TIME correspondent Jay Carney, who was with Bush's campaign entourage just before it departed for California at about 5 p.m., said the group was shocked that McCain mobilized so many voters. "Bush's people were very confident in the last couple of days that they'd get a bounce from his win last week in South Carolina and would take Michigan decisively," said Carney. "They've already worked out this bogus line that Democrats are voting tactically they're loading the primaries for McCain because they've got a better chance of beating him in November." (In fact, polls show McCain beating probable Democratic candidate Al Gore by 24 percent as opposed to Bush's 5 percent.)
Momentum in this race has been as hard to follow as a bouncing rubber ball. After McCain's decisive win in New Hampshire, he was able to score defections of major Bush supporters in California and New York, the two largest states, delegate-wise, to vote March 7. Even more impressive was his successful campaign to trump New York's convoluted nomination system and get himself on the ballot in all 31 of the state's voting districts. But then came the Bush landslide in South Carolina Saturday, which gave him nearly five times as many delegates as McCain to that point and left just three days for the Arizona senator to reclaim some momentum before Michigan. Now with his wins on Tuesday in Michigan and his home state of Arizona, McCain's taken the two largest states that have voted so far. And for the first time this year, it appears certain McCain will be in the race through March. With the Bush firewall tumbled, McCain has to be seen as a legitimate threat to be on the ballot come November.