premise of the diary, but the near total lack of reference to the party and the party's values in Obama's rhetoric makes it seem unlikely that he's such a party cheerleader.  Of course, it would help to know if these were the only contributions he made or if these were representative of other contributions to non-SDs.

by newhorizon 2008-02-14 07:14PM | 0 recs
What Rhetoric Are you listening to

I hear the rhetoric about ending the Iraq War and it sounds pretty Democratic to me.

by DreamsOfABlueNation 2008-02-14 11:34PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Supporting Democratic Candidates!!

Seriously, you have told us what way we should understand this... Why a presidential candidate want to build up the party... I heard actblue is going to be running for president as well.. if you don't think so, you must be in a cult...

by labor nrrd 2008-02-15 04:35AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

Interesting article--thanks very much for posting it. A minor comment--the diary title is a little bit incendiary, though. Maybe tone it down a little?

A few questions that come up:
1. How much total money have Obama and Clinton handed out? Are $694,000 and $194,000 large or small amounts?

2. It is surprising that there's not a single case in which somebody money from only one candidate and endorsed the other. I don't know what that says, and about whom--are the receivers the ones who are reciprocating, or were there tacit deals in place?

3. I remember there was some murmuring about contributions made by HopeFund (it may not have been that name), Obama's leadership PAC, and the donations it made to Iowa and NH officials after he announced. Does anyone remember anything about that?

by OrangeFur 2008-02-14 03:25PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

Hope Fund apparently did take money from PACs and federal lobbyists, as did Obama's 2004 Senate campaign and his 2010 Senate campaign:

http://blogs.suntimes.com/sweet/2007/11/ sweet_column_obama_making_dona.html

by OrangeFur 2008-02-14 03:38PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

I comment below.

by jfashwell 2008-02-14 04:47PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

I see a pattern too, crazy accusations.

by labor nrrd 2008-02-15 04:35AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama supports the Democratic Party

While Senator Obama traveled the country supporting     Democratic candidates with his presence and funds from his leadership PAC, Senator Clinton raised a war chest for her presidential campaign. I think those candidates who he helped win their races appreciate it.

by WellstoneDem 2008-02-14 03:28PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama supports the Democratic Party

I read the article. There are only 4 that received the same amount from Clinton and Obama and yes they did go to Clinton.  I don't find a sample of 4 to be terribly convincing.

The article also says the 60% of Obama's elected official superdelegate supporters had not received any money so that would suggest he is not "buying super delegates"

Superdelegates are going to those that supported their campaign efforts in the past.  Clinton supported fewer of them in 2006 in order to save $10 million for her presidential campaign. Meanwhile, Senator Obama "was the most requested speaker on the 2006 campaign trail, appearing with candidates in more than 30 states."
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1212/p01s0 1-uspo.html

by WellstoneDem 2008-02-14 05:50PM | 0 recs
Buying or Supporting Democratic candidates?!

Nice copy and paste job.  What you do not inform is that this is a standard practice.

Twist the facts as you may, but Democratic candidates often fundraise and fuel lower ticket campaigns in hopes of grassroots support and endorsements.  Kerry, Edwards, and Bill have done this often in the past.

Why is this now considered 'buying' by Obama?  

There is nothing illegal about this process, just shows the power of super delegates (40%) in deciding the next nominee.  

by optimusprime 2008-02-14 03:35PM | 0 recs
Re: Buying or Supporting Democratic candidates?!

The problem here is that Obama has been telling Clinton's superdelegates that they should support a candidate because of popular vote. Given that 40% of his delegates that he has did not support him due to popular vote--that's worrysome.

by HillaryKnight08 2008-02-14 03:40PM | 0 recs
Re: Buying or Supporting Democratic candidates?!

The 40% is a little misleading--superdelegates make up 20% of the total delegates. So they comprise 40% of a majority. By that standard, the pledged delegates make up 160% of the delegates needed to choose the nominee.

by OrangeFur 2008-02-14 03:40PM | 0 recs
20% not 40%

My mistake.

   

by optimusprime 2008-02-14 03:48PM | 0 recs
Re: 20% not 40%

I should make that correction as well.

by HillaryKnight08 2008-02-14 03:55PM | 0 recs
I thought no more politics as usual?n/t

by grassrootsorganizer 2008-02-15 03:03AM | 0 recs
Re: This is amazing-- he's trying to

This is enough. Think I'm going to read through the rest of this garbage? And why is this diary on the rec list?

by shergald 2008-02-14 03:42PM | 0 recs
Re: This is amazing-- he's trying to

Because these posters are pathetic and the end is NEAR.

by tracey webb 2008-02-14 06:38PM | 0 recs
Re: This is amazing-- he's trying to

Because these people will slander Obama in anyway possible.

by JDF 2008-02-14 06:38PM | 0 recs
Re: This is amazing-- he's trying to

Why are you against this post?  I find it to be very informative.  

by findthesource 2008-02-14 06:39PM | 0 recs
um....

