Here are the latest numbers, incorporating only post-New Hampshire polls:
Democratic Nomination, At A Glance
Contest
Date
Delegates
# of Polls
Clinton
Obama
Edwards
Kucinich
P. Delegates
Aug 25
2,209
2
24
25
18
0
U. Delegates
Aug 25
2,209
NA
177
73
28
2
Nevada
Jan 19
25
2
32.5%
32.0%
26.0%
--
South Carolina
Jan 26
45
2
32.0%
41.0%
16.5%
3.5%
Florida
Jan 29
0 / 185
4
51.8%
27.5%
12.0%
1.0%
National
Feb 05
1,688
NA
42.9%
33.7%
12.1%
2.5%
The situation here is pretty obvious. Clinton’s leads in Florida and nationally mean that she moves very, very close to the nomination if she wins in Nevada. Obama is only down by about 9-10% nationally, which means that winning in both Nevada and South Carolina will make for a very close campaign on Super Tuesday. Edwards needs a Nevada win in order to achieve a breakthrough. As such, Nevada now seems to be just as important as Iowa and New Hampshire were earlier in the month.
Republican Nomination, At A Glance
Contest
Date
Delegates
# of Polls
McCain
Romney
Huckabee
Giuliani
Thompson
Paul
Delegates
Sep 01
1,259
4
15
52
22
1
6
2
Nevada
Jan 19
34
2
21.5%
21.5%
12.0%
14.5%
12.0%
7.5%
South Carolina
Jan 19
24 / 47
4
27.5%
16.0%
20.3%
5.0%
12.8%
5.3%
Louisiana
Jan 22
21 / 47
0
??
??
??
??
??
??
Florida
Jan 29
57 / 114
3
22.0%
18.3%
18.0%
20.3%
9.0%
4.7%
Maine
Feb 01
21
0
??
??
??
??
??
??
National
Feb 05
1,081
NA
29.6%
13.6%
19.6%
13.5%
8.6%
4.2%
I’ve bumped Romney up to second place following his win in Michigan, and given that he seems to have a good chance in both Nevada and Florida. Huckabee needs South Carolina badly, and now faces pretty much the same situation Romney faced in Michigan yesterday. A Huckabee South Carolina win keeps him viable, while a McCain South Carolina win solidifies his front-runner status. Saturday is clearly a huge day in both campaigns.