That point is in dispute, since it includes vote totals in Michigan, where Obama's name was not on the ballot, and in Florida, where neither candidate campaigned. It also leaves out states won by Obama that used a caucus system where individual votes are not tallied.
In any case, the popular vote does not count in the nominating process. What counts are delegates to the national convention, and Obama leads both in elected delegates and superdelegates who are free to support whomever they like.
MISTY-EYED
People wait with flags to greet Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton during a campaign rally in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, May 31, 2008. [Agencies]
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"One thing about superdelegates is that they can change their minds," Clinton reminded reporters after the Puerto Rico primary, which she won by a wide margin.
The Clinton campaign, which wants to convince superdelegates that she is the stronger candidate against McCain, hoped to use the Puerto Rico result to support its argument but lower-than-expected turnout weakened the case.
Other cracks were appearing in a campaign that had stayed remarkably optimistic despite the political reality.
"I'm starting to get a little misty-eyed," one staffer whispered to another while Clinton visited a San Juan bakery.
The candidate, whose persistence could be viewed either as fierce determination or outright obsession, flagged a bit.
Giving a speech in Yankton, South Dakota, Clinton grew hoarse, started to cough and stopped twice to let daughter Chelsea Clinton step in. The younger Clinton proceeded to talk about "my mom" and her policy proposals.
In San Juan, Puerto Rico, Clinton cut her campaign speech, typically lasting a half hour, down to just a few minutes.
A campaign trip on the back of a truck in Puerto Rico was cut short as darkness fell and supporters along the route ceased to materialize.
Her victory party in San Juan, a city of more than 400,000, attracted only a few hundred people. The same afternoon, Obama drew more than 2,000 supporters to the South Dakota town of Mitchell, population roughly 15,000.