Pledged Delegate Milestone

Tuesday's primaries could give Obama a majority of pledged delegates.

ByABC News
May 19, 2008, 5:54 PM

May 19, 2008— -- KENTUCKY - Democratic Primary - closed

Polls close: 7:00 PM ET

51 delegates at stake, proportional

OREGON - Democratic Primary - closed
Polls close: 11:00 PM ET
52 delegates at stake, proportional

Tuesday night's primaries look like another split decision – Barack Obama is favored in Oregon and Hillary Clinton is favored in Kentucky. But unlike primary night draws in the past, Tuesday could be actually have a game-changing moment in the battle for the Democratic nomination.

The night could be a milestone in the nomination race if Obama is able to achieve a majority (1627 or more) of the total pledged delegates (3253). At this writing, he has 1609 pledged delegates in the ABC News delegate estimate and needs just 18 to achieve the majority.

Of course, this does not constitute victory. Obama still needs to reach the DNC's magic number of 2026. But reaching this pledged delegate marker does give the Obama a solid talking point to pitch to the 200 or so uncommitted superdelegates that they now should follow the will of the voters.

Clinton will be in Louisville when results come in tomorrow night while Obama will "bring things full circle" and hold a rally in Iowa.

ABC News' Sunlen Miller reports that Obama will not declare victory in the nomination fight but did call reaching the majority of pledged delegates "a pretty significant mark."

"It doesn't mean we declare victory because I won't be the nominee until we have enough, a combination of both pledged delegates and superdelegates to hit the mark," Obama said on Sunday in Milwaukie, Oregon. "But what it does mean is that voters have given us the majority of delegates that they can assign. And obviously that is what this primary and caucus process is about."

Things to look for on Tuesday night:

1. Superdelegate movement. While he will be able to claim the majority of pledged delegates, it would take a flood of superdelegates endorsing Obama to put him over the magic number of 2026 to win the nomination tomorrow night. But there are superdelgates that could announce after the results are in in Oregon and Kentucky. Eight of the 14 superdelegates from Oregon remain uncommitted and it would not be surprising to see them come out quickly after the results are in (and support Obama should he win the state). A spokesman for the Kentucky Democratic Party chair and vice-chair, who are both uncommitted, has indicated that they would wait until after the state votes and take into account the results.

The ladies get into a heated debate over U.S. talks with other nations. LINK

British PM Joins YouTube
Britain's Gordon Brown is using YouTube to reach young voters. LINK

Obama: 'Lay Off My Wife'
The senator and his wife discuss the race for the White House. LINK

Ted Kennedy Recovering
Doctors are attempting to determine what caused the senator's seizure. LINK

Bush Sees Mideast Peace
The president came back to the U.S. confident of an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal. LINK

Is the Race at an End?
Obama is poised to declare victory after the primaries on Tuesday. LINK

Will Obama Defeat Hillary?
Mark Halperin weighs in on the Democratic race. LINK

Ted Kennedy's Health Scare
The senator was doing well a day after suffering a seizure LINK

How Electable Is Barack Obama?
"GMA" anchor Ron Claiborne leads a discussion on race in politics. LINK

Sen. Biden on 'Appeasement'
Foreign Relations Committee head on Iran, Obama and vice presidency. LINK

Rep. John Boehner Not Going Anywhere
House minority leader committed to delivering the 'change Americans deserve.' LINK

Roundtable: 'Appeasement' Debate
George Will, Donna Brazile, Matt Bai and Peggy Noonan. LINK

Green Room: Baseball and Politics
George Will, Donna Brazile, Matt Bai and Peggy Noonan. LINK