Barack Obama in recent days has sprinted ahead in the endorsement derby against Hillary Rodham Clinton when it comes to a certain breed of Democrat - politicians who have won statewide in places where Republicans dominate presidential politics.
Among a barrage of prominent statewide elected officials to back Obama publicly this month is Arizona governor Janet Napolitano, and U.S. Sens. Ben Nelson of Nebraska and Tim Johnson of South Dakota.
What all three politicians have in common is that they are Democrats who have cracked the code in getting elected in states where Republicans historically have triumphed at the presidential level. George W. Bush won these states both times.
So did most of his Republican predecessors. In fact, these three states have each voted for a Democratic presidential nominee only once since 1948.
The string of recent Obama endorsements seems to be more than a coincidence.
During extensive interviews in recent weeks in Republican-leaning states, Politico found widespread belief among current and former Democratic statewide officials that Obama is the more electable candidate with their electorates. These politicians also frequently registered a fear that Clinton’s personality and past history make her too polarizing to win independent and Republican-leaning voters.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/01/15/politics/politico/main3714465.shtml