

The weekend’s winners. Guess which one enjoys enormous popularity among Southern Baptists.
Super blowout: Super Tuesday was Barack Obama’s to survive, not to win. Why? After a mind-numbing array of Democrat primaries and caucuses which brought Obama and Hillary Clinton’s delegate count closer than she’d even imagined, he has the rest of February’s contests before states that are Hillary-friendly get their say. And the Senator from Illinois hasn’t disappointed: decisive victories in Nebraska, Washington state, Louisiana, the US Virgin Islands and, most importantly, Maine. The latter state had not been polled in the months before the election, and previously had a major hard-on for Hillary. Obama’s sweep will likely continue on tomorrow’s So-So Tuesday match-ups in Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia…
Super implosion: With five losses over the weekend, a major campaign shakeup, rampant tales of mismanagement being leaked to the press by campaign insiders and Barack Obama now leading the total delegate count, Hillary Clinton can’t be in a good mood right now. If there’s anything history has taught Americans, though, it’s to never turn their backs on the Clintons…
Super endorsement? Who will John Edwards endorse? And will it have much of an impact, considering his former supporters had plenty of time to align themselves with Obama or Hillary in the interim?
Super confusing: The GOP party bosses would like to think that now that John McCain will be the Republican nominee, the rank-and-file will fall into line. That’s not happening. After Super Tuesday, with no chance of Mike Huckabee surpassing McCain in the delegate count, the Huckster won the Kansas caucus and Louisiana primaries. Another contest, this one in Washington, is no small source of controversy. Though the state party chair Luke Esser called the race for St. John, he did so when the race was too close to call with 13% of the vote remaining to be counted. Huckabee has lawyered up…