It's fairly common for campaigns to give other campaigns money to help build the party.  

The donations in this report go back three years- well before anyone was an announced candidate and before anyone knew that superdelegates would have such influence in the primary.

All this report supports is that Obama has been more supportive of other elected Democrats than Clinton.

Sorry.

by Damien in Texas 2008-02-14 09:00PM | 0 recs
Re: This is amazing-- he's trying to

Agreed.  They really had to dig deep in their rear to come up with this raft of horseshit.

by John Poet 2008-02-15 05:53AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama

I tell his supporters they will be sorely disappointed when he gets to Washington and changes NOTHING! "New politics" from Chicago???? Are you kidding me!?

by rossinatl 2008-02-14 04:21PM | 0 recs
When did

Team clinton win its exemption from "Fair Use"?

by zonk 2008-02-14 04:25PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

". . .campaign contributions have been a generally reliable predictor of whose side a superdelegate will take. . . .where superdelegates had received contributions from both Clinton and Obama, all 7 elected officials who received more money from Clinton have committed to her. 34 of the 43 superdelegates who received more money from Obama, or 79%, are backing him. In every case. . .in which superdelegates received money from 1 candidate but not the other, the superdelegate is backing the candidate who gave them money. 4 superdelegates who have already pledged received the same amount of contributions from both Clinton and Obama--and all committed to Clinton."

I am a Hillary Clinton supporter. But I don't get how you can say that "Obama is buying superdelegates." Either they are both buying them, or neither is. Naturally, both candidates are more likely to give $ to other pols that are sympatico to them. And, those pols, in turn, are more likely to back the donor rather than his or her opponent. Maybe this is a bad thing. Maybe both candidates are buying superdelegates. Well then, maybe it should be banned prospectively. But to say that Obama is "buying votes," while, at the same time, saying nothing about Hillary doing the same, strikes me as disingenuous.

As an aside, anyone who has read Caro's masterful biography of LBJ knows that one of the tools that helped him rise to power was control over a fund to support Democratic House candidates. Johnson was basically a cipher as a US Rep. He sponsored few bills. He made no speeches. But, partly because nobody else wanted the job, he got control over that fund. And every Congressman and woman he helped with that money, who were all being outspent by their well-heeled GOP opponents, owed him big-time and forever. Maybe Obama is doing a similar thing.

I am starting to gain some respect for Obama. And not because he represents some "new kind of politics." That's just pablum for the kiddies. But because he seems to know how to game the system. From what I can gather, he gamed the system at Harvard to win his presidency of the Law Review (also similar to Johnson's victory in a college election, where he simply stuffed the ballot box!). In his first race for the State Senate in Chicago, Obama got all of his opponents thrown off the ballot on technicalities, which was directly contrary to his voters' rights and "power to the people" rhetoric of then and now. But it worked.

In short, given how there is no real policy distinction between Hillary and Obama, and how I have supported Hillary because I thought she had what it takes to win against the GOP, the more Obama shows he can rig the game in his favor, the more I like him. Hillary gave money to these superdelegates too, but Obama gave more and to more of them. Hillary, on this issue, is in the position of Robert Shaw, in the movie "The Sting." Shaw has his boy stack the deck in a showdown hand of poker against Paul Newman, but Newman knows he is going to do it, and has a better hand than Shaw's up his sleeve. Afterwards, Shaw knows he's been cheated, but he says to his boy, "What am I going to do, go after him for cheating better than me?"

Hillary should have seen this coming. I have supported her all along, and will continue to do so. As a good Democrat, I will vote for which ever of them wins the nomination. But, if it is Obama, stories like this are making me to start to believe, for the first time, that he just might have what it takes to bring the Republican bastards down.

by freemansfarm 2008-02-14 04:27PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

There is one key point to make with this story and it is this:

IF THIS WAS REVERSED AND HILLARY WAS AT 40%, THE MEDIA AND THESE WACKO OBAMA SUPPORTERS WOULD BE HAILING IT AS THE "REASON" SHE IS PART OF WASHINGTON AND OBAMA IS NOT!!!!

Plan and simple! Their hypocrisy is scary!

by boxer4hrc 2008-02-14 04:28PM | 0 recs
Some number crunching...

The article is written in an annoying fashion--it doesn't give enough raw data to figure out how many people Clinton and Obama gave to. It says that 34 of Obama's 81 elected official endorsers received money. This sounds bad, but it doesn't say how many he gave to--if he gave to a lot of others, it's not so bad. Similarly for Clinton.

