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What if it's a two-man Democratic race?

New Hampshire may leave Clinton on the ropes, reshaping the contest

Image: John Edwards, Barack Obama
Steven Senne / AP
Presidential hopefuls Barack Obama and John Edwards before the televised debate at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, N.H., on Saturday night.
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Russert on last-minute N.H. campaign
Jan. 8: NBC's Tim Russert talks with TODAY's Matt Lauer about the final day of campaigning before the New Hampshire primary.

Today show

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Obama: 'We've started something'
Jan. 7: In an interview with Brian Williams, Barack Obama talks about the excitement mounting around his campaign.

Nightly News

Video: Decision '08  
  
Madame Secretary?
Nov. 13: Two advisors to President-elect Obama confirm to NBC News that Sen. Hillary Clinton is being considered for Secretary of State. Rachel Maddow has the latest with NBC News Chief Foreign Affairs correspondent Andrea Mitchell.

  The candidates in pictures
U.S. Republican presidential nominee Senator McCain points into the crowd at an airport campaign rally in Roswell
Reuters
Final push
Presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain make their final appeals to voters.
Image: President Richard Nixon greets John McCain after he returned from Vietnam.
AP file
John McCain
The Republican presidential candidates' life has revolved around the public need.
Barak "Barry" Obama
Punahoe Schools via AP
The life of Barack Obama
The path of the president-elect, from childhood to party leader
AP
Sarah Palin
The fast-track governor's rise from Alaska beauty queen to governor to John McCain’s running mate.
AP file
Joseph Biden
The senator's legacy of public service and life filled with second chances.
By Tom Curry
National affairs writer
MSNBC
updated 12:36 a.m. ET Jan. 8, 2008

Tom Curry
National affairs writer

E-mail
HAMPTON, N.H. - Imagine a whole new race for the Democratic presidential nomination: a two-man contest between the 2004 vice presidential nominee, John Edwards, and the rookie phenomenon of 2008, Sen. Barack Obama.

If Hillary Clinton were to suffer a defeat of large proportions on Tuesday night in the New Hampshire primary, and if her star were to fade in the succeeding contests in Nevada and South Carolina, she might either quit the race or cease to be a dominant factor.

Edwards would remain as the only person standing between Obama and the Democratic presidential nomination.

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Edwards and his strategists are already planning for a two-man contest.

Elizabeth Edwards, the candidate’s wife and most outspoken campaign advocate, pressed the critique of Obama on Monday at a stop in Bedford, N.H.

“Sen. Obama, when he was in the state Senate in Illinois, took money from the health insurance industry at the same time that he was suggesting an amendment that was favorable to the health insurance industry and was unfavorable to the people of the Illinois,” she told a small crowd.

She also slammed Obama for having a lobbyist as co-chairman of his New Hampshire campaign.

Obama spokesman Bill Burton said in response to Edwards that Obama "has done more than any candidate in this race to curb the influence of money and lobbyists in the political process and, as president, he will institute some of the most sweeping ethics reforms the executive branch has ever seen." 

'A superhuman rocket ship'?
Joe Trippi, who piloted Howard Dean’s candidacy four years ago and now serves as a strategist for Edwards, has the experience of seeing one candidate, Dean, implode.

Some in the Clinton camp think sooner or later Obama, too, will implode.

If so, Edwards would be there to benefit.

“I grant you, one scenario is that this guy (Obama) is a superhuman rocket ship that is never going to come down,” Trippi said as Edwards spoke to a rally in Hampton on Monday night. “The other scenario is that every time you have had one of these rockets go off, every time it becomes clear this guy is about to be the nominee, everybody steps back and reassesses it.”

Slide show
A supporter of U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Edwards is arrested by a policeman in New Hampshire
  New Hampshire votes
The presidential hopefuls converge on the Granite State, which holds its primary on Tuesday. Click to see campaign images.

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“On Wednesday morning, people will wake up and say, ‘Jeez, this guy (Obama) is going to be our nominee,’” Trippi said. At that point, Trippi said, a closer examination will occur: “The world is going to say, who the hell is this guy?”

He acknowledges that Obama would start on Wednesday morning with a substantial advantage, having won Iowa and New Hampshire.

“For a year everybody was told this contest is between him (Obama) and her (Clinton),” Trippi argued. “And during that year, the national audience has learned quite a bit about him, most of it amazingly good: amazing speaker, incredibly inspirational — and yet where is he nationally? He’s at 25 percent. The Rasmussen Poll, which is the only national one I’ve seen since Iowa, has him at 25. I’ll tell you why: They have massive doubts about this guy — on their own.”

In other words, even without advertising from Edwards pointing out flaws in the Obama image or record, many Democratic voters have doubts about Obama.

“If you were going to fall under his spell, wouldn’t you have done it by now?” asked Trippi.

Seventy percent of the Iowa Democratic vote went against Clinton last week, but another way of reading the same data is that 62 percent voted against Obama and 70 percent voted against Edwards.


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