Washington
Barack Obama declared Wednesday his chief rival for the Democratic
presidential nomination, Hillary Clinton, was the "frontrunner" even
though the outcome in the biggest day of voting so far left the two
candidates in a tight race.
Obama, speaking in Chicago, said Clinton's a "formidable opponent"
because of her strong name recognition and well-managed campaign in
the state-by-state competition to win the nomination.
"This makes her the front runner in every single contest," Obama,
46, said after the "Super Tuesday" contests in 24 states.
Clinton captured the biggest states, including California and New
York Tuesday night, but Obama carried more states - 13 - compared to
Clinton's eight. New Mexico, which was too close to call, had yet to
announce a final result as mid-day approached.
"This campaign is gaining momentum by the day," Obama said while
trying to maintain his status as an underdog.
Neither Clinton or Obama was able to emerge as the clear leader on
the Democratic side, in contrast to the Republicans. John McCain won
nine of the 21 states at stake in the Republican race and took a
decisive step toward capturing his party's nomination.
Obama denied that a dragged out race with Clinton would leave
Democrats divided and weaken their chances heading into the Nov 4
general election against their Republican opponent.
"I think it would be a problem if Senator Clinton's voters disliked
me, or my voters disliked Senator Clinton," he said. "I don't think
that's the case."
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