Barack Obama
swept to a convincing victory in the North Carolina primary
Tuesday night and declared he was closing in on the
Democratic presidential nomination. Hillary Rodham
Clinton eked out a win in Indiana as she struggled to
halt her rival's march into history.
''Tonight we
stand less than 200 delegates away from securing the
Democratic nomination for president of the United States,''
Obama told a raucous rally in Raleigh, N.C. -- and
left no doubt he intended to claim the prize.
Clinton stepped
before her own supporters not long afterward in
Indianapolis. ''Thanks to you, it's full speed on to the
White House,'' she said, signaling her determination
to fight on in a campaign already waged across more
than 16 months and nearly all 50 states.
Returns from 99%
of North Carolina precincts showed Obama winning 56% of
the vote to 42% for Clinton, a triumph that mirrored his
earlier wins in Southern states with large black
populations.
That made Indiana
a virtual must-win Midwestern contest for the former
first lady, who had hoped to counter Obama's persistent
delegate advantage with a strong run through the late
primaries.
Returns from 99%
of the precincts showed her with 51% to 49% for her
rival, a margin of little more than 22,000 votes out of more
than 1.2 million cast. The outcome wasn't clear for
more than six hours after the polls closed, the
uncertainty stemming from slow counting in Lake County,
near Obama's home city of Chicago.
Obama won at
least 69 delegates and Clinton at least 63 in the two states
combined, with 55 still to be awarded.
Voters in both
states fell along racial lines long since established in a
marathon race between the nation's strongest-ever black
presidential candidate and its most formidable female
challenger for the White House.
The economy was
the top issue by far in both states, according to
interviews with voters as they left their polling places.
Two weeks after a
decisive defeat in Pennsylvania, Obama sounded
increasingly like he was looking forward to the fall
campaign.
''This primary
season may not be over, but when it is, we will have to
remember who we are as Democrats ... because we all agree
that at this defining moment in history -- a moment
when we're facing two wars, an economy in turmoil, a
planet in peril -- we can't afford to give John McCain
the chance to serve out George Bush's third term.''
Clinton was
joined at her rally by her husband, Bill, his face sunburned
after hours spent campaigning in small-town North Carolina,
and their daughter, Chelsea.
She stressed the
issue that came to dominate the final days of the
primaries in both states, her call for a summertime
suspension of the federal gasoline tax. ''I think it's
time to give Americans a break this summer,'' she
said.
She added that no
matter who wins the epic race for the nomination, ''I
will work for the nominee of this party'' in the fall
campaign against the Republicans. To emphasize her
determination, Clinton announced plans to campaign
Thursday in West Virginia, South Dakota and Oregon, three of
the remaining primary states.
Obama was gaining
more than 90% of the black vote in Indiana, while
Clinton was winning an estimated 61% of the white vote
there.
In North
Carolina, Clinton won 60% of the white vote, while Obama
claimed support from roughly 90% of the blacks who
cast ballots.
Obama's delegate
haul edged him closer to his prize -- 1815.5 to 1,672
for Clinton in The Associated Press count, out of 2,025
needed to win the nomination.
As he told his
supporters, Obama was on pace to finish the night within
200 delegates of the total needed. There are 217 delegates
at stake in the six primaries yet to come. Another 270
superdelegates remain uncommitted.
He has long led
Clinton among delegates won in the primaries and
caucuses, and has increasingly narrowed his deficit among
superdelegates who will attend the convention by
virtue of their status as party leaders. The AP tally
showed Clinton with 269.5 superdelegates, and Obama
with 255.
The impact of a
long-running controversy over Obama's former pastor, the
Reverend Jeremiah Wright, was difficult to measure.
In North
Carolina, six in 10 voters who said Wright's incendiary
comments affected their votes sided with Clinton. A
somewhat larger percentage of voters who said the
pastor's remarks did not matter supported Obama.
The questionnaire
used to learn about voter motivation did not include
any questions about the gasoline tax.
In Indiana, about
one in five voters said they were independents, an
additional one in 10 said Republican.
Only Democrats
and unaffiliated voters were permitted to vote in North
Carolina.
Voting in Indiana
was carried out under a state law, recently upheld by
the Supreme Court, that requires voters to produce a valid
photo ID. About a dozen nuns in their 80s and 90s at
St. Mary's Convent in South Bend were denied ballots
because they lacked the necessary identification.
Obama leads
Clinton in delegates won in primaries and caucuses. Despite
his defeat two weeks ago, he has steadily whittled away at
her advantage in superdelegates in the past two weeks
and trails 269.5 to 255.
Clinton saved her
candidacy with her win in Pennsylvania, and she
campaigned aggressively in Indiana in hopes of denying Obama
a victory next door to his home state of Illinois.
Indiana is home to large numbers of blue-collar
workers who have been attracted to the former first lady,
and she sought to use her call for a federal gas tax holiday
to draw them and other economically pinched voters
closer.
Inevitably, the
issue quickly took on larger dimensions.
Obama said it
symbolized a candidacy consisting of ''phony ideas,
calculated to win elections instead of actually solving
problems.''
Clinton retorted,
''Instead of attacking the problem, he's attacking my
solutions,'' and ran an ad in the campaign's final hours
that said she ''gets it.''
The balance of
the primary schedule includes West Virginia, with 28
delegates on May 13; Oregon with 52 and Kentucky with 51 a
week later; Puerto Rico with 55 delegates on June 1,
and Montana with 16 and South Dakota with 15 on June
3.
Sen.
John McCain of Arizona, the Republican nomination
already in hand, campaigned in North Carolina and
assailed Obama for his vote against confirmation of
Chief Justice John Roberts.
''Senator Obama
in particular likes to talk up his background as a
lecturer on law, and also as someone who can work across the
aisle to get things done,'' McCain said. ''But ... he
went right along with the partisan crowd, and was
among the 22 senators to vote against this highly
qualified nominee.''
Clinton also
voted against Roberts, but McCain, as is often the case,
focused his remarks on Obama.
Obama's campaign
responded that the Republican would pick judges who
represent a threat to abortion rights and to McCain's own
legislation to limit the role of money in political
campaigns. (AP)