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The last really good primary night for Barack Obama came on Feb. 19, when the senator from Illinois won the Wisconsin primary by a 58 percent to 41 percent margin.
Since then, the candidate who has been on the verge of claiming the Democratic presidential nomination for so very long has struggled to "close the deal."
He did not close it Tuesday night. But he did have his best finish since February. And that finish all but ensures that this most unlikely presidential contender will soon secure the nomination of his party.
The headlines may suggest that Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton split Tuesday's primaries in North Carolina and Indiana -- with North Carolina for Obama and Indiana for Clinton.
But it was not an even split.
As Obama secured a landslide win in North Carolina, Clinton barely prevailed in her firewall state of Indiana.
In North Carolina, Obama won by 56-42 percent. His popular vote advantage was more than 230,000.
In Indiana, Clinton squeezed out a 50.5 percent to 49.5 percent win. Her popular vote advantage was barely 20,000.
Bottom Line No. 1: Obama has come out of a night that was supposed to be a mixed one for him with a solid boost in his delegate total. He now leads Clinton by more than 150 pledged delegates and the gap is widening.
Bottom Line No. 2: Barack Obama has finished the night with a tremendous improvement in his popular vote total -- a boost so significant that it now seems all but certain that he will finish the primary competition with an overall popular-vote advantage.
That's very bad news for Clinton, who really needed to narrow the margin in the delegate race and improve her popular vote position if she was going to make an effective appeal to wavering superdelegates.
Obama's landslide win in North Carolina and his virtual tie in Indiana have dealt Clinton her worst setback in months -- a defeat so serious that it is all but certain to undermine her ability to raise the money she needs to carry this campaign forward.
That doesn't mean the former first lady will quit campaigning before the West Virginia and Kentucky primaries, which she is likely to win.
But it means that whatever momentum might have been with Hillary Clinton before Tuesday's primary voting is now gone. And Barack Obama will be looking more and more like the Democrat who will take on Republican John McCain in November.
Gerry Broome/Associated Press
Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., and his wife Michelle react to the crowd in Raleigh, N.C., after Obama won the North Carolina Democratic presidential primary Tuesday.