FACTBOX: Scenarios in political race
(Reuters) - Hillary Clinton's victory in Pennsylvania assured her hard-fought battle with Barack Obama for the Democratic presidential nomination will go on for at least two more weeks.
Republican candidate John McCain has already clinched his party's presidential nomination for the November election.
Here are some scenarios for the presidential nomination battle:
DEMOCRATS
Even with her win in Pennsylvania, Clinton still trails Obama in delegates to the August nominating convention and in votes won during the four-month primary battle.
The two contenders head to the next major contests on May 6 in Indiana, which is a toss-up, and North Carolina, where Obama is favored.
If Obama wins both, it would likely spark another flood of calls for Clinton to step aside and allow Obama to focus on the race with McCain.
Clinton victories in both states could begin to persuade some superdelegates -- party insiders who are free to back any candidate at the nominating convention -- to move toward her.
After those two states, just six more contests will remain before the Democratic race concludes on June 3.
Neither candidate will win enough delegates in the state contests to clinch the nomination, leaving the decision at that point to the party's nearly 800 superdelegates.
Both Clinton and Obama want to show them they are the candidate with the best chance to beat McCain in November.
Many Democratic strategists expect a wave of superdelegates to move toward the leader after the final contest on June 3, essentially deciding the race before it reaches the August convention in Denver.
REPUBLICANS
John McCain, who has clinched his party's presidential nomination, has begun a national campaign and is trying to set the agenda for a autumn race against either Obama or Clinton.
(Writing by John Whitesides, editing by David Wiessler)
(For more about the U.S. political campaign, visit Reuters "Tales from the Trail: 2008" online at blogs.reuters.com/trail08 )
© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved
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