wco81 wrote:Huckabee wins by a big margin, which probably means Romney is done.
Negative. Romney moves to his backyard in New Hampshire next week. If he is routed there, he's done. If he wins, he's very alive.
Plus Huckabee doesn't have anywhere near the numbers in N.H. that he had in Iowa, and his role as the evangelicals' darling won't carry anywhere near the weight in New England that it does in the Midwest.
Giuliani is very much in trouble. He finished dead last in Iowa and has turned his attention to Super Tuesday. But that may backfire, as he could be so far out of the spotlight by then. He also has very little infrastructure in New Hampshire. No great loss to the race -- Rudy is a useless candidate running on fear and images of him wearing a cotton mask on Sept. 11, 2001.
wco81 wrote:Obama is projected to win a close race and Hilary is trying to claw into second place.
And of course, the Clinton campaign will depict that as a solid showing, when anyone who pays any attention to this process realizes it's a big blow. Clinton had a 20-point lead over Obama two or three months ago.
People in Iowa saw Hillary as an opportunistic political animal who can't relate with anyone who can't help her in her march to power, and they rejected her. Let's hope the rest of America follows suit.
Iowa did seem to sift the wheat from the proverbial chaff in both parties. Looks like a three-horse race for the Dems, with Obama, Clinton and Edwards. The GOP appears to be a two-man showdown between Huckabee and Romney.
Paul, McCain and Thompson all are treading water in the low double-digits and teens for the GOP. But they remain key players in the GOP race because whomever can get their supporters' votes when they drop out this month will have the inside edge on Super Tuesday.
Take care,
PK
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