Until tonight, it was Bill Clinton who was known as “the come back kid.” Now, that is Hillary’s title. She beat Barack Obama in both Ohio and Texas, the must win states she needed to pump new life into her campaign.

And, Clinton has won the major states of New York, New Jersey, California, Mass., Ohio, Texas,  as well as Michigan and Florida, provided their delegates are seated at the convention in Denver this summer.

One can’t help but think that tonight’s results had something to do with the news media finally doing its job and throwing some tough questions at Obama, who has yet to give convincing answers to most of them!

Should Obama Follow His Own Advice & Bow Out?

Wasn’t it Obama who suggested that Clinton should bow out of the race in the event she lost Ohio and Texas for the unity of the party because she wouldn’t have enough delegates to win the nomination?

Well, now that  the tables have been turned, the same can be asked of Sen. Obama who also can’t get enough pledged delegates to win now. Which brings us to ——

Superdelegates

Obama was also the one who said recently that the superdelegates, who will help decide the nominee, ought to vote the people’s will, even though superdelegates were created to do their own thinking.

Well, I’m sure Obama will now encourage ALL the superdelegates from Texas and Ohio to vote for Clinton—that is the will of the people in those states, right?

Poor Howard Dean, head of the Democratic Party. Looks like he is being handed one of the toughest assignments in recent U.S. political history: how to come up with some “deal” to select the party’s nominee.

Obama may have more pledged delegates; but Clinton may now have more of the popular vote.

Obama has a glass jaw…easily cracked when the going got rough this week. Do we really want a President marked “fragile, handle with care?”