The Texas primary is is over and done - completed on March 4th, to be exact. But the Lonestar State has such a convoluted process for determining final delegate tallies from the initial contest that changes are still occurring.

A weekend caucus in Texas was the second step toward finalizing the totals. Being a caucus, the Obama camp was counting on adding a few delegates and chipping away at Hillary’s 4-delegate lead after 3/4. There was even talk that Obama’s top-notch organization could help him eke out a delegate win after the caucusing. Mission accomplished - even if the final count ends up being closer to a tie than an Obama delegate lead.

Across Texas, over 100,000 Democrats gathered Saturday at county conventions — the second tier of the complicated three-step caucus process to select 67 delegates to the national convention. joining the 126 delegates chosen in the primary voting that same day. With her 51% win of the popular vote, Hillary Clinton won 65 delegates to Barack Obama’s 61 in the actual primary. But late Saturday, his campaign declared it had 99 total delegates to Clinton’s 94. Clinton?s camp dispute that, and by Monday morning it appeared that Obama?s lead had shrunk to three delegates.

This is where Obama has been at his best; sewing up the minor things and letting his super-motivated grass roots and state organization whip a more top-heavy Clinton group.

As if HRC needed Obama to get any more delegates. Now he’s stealing them from Clinton wins. But when is a pledged delegate a “pledged” delegate? Will we see the Clinton camp go from “Tonya Harding” to a flat-out heist?

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