首页 新闻 体育 娱乐 游戏 邮箱 搜索 短信 聊天 点卡 天气 答疑 交友 导航


新浪首页 > 新浪教育 > Kerry Continues Nomination Roll

Kerry Continues Nomination Roll
http://www.sina.com.cn 2004/02/20 12:19  Shanghai Daily

  The Democratic presidential campaign is spreading out to primaries in 10 crucial states, and it appears to be down to a two-man race between front-runner John Kerry and a plucky challenger, John Edwards.

  Tuesday's Wisconsin primary set the stage for the March 2 contests. Kerry emerged again as the victor, Edwards is still in the race after a surprisingly close second place finish and Howard Dean's candidacy appeared doomed after he came in a distant third.

  "The voters of Wisconsin sent a clear message," Edwards said. "The message was this: Objects in your mirror may be closer than they appear." But Kerry gave no indication he was fazed by the Edwards surge in Wisconsin. "We're going to win the nomination," Kerry told The Associated Press.

  Kerry's advisers pointed out that even though Edwards closed the gap in Wisconsin, Kerry still has won 15 of 17 contests. Edwards has only one, South Carolina, where he was born.

  "The problem these other candidates have is they are not competing in a serious way to get enough delegates to get the nomination," said Steve Elmendorf, Kerry's deputy campaign manager.

  The March 2 contests are in California, New York, Ohio, Minnesota, Vermont, Georgia, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Maryland.

  At stake will be 1,151 delegates, more than half the total needed to claim the nomination.

  Utah, Idaho and Hawaii will vote on Tuesday, but with only 61 delegates up for grabs total, the states will not be a focus of the campaign.

  Aides say Edwards' populist message will resonate in Ohio and upstate New York, areas hard hit by job losses. The Southern-bred candidate also should do well in Georgia. California is by far the day's biggest prize, with 370 delegates, followed by New York with 236.

  In the final days of the Wisconsin race, Edwards criticized Kerry's support of the North American Free Trade Agreement. The message found a receptive audience: In exit polls, three-fourths of voters said trade with other countries takes jobs from their state.

  Edwards and Kerry split the vote among those voters, though Edwards did better than the front-runner among voters who cited the economy and jobs as top issues.

  Edwards finished far better than polls suggested he would, his surge fueled by the highest Republican turnout of the season and voters who made up their minds in the last week.

  Now the only Democrat with a glimmer of hope to beat Kerry, Edwards is pushing for a one-on-one debate with the front-runner before next month's showdown. The Democratic race once had 10 candidates, but the field is now down to five, including Dean, Dennis Kucinich and Al Sharpton, who haven't won a single contest.

  Dean ignored pleas to give up the fight.

  "We are not done," he told his supporters, even as his own advisers were saying his campaign for the presidency was effectively over.

  Senior advisers, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Dean, with no hope of winning the presidency, was considering scaling back his campaign sharply - but not formally withdrawing. He was just as likely to cede the nomination and endorse a rival.

  His campaign reached out to Edwards' team, believing Dean's fund-raising prowess could help reshape the race, aides said. But they did not rule out Dean endorsing Kerry, a move they said would seal Kerry's nomination.

  (The Associated Press)




英语学习论坛】【评论】【 】【打印】【关闭
Annotation

新闻查询帮助



文化教育意见反馈留言板电话:010-62630930-5178 欢迎批评指正

新浪简介 | About Sina | 广告服务 | 招聘信息 | 网站律师 | SINA English | 会员注册 | 产品答疑

Copyright © 1996 - 2004 SINA Inc. All Rights Reserved

版权所有 新浪网
北京市通信公司提供网络带宽