Calitics reports on the final certification of the Calfornia vote.
Hillary's final margin of victory: 8.9%.
The final delegates will be 203 for Clinton to 167 for Obama.
The certified totals represent a +8 delegate swing for Obama vis a vis the original estimates. See below for a quick rundown.
Real Clear: 207-163 will now be changed.
CNN 204-161 (+7 obama)
This presents an interesting narrative in the face of Hillary's wins on Tuesday.
Current delegate counts from Tuesday look to be:
Vermont, O +3
RI, C +4
Ohio, C +9
TX...
Well, this is where it gets complicated. Initially, the total Texas vote was estimated to be C +1. However, the Austin American Statesman reports on vote counting and says Obama may end up winning 3 delegates in TX, net. So on a delegate level, Obama could actually be the winner in Texas.
When we subtract those 3 from the +10 Hillary netted between RI/Ohio/Vermont, she was +7 delegates on Tuesday. This means that a +8 delegate swing in CA means that Hillary will end up down another pledged delegate from where she was Monday.
On top of that, superdelegates are endorsing Obama heavily.
From the AP:
Clinton leads in endorsements from superdelegates, 242 to 209. But that lead has shrunk in the past month. Since an AP survey the week of Super Tuesday, Obama has added 53 superdelegates, while Clinton has had a net loss of one.
Meanwhile, the Wyoming caucus and Mississippi primary are coming up, and both look very good for Obama, one because of Obama's consistent high performance in caucuses, the other because the demographics are very favorable.
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