I TALK ABOUT THE ELECTION I’M TRYING NOT TO TALK ABOUT

By Benjamin Phillips

I’ve been avoiding the temptation to talk about the Primaries. I’m not usually superstitious, but after New Hampshire, and considering who’s involved, I don’t want to jinx anything. I’ve already said too much.

Instead, I want to point out something important, and an explanation of why it’s important. I didn’t write this, so it’s not a Jinx. It came from TPM’s election coverage. No Whammies.

Civil Rights Icon John Lewis Switches Super-Delegate Vote From Hillary To Obama
By Eric Kleefeld - February 14, 2008, 10:26PM

This is big news, and may well be the beginning of the end for Hillary Clinton’s super-delegate strategy. The New York Times reports that Rep. John Lewis (D-GA), a legend of the civil rights movement who had endorsed Hillary last year, is switching his super-delegate vote from Hillary over to Barack Obama.

Lewis stopped short of formally switching his endorsement over to Obama, but said he would make a decision on that matter within a few days. Lewis also said that he and other lawmakers would meet soon to decide just how they should involve themselves in the nomination fight — and he cited the super-delegate battle as a pitfall that could weaken the party’s hopes this Fall.

In short, it looks like the Hillary campaign probably can’t count on the super-delegates to save them, should they lose out in the elected delegate race. So if it becomes clear that Obama ends up with an insurmountable lead — or Hillary, for that matter — there could be a strong message from super-delegates that the loser has to concede defeat and close up shop.

Looks like the Party Leaders are tougher than I thought. Or they’re just as powerful as they ever were and someone else got weaker. I’m not saying who.