As near as I can tell, Obama donated to roughly 100 superdelegates, while Clinton donated to roughly 65. Details of the calculation at the end.
There should be around 310 elected supers--230 House members, 50 senators, 28 governors. Of these, 190 have endorsed, splitting 81 for Obama, 109 for Clinton.

If money had nothing to do with who people endorsed, you'd expect that if a candidate gave money to say 50% of the supers, about 50% of the supers who endorsed him would have gotten money from him. What do we get?

Obama gave money to about 100 out of 310 supers, a little over 30%. But 40% of his endorsers got money from him. This may not be a big difference, but at least his money didn't hurt him. His endorsers are more likely to have gotten money from him than the average elected super.

Clinton gave money to 65 out of 310, around 21%. Yet only 13% of her supers got money from her. Her endorsers are less (!) likely to have gotten money from her than the average elected super. Odd, to say the least.

This leaves out one very big factor that makes things a little more complicated and suspicious--that 54 of these supers got money from both of them. This should considerably depress the "return" the two candidates get from their money, since only one of them can get the super. It appears that Obama easily "won" among these, getting 34 of them compared with at most 15 for Clinton. So Clinton's low return is because a lot of the ones she gave money to went for Obama; Obama's relatively high return is despite that some of the ones he gave money to went for Clinton.

This doesn't mean that Obama bribed supers--it could be that each candidate did what they could to help the party, and the supers are just being grateful. But in that sense, Obama got a lot more for his money than Clinton did.

Calculating the numbers:

The article states that 54 supers received money from both of them--7 more from C, 43 more from O, 4 the same--and accounts for 45 of them. It's not clear whether the last 9 are still undecided or not. Additionally, Obama and Clinton have given to 52 and 15 undecided supers, respectively, making their totals 106 and 69. The numbers may be smaller by up to 9 if we double-counted undecided supers who received money from both.)

by OrangeFur 2008-02-14 04:31PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

"While Obama has received the support of numerous state governors, state legislators and local officials, it does not appear that his leadership PAC or presidential candidate committee has contributed to any of them. His PAC did make one interesting contribution in 2006: for her Senate re-election, Hillary Clinton received a $4,200 contribution from Obama."

Obama's campaign was handing out $1,000 checks all over NH in the summer and fall of 2007 (not an election year) including to superdelegates who have endorsed him. Other checks went to state level candidates.

His PAC was pretty casual about their handling of money, and in one case at least, used PAC money to buy dinner for Obama staff. (IMO a violation of FEC rules.)

by jfashwell 2008-02-14 04:45PM | 0 recs
If anything, this makes me support Obama more.

Because he supports the Democratic party in general, and worked hard in creating our current Congressional majority. In 2004, he went all over the country helping candidates even though he hadn't even been elected to the Senate yet. And now, he made a television ad to help Bill Foster get elected to Hastert's former seat. In contrast, Clinton blew $30+ million on her own reelection.

by MILiberal 2008-02-14 05:11PM | 0 recs
Re: If anything, this makes me support Obama more.

Yes; see how terrible he is. Giving money to fellow democrats is shameless and terrible. How dare he!!

by JDF 2008-02-14 06:42PM | 0 recs
HIS BLACK PANTHER MAFIA IS ALSO THREATENING THEM

HIS BLACK PANTHER MAFIA IS ALSO THREATENING WHOEVER CANNOT BE BOUGHT!!

Jesse Jackson Jr. plays the race card (again) Add to Hotlist

by LakersFan, Thu Feb 14, 2008 at 09:51:20 PM EST

Jesse Jackson Jr. is already one of the most egregious players of the race card with his "she didn't cry for Katrina" comments. But today I found this a quote by him that really shows the kind of racial politics he's playing -- and this time he's targeting black politicians.

From AP article about the pressure some black lawmakers feel to support Obama                 (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080215/ap_o n_el_pr/clinton_superdelegates_6;_ylt=Ap eAuR7qy3M.kGJ6rUOZk50E1vAI):

   One black supporter of Clinton, Rep. Emanuel Cleaver of Missouri, said he remains committed to her. "There's nothing going on right now that would cause me to" change, he said...

   ...In an interview, Cleaver offered a glimpse of private conversations.

   He said Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. of Illinois had recently asked him "if it comes down to the last day and you're the only superdelegate? ... Do you want to go down in history as the one to prevent a black from winning the White House?

   "I told him I'd think about it," Cleaver concluded.

   Jackson, an Obama supporter, confirmed the conversation, and said the dilemma may pose a career risk for some black politicians. "Many of these guys have offered their support to Mrs. Clinton, but Obama has won their districts. So you wake up without the carpet under your feet. You might find some young primary challenger placing you in a difficult position" in the future, he added.

