Obama focuses on McCain during Florida stop
By Jeff Mason
TAMPA, Florida (Reuters) - Barack Obama sounded like the Democratic presidential nominee on a visit to the November election battleground of Florida on Wednesday, praising rival Hillary Clinton and targeting 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 -- to move his way.
An MSNBC count 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's August convention.
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. Continued...




