|
- Kerry is a fighter. He was written off for dead just weeks ago, but he hung in there, kept fighting, and pulled off a win in the first presidential contest. Deserves major kudos for that.
- The Iowa win will give Kerry momentum going into New Hampshire. Given that both Dean and Kerry are NH neighbors, and that most voters seem to like both of them, look for Kerry to narrow the gap with Dean considerably and very possibly, imo, win New Hampshire outright. The unknown factor, of course, is what impact Clark will have in NH. My hunch is that most voters will stick with a New Englander who they know.
- A lot of people are voting on perceived electability. The most important thing to most Democrats is beating Bush, and they want the candidate who seems to have the best shot at doing that. Going into New Hampshire, this is a plus for Kerry and a minus for Dean, imo.
- If either Kerry or Dean wins the nomination, the other will not be the winner's running mate. Two candidates from New England just makes no sense. If either is the nominee, top VP candidates would appear to be Edwards and Clark, imo.
- Kucinich and Lieberman should be gone following New Hampshire. Sharpton will probably stick around to represent his constituencies, which is not a bad thing. So the race seems to be coming down to Kerry, Edwards, Dean, and Clark -- with Kerry and Edwards having the momentum right now.
|