I'm starting to think you don't understand how primaries work...Texas has a good amount of electoral college votes, but its primary is held after Super Tuesday...i.e., it doesn't count for ****.
Were you thinking of bringing in the bounty hunter?
HAHAHAHAHA YOU MADE A ****ING MISTAKE HAHAHAHA *****. Michele Bachmann dropped out of the race, and I really don't see how she's relevant anyway. The sooner that a state has a primary vote, the more important it is in the primary. Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina are the most important primary states, even though they are not the largest by a long shot. Likewise, in the presidential election, California and Texas don't matter even though they're big states: the swing states like Arizona and Nevada are the important ones.
Hyper, Obama was well behind Clinton in the first few primaries.....
Obama lost very narrowly in New Hampshire, but took first place in Iowa whereas Clinton took third, he then proceeded to win South Carolina with over half of the vote. QED.