Matt Towery:
Why Obama Won And Why It Means Hillary Probably Is Finished
By Matt Towery
InsiderAdvantage
(5/7/08) Unless they pull a fast one in Gary, Indiana, late tonight,
it appears that we will be able to say that InsiderAdvantage has
polled the correct winner now in 15 of 16 presidential primaries
and caucuses this season. That’s the good news for us.
Here’s the bad news. We had the race a tight 4-point Obama
victory (47% to 43% with 10% undecided). Were we wrong? Yes and
no. The exit polls showed that the white vote was exactly as we
polled it at 61%. The African-American vote was stronger for Obama
(we showed Clinton with 17% and she received 10%) but, then again,
we weighted African Americans at a higher percentage than the exit
polls suggested.
So what accounted for the 55%-to-42% victory (latest numbers from
North Carolina officials as of late in the evening)? The answer
is two things: money (or lack thereof for Clinton) and undecided
voters.
Clinton was badly outspent on North Carolina television and with
an undecided as high as 10%, that meant that a sizeable group of
voters really intended to vote but had not made up their mind. It
now appears that Clinton stood still at the 43% or so level our
poll showed her at as of Monday night and that Obama picked up the
lion’s share of the undecided.
That, given a little shredding to Mike Gravel and “Uncommitted”
listed as choices on the ballot, left him right at that 55-to-56
percent range.
Why is the difference between a four point win and a 12-to-13 percent
win so critical, even if we got the winner right? Because it knocks
the wind out of Clinton’s sails in a top ten population state
and basically will lead to an evaporation of her money. We likely
won’t poll West Virginia or Kentucky, where she presumably
would do well.
Clinton had all of the earned media, from Jeremiah Wright to the
gas tax moratorium on her side. But it couldn’t overcome the
power of Obama’s ability to put television ads up at every
turn.
Yes, as I have said for nearly two years now, Florida will be an
issue, as will Michigan. But for the Clintons to believe that the
party will run the risk of alienating Obama’s followers now,
after Tuesday’s results, is pure fantasy.
She has run a race full of heart. But barring some new big issue
or event, my guess is that North Carolina puts an end to any real
sustainable effort on Hillary Clinton’s behalf.
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