On May 8, 2008 Hillary Clinton told USA Today that white voters "were supporting me," and claimed to have "a broader base to build a winning coalition on." Clinton referred without citation to an Associated Press report that she said showed Obama's support from white voters shrinking. Clinton's remarks received considerable coverage on cable news and in the blogosphere, with some commentators questioning the racial overtones of her assertions.
Clinton was apparently referring to a May 3 article by Alan Fram that examined AP/Yahoo News polls from November and April, as well as primary exit polls including those from Pennsylvania. The polling showed that white primary voters without college degrees favored Clinton by 20 percent or more. In Pennsylvania, 20 percent of those voters said that race had played a role in their choice of candidate, and of those, 80 percent voted for Hillary.
Speaking to the Washington Post Emory University's Andra Gillespie observed that an election with the first black candidate having a "legitimate shot at the nomination ... was going to reveal these cleavages."
In an interview for National Journal On Air, congressional Marjority Whip James Clyburn of South Carolina disputed the validity of Clinton's claim:
I don't think that carries any more weight than anyone who will argue that the fact that she only got 8 percent of the African-American vote in North Carolina indicates that she cannot get African-American votes in the general election. It's one thing for us to measure these two Democratic candidates against each other. It is totally something else again for us to measure a Democratic candidate against a Republican candidate. Those are two different things -- apples and oranges -- and I do believe it is a stretch for us to consider otherwise. If we buy into that, and we buy into the conventional wisdom that no Democrat wins the presidency getting only 8 percent of the African-American vote, then what does that to say for her prospects in the fall?