So now Jackson Jr. is threatening black politicians that unless they fall in line and support Obama they may find themselves in a "difficult position". It would be one thing if he made this statement about all politicians who represent black districts, but the fact that he's specifically threatening black politicians makes his statement truly disturbing.

Unfortunately, this apple has fallen far from the tree.

by publicopinion 2008-02-14 05:42PM | 0 recs
Re: HIS BLACK PANTHER MAFIA

This racist; end of discussion.

by JDF 2008-02-14 06:43PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

Well I don't think that pejoratives like Black Panther Mafia help, but that story does raise an interesting point.   Imagine the outcry if Diane Feinstein, strong armed Claire McCaskill and threatened her with a primary for standing in the way of the first woman President.  

Anyway as to the issue of money to the superdelegates...

Seems like someone intent on changing the way of politics is sure good at some old school politickin'.  

Not that there's anything wrong with cutting checks to other campaigns, but some of the deity's supporters might be interested in seeing how their "small dollar" donations are greasing superdelegate campaign coffers.

Really that's the hypocrisy.   He rails against the way Washington works, yet has flourished because of that system.  How many of you know that Obama had a huge fundraiser at Hillary's house in Spring '04 to finance his Senate run?  He says he doesn't take a dime from FEDERAL lobbyists implying no influence over him yet a lot of his bundlers are in fact registered FEDERAL lobbyists and former and current FEDERAL lobbyists work on his campaign in official and advisory roles.

I mean come on, support your guy, but don't say that he's above the fray and so much better than that corrupt Hillary.

by mikesize 2008-02-14 05:57PM | 0 recs
Better giving it to fellow Dems...

then spending it on parking. Look at the difference, it's 500K. And Obama started giving back in 2005 - you know why? Because he's a good Democrat. Cares a little for the party.

The HRC campaign spends money like they are Republicans. Blew through $120 million by the time they got to Iowa, without having organizations in any States beyond NH, SC, IA, NV and CA.

by johnnyappleseed 2008-02-14 06:09PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

Looks like he bought John Lewis today.

by Drummond 2008-02-14 06:14PM | 0 recs
That is just a despicable comment.

John Lewis is a good man, a far better one than you. When he supported Clinton, I had no doubt that he did so because he felt that she would be a better president than Obama. Back then, many people triumphed his endorsement. But now that he has changed his mind, you accuse him of being 'bought.' It is beyond despicable for you to accuse him of somehow being bribed. Hence, I am 0-rating that comment.

by MILiberal 2008-02-14 06:27PM | 0 recs
Re: That is just a despicable comment.

Drummond is an Obama supporter. I think he was being sarcastic.

by OrangeFur 2008-02-15 12:03AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

The real story is that Obama created a PAC in kindergarten and starting saving up his pennies because he knew he was going to run back then and would need to cough bribe elected officials when he ran for president.

by sndeak 2008-02-14 07:01PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

"...it is also startling to see how quickly Obama's senatorship has been woven into the web of institutionalized influence-trading that afflicts official Washington. He quickly established a political machine funded and run by a standard Beltway group of lobbyists, P.R. consultants, and hangers-on...Obama's top contributors are corporate law and lobbying firms (Kirkland & Ellis and Skadden, Arps, where four attorneys are fund-raisers for Obama as well as donors), Wall Street financial houses (Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase), and big Chicago interests (Henry Crown and Company, an investment firm that has stakes in industries ranging from telecommunications to defense).

Obama immediately established a "leadership PAC," a vehicle through which a member of Congress can contribute to other politicians' campaigns--and one that political reform groups generally view as a slush fund through which congressional leaders can evade campaign-finance rules while raising their own political profiles.

http://www.harpers.org/...

by Tennessean 2008-02-15 02:42AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

More, better Democrats!

by Socks The Cat 2008-02-15 03:30AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

This just points to the potential for an appearance of corruptness of the SuperDelegate process (how Russ Fiengold might term it).

Is that 40 percent got money is not by random chance? No, but it's pretty much the culture of pay to play that we have.

If anything, the SD's, given where we are in the process, they all ought to now return their monies to the presidential nominees.

by Jerome Armstrong 2008-02-15 03:30AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

If anything, it is to Hillary's discredit that she did not share the wealth more and squandered money on an easy Senate campaign.

by Pravin 2008-02-15 04:44AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Buying Super Delegates!!

Didn't we all eviscerate Kerry for not doling out cash in 2006 from his funds to democrats in close races even though he wasn't up for reelection?

Are we eviscerating Obama now for doling out cash to dems in close races when he wasn't up for reelection?

by kasjogren 2008-02-15 06:20AM | 0 recs

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