(02-10) 17:38 PST WASHINGTON (AP) --
John Kerry vanquished his Dixie-bred rivals in Virginia and Tennessee on Tuesday, all but unstoppable in his march toward the Democratic nomination with a Southern sweep that extended his dominance to every region of the country.
Kerry was pocketing about half the vote in Virginia, with John Edwards of North Carolina a poor second and Wesley Clark of Arkansas a far-distant third. Kerry easily beat Edwards and Clark in Tennessee.
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With the enormous victories, Kerry expanded his primary-season dominance to the last region on his political scorecard. He has won 12 of 14 contests -- on the East and West coasts, in the Midwest, the Great Plains and the Southwest.
Party leaders began pressing for the nomination fight to end.
"I think Democrats need to unify behind John Kerry and refocus on winning in November," said former Clinton White House chief of staff Leon Panetta, who is not tied to any campaign.
Kerry sought to dispatch his rivals with Tuesday's triumphs, victory next week in Wisconsin or a nail-in-the-coffin showing March 2, when 10 delegate-rich states hold elections.
In the AP interview, Kerry said it's not up to him to decide whether his foes should stay in the race.
"What we showed today is the mainstream values that I've been talking about, fairness and hope and hard work and love of country, are more important than boundaries and birthplace," the Massachusetts senator said.
"People want change in the country. They want to move forward in a new direction and I think I'm articulating what that new direction can be," Kerry said. "It's crossing all lines ... without regard to region and other labels."
AP Source Article