Polls: Clinton Closing Gap on Obama
Clinton gets backing of Indiana's big paper, Obama gets 2nd former DNC chairman.
May 2, 2008 — -- Four days before the Democratic primaries in Indiana and North Carolina, Sen. Hillary Clinton won the endorsement of Indiana's largest newspaper and has cut Sen. Barack Obama's once imposing lead in North Carolina to single digits.
Clinton's come-from-behind effort also picked up some momentum from a national poll that showed her now in a virtual tie with Obama.
The national survey by the Pew Research Center gave Obama a 47-45 lead over Clinton, a statistical tie when you take in the poll's margin for error. That marks a big mood swing for Democratic voters since Pew's March survey gave Obama a 49-39 lead.
Next Tuesday could be yet another make-or-break moment for the candidates. A victory in Indiana coupled with a close race in North Carolina would bolster Clinton's argument that she is the candidate to take on Republican Sen. John McCain in the general election.
Clinton picked up the endorsement today of Indiana's largest newspaper, the Indianapolis Star. The paper cited "her experience and grasp of major issues." And as she frequently reminds voters, she has won the major states – Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, California and Texas – which, she says, makes her the only candidate who can beat McCain.
The Star's backing came a day after former Democratic National Committee chairman Joe Andrew, who is from Indiana, defected from the Clinton camp and urged Hoosiers to vote for Obama.
The Obama campaign is expected to roll out another former DNC chairman's endorsement today. Paul Kirk, a superdelegate who led the party from 1985-1989, is coming out for Obama.
There are no reliable polls in Indiana because voters don't register by party, but a Mason Dixon poll of North Carolina indicated that Obama's 20 point lead there has vanished and now stands at 49-42.
Clinton is not expected to win North Carolina, but a Clinton defeat in Indiana would rapidly put pressure on her to bow out of the race.
Despite fears from Democratic leaders that the prolonged primary battle is tearing the party apart, neither candidate is ready to throw in the towel.