We’re going the distance.

There is one thing on this February night that we do not need the final results to know: our time has come. Our time has come, our movement is real, and change is coming to America.Obama takes the Super Tuesday hit, and not only stands his ground but deals some damage of his own. The result? We need more rounds.

It’s Wednesday morning, 3am, so I’ll keep it short for now. But, all in all, I’m pretty pleased with how Super Tuesday shook out tonight. Sