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Presidential primary attention was shifting this week to Kentucky, Oregon and West Virginia, which hold primaries later this month.
‘It’s
over’
Experts say N.C., Indiana
results spell end of Clinton
campaign
JOSHUA
LYNSEN
Friday, May 09,
2008
Some gay political
experts forecasted the end of Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton’s presidential campaign this
week after she faced several new
setbacks.
“I think she’s at the end of
her rope,” said Dan Pinello, a City University
of New York government professor. “I really do.
There’s nothing more she can do. It’s
over.”
Experts said Clinton’s estimated
14-point loss to Sen. Barack Obama in the North
Carolina primary was a massive blow to her
campaign.
“I think it hurt her pretty
badly,” said Hastings Wyman, editor of the
Southern Political Report. “They gave it
everything they had — the governor endorsing
her. And she still lost big.”
Also
problematic, Pinello said, was Clinton’s slim
win in Indiana, where early returns showed she
took 51 percent of the vote.
Pinello
said Indiana, which allows Republicans to cast
ballots in the Democratic primary, might have
seen its results skewed by voters who acted on
conservative talk radio suggestions to vote for
Clinton in hopes of prolonging the Democratic
contest.
“Therefore, I would call that a
literal tie,” he said. “Not a virtual tie, but
a literal tie.”
According to CNN
tallies, Obama had 1,584 pledged delegates
Wednesday to Clinton’s 1,415. Including
superdelegates, Obama had 1,836 delegates to
Clinton’s 1,681.
A candidate needs 2,025
delegates to win the Democratic nomination
outright. About 220 pledged delegates remain to
be won and 270 superdelegates are
uncommitted.
Clinton’s delegate deficit
follows news that she lent her financially
strapped campaign more than $6 million over the
last month.
“She still desperately needs
money,” Pinello said, “and I’m not sure what
kind of convincing pitch she can make to
contributors.”
Wyman said although six
state primaries remain on the calendar, the
race has effectively ended.
“I think
Obama is the nominee,” he said. “I think it’s a
matter of Clinton finding a graceful way out.
She’s done well, and she’s certainly made it a
race, but she hasn’t done well
enough.”
Also falling short this week
was an openly gay U.S. Senate candidate in
North Carolina.
Jim Neal lost his
primary bid to run against Republican incumbent
Sen. Elizabeth Dole. Neal’s main opponent,
veteran state Sen. Kay Hagan, took an estimated
60 percent of the vote to his 18
percent.
“In that Senate race, it’s very
clear that Jim Neal’s being gay didn’t help him
at all,” Wyman said. “It probably hurt him
terribly. It was not an issue, but it was well
known.”
Neal did not immediately respond
Wednesday to the Blade’s calls for
comment.
“I will say that even had he
been straight, I think he would have lost,”
Wyman said. “You know, he was not an office
holder, as was his opponent, state Sen. Kay
Hagan. I just think he could have done
better.”
Although neither the Gay &
Lesbian Victory Fund nor the Human Rights
Campaign endorsed Neal, Wyman said those were
not fatal blows.
“It might have hurt his
money,” he said, “but I don’t think those
groups have a political force in North
Carolina.”
Wyman said Neal was hurt more
by his overly ambitious goals, and would have
to recalibrate before mounting any future run
for office.
“I would choose a smaller
office, with a more gay-friendly electorate,
something around Chapel Hill or maybe around
Charlotte,” he said. “But with 18 percent, I
don’t think he has a great political
future.”
Presidential primary attention
was shifting this week to Kentucky, Oregon and
West Virginia, which hold primaries later this
month.
But it’s unclear whether gay
issues will figure into those votes. Jordan
Palmer, president of the Kentucky Equality
Federation, said gay issues generally haven’t
been part of the campaign dialogue in his
state.
“I’m not seeing a whole lot,”
said Palmer, who is gay. “And it’s very
disappointing.”
Palmer said the general
silence on gay issues is particularly
dispiriting because Kentucky “is one of the few
places where there are no laws on the books to
protect gay people from anything.”
He
said although Lexington, the state’s largest
city, bars discrimination based on sexual
orientation in the areas of employment and
housing, he would welcome any additional calls
for equality a presidential candidate would
make.
“But realistically, there’s not a
whole lot a United States president can do in
Kentucky,” Palmer said.
Wyman said gay
issues were unlikely to figure into the
Kentucky or West Virginia primaries because
“neither candidate has any interest in raising
them at this point.”
“It doesn’t gain
them anything at this point, neither
candidate,” he said. “You know, gay issues mean
a great deal to gay people, and have some
support among the liberal voters, generally.
But they’re touchy when you talk about the
electorate at large. And I think the candidates
would just rather not talk about them. That
doesn’t mean they’re not committed, but I think
the test of that commitment will be after their
election, not the way they
campaign.”
Gay issues also could be
downplayed in primary discussions in Montana
and South Dakota, the final states to vote in
the primary process on June 3.
Linda
Gryczan, director of Montana Human Rights
Network’s equality project, said both campaigns
could make the calculated decision that gay
issues “aren’t the issues that are going to
move the majority.”
And they’d be
correct, she said, because more people care
about gas prices.
“Where they are on the
gas tax is more important to me,” said Gryczan,
a lesbian. “Because transportation is a very
important issue to me, and the price of
gasoline is a very important issue to
me.”
Todd Epp, chair of Equality South
Dakota’s political action committee, agreed
that voters generally are prioritizing other
issues.
“GLBT issues have not been in
the forefront of the South Dakota presidential
primary,” said Epp, who is straight.
“Agriculture, education, the economy, water
projects, the war in Iraq and health care are
the biggest issues in the
state.”
Consequently, Epp and Gryczan
said their organizations are focused more on
swaying local races than on the presidential
campaign.
“Locally,” Gryczan said, “it’s
far more important that we maintain a
Democratic Senate and that our local
representatives and senators will be
pro-equality voters.”
Excitement in
Alabama
Although gay
issues aren’t prominent in the remaining
primary states, they did make headlines this
week in Alabama.
State lawmakers
approved Tuesday a bill to add crimes against
people because of their sexual orientation to
Alabama’s hate crime law.
“It is a very
happy day to be gay in Alabama,” Danny Upton,
executive director of Equality Alabama. “I’m
just almost speechless. This is something that
people told us could never happen.”
The
bill narrowly passed the House, 46-44, when a
Republican lawmaker who had become friends with
lesbian state Rep. Patricia Todd backed the
proposal.
“We both got elected at the
same time,” Todd said. “She sits behind me on
the floor, so we talk a lot, and I think she’s
just one of those independent-minded people
that votes based on her own personal beliefs
and not on what the party tells
her.”
Todd said the bill, which advanced
at the legislative session’s end, was unlikely
to see a Senate vote this year.
