Hillary Campaign Is Over
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By the way the last 9 primary exit polls have been trending, it’s time to stick a fork in Hillary’s breast. Or eye. She’s done.
‘Course a blowjob and a crackpipe could change everything…plus that freaky, smug witch Hussein’s married to could keep flapping, but ultimately what she says won’t matter, unless it’s something really big, cos he’s running, not her.
Wisconsin Exit Polls:
Obama Won:
Women (51-49)
All age groups under 65
All education levels
All regions of the state — urban, suburban and rural
Voters without college degrees (50-48)
Democrats (50-49)
Whites (53-46)
White men (59-38)
Voters who decided in the last week (58-42)
Won or tied voters of all income levels
Tied among white women
Tied among union members
Tied among union households
WASHINGTON (AP) – Barack Obama claimed major pieces of Hillary Rodham Clinton’s usual coalition as his own Tuesday, winning a majority of white and working- class voters while splitting women in Wisconsin’s Democratic presidential primary, according to exit polls.
In a potent showing, the Illinois senator essentially split the votes of white women and lower-earning white workers with his rival, who had relied heavily on them until now. He also tightened his grip on groups he has dominated before, winning two-thirds of men and 70 percent of voters under age 30, according to surveys of voters leaving polling places across the state.
Obama was backed by two-thirds of young whites and six in 10 moderatesâ€â€groups that have been closely contested in past racesâ€â€while expanding his decisive leads with independents and middle-aged, college-educated, high income and very liberal voters.
Among the few mainstays where Clinton remained strong were older voters and those looking for experience.
Underscoring Obama’s inroads, the two split those with no more than a high school diploma, whom Clinton has carried easily in most previous contests. They were also even among whites who have not finished collegeâ€â€a group she has dominated by nearly 30 percentage points among the 21 contested Democratic primaries held earlier.
Obama won among those earning less than $50,000 a yearâ€â€and significantly, the two split whites in that income group, for one of his best showings of the year with them. In previous primaries, she led him among whites making that amount of money by 23 percentage points, and had a narrow advantage with people of all races earning that amount.
Nine in 10 blacks backed Obama, similar to his usual margin with them. But they represented fewer than one in 10 voters in Wisconsin, meaning Obama had to do well with whitesâ€â€which he did.
Clinton had a 22-percentage-point lead among white women in earlier primaries combined. Tuesday, she got 52 percent of their votesâ€â€a statistical tie with Obama. He also had a huge margin among young whites.
Two-thirds of men were supporting Obama, including nearly the same proportion of white men. That is a group Obama has done increasingly well with, especially since former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards left the race two weeks ago.
Almost six in 10 liberals and moderates supported Obama, another show of muscle among groups that usually tilt Clinton’s way.
Obama won among voters who said race and gender were not important in choosing a candidate, while Clinton led with those who considered sex significant. They were tied with those who said race was a factor.
In responses that might resonate as the campaign moves next to economically ailing Ohio, seven in 10 said U.S. trade takes more jobs from Wisconsin than it creates. Obama led with those voters. The economy was seen by Ohio Democrats as the country’s top problem, and Obama led with that group, too.
Politico: Wisconsin Exit Polls Spell Trouble For Clinton


