WRAPUP 7-Obama focuses on McCain during Florida stop
* Obama turns attention to McCain, Florida
* Clinton presses ahead during Florida visit
* National poll shows Obama leading McCain (Adds Obama quote, updates delegate count)
By Jeff Mason
TAMPA, Fla., May 21 (Reuters) - Barack Obama sounded like the probable Democratic presidential nominee on a visit to the November election battleground of Florida on Wednesday, praising rival Hillary Clinton and focusing his criticism on Republican foe John McCain.
Clinton also visited Florida, where she pressed ahead with her uphill Democratic race and demanded the state's delegates be seated at the August nominating convention despite a dispute with the national party.
The dueling visits came the day after split decisions in Oregon and Kentucky gave Obama a majority of pledged delegates won in the lengthy state-by-state nomination fight with Clinton -- a milestone he hopes marks a turning point in their battle for the right to face McCain in November.
"We are at the threshold of being able to obtain this nomination," Obama told a rally in Tampa, Florida.
Obama hopes the pledged-delegate milestone persuades more undecided superdelegates -- party officials who can back any candidate and will make the difference in the race -- to move his way.
A count by MSNBC gives him 1,961 total delegates to Clinton's 1,783, leaving him 65 short of the 2,026 needed to win the nomination at the Democratic Party convention in August.
A Reuters/Zogby poll showed Obama opening an 8-point national lead on McCain as the two geared up for their likely battle for the White House.
Clinton, a New York senator and former first lady, continued her fight to seat delegates from Michigan and Florida, where she won nominating contests that were not recognized by the national party.
Seating the delegates from those two contests at the convention would narrow Obama's lead in the delegate chase and bolster Clinton's argument to superdelegates.
"The people who voted did nothing wrong and it would be wrong to punish you," Clinton said in Boca Raton, Florida. "The rules clearly state we can count all these votes and seat all these delegates if we so choose."
Obama and Clinton did not campaign in Florida before the January vote. They signed pledges not to appear publicly in either Florida or Michigan because the states moved up the dates of the contests without national party approval.
PRAISE FOR CLINTON
Obama, making his first visit to Florida since signing the pledge, praised Clinton as he tried to heal any lingering Democratic wounds from their long nominating fight.
"Senator Clinton has run an outstanding campaign and she deserves our admiration and our respect," he said. "She has broken through barriers and will open up opportunity for a lot of people, including my two young daughters."
The Illinois senator also took several shots at McCain, criticizing the influence of lobbyists in his campaign and calling him a new version of President George W. Bush.
Ten years ago, he said, McCain introduced a bill to ban candidates from paying registered lobbyists. "John McCain then would be pretty disappointed with John McCain now, because he hired some of the biggest lobbyists in Washington to run his campaign," he said.
He brushed off McCain's criticism of his willingness to talk to leaders of hostile nations as a continuation of Bush's isolationist approach that has not led to diplomatic progress with countries like Iran.
"We can't afford four more years of George Bush foreign policy, that's why we can't afford John McCain," he said. "He basically wants to perpetuate the same errors that George Bush has made for the last eight years."
Clinton has promised to stay in the race until voting ends on June 3, but Obama could reach the magic number needed to clinch the nomination with a wave of superdelegate endorsements before then.
Three more contests remain -- Puerto Rico on June 1 and Montana and South Dakota on June 3 -- with a combined 86 delegates at stake. About 200 superdelegates remain uncommitted.
Each candidate picked up one superdelegate endorsement on Wednesday. Obama also earned the endorsement of the United Mine Workers, which represents more than 100,000 active workers.
Clinton hopes her drubbings of Obama in states like Kentucky, where she won by 35 points, will give superdelegates pause. Obama beat Clinton by a wide margin in Oregon on Tuesday.
The Reuters/Zogby poll showed Clinton running even with McCain nationally at 43 percent each.
Clinton still faces a campaign debt of at least $19.5 million, including $10 million she put into the campaign from her own pocket, according to her Federal Election Commission report. She raised $21 million in April.
Obama, an Illinois senator who would be the first black U.S. president, raised $30.7 million in April, his report showed, with $46.6 million in the bank and debts of $2 million. (Additional reporting by Andy Sullivan and Ellen Wulfhorst; Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by David Wiessler) (To read more about the U.S. political campaign, visit Reuters "Tales from the Trail: 2008" online at http:/blogs.reuters.com/trail08/)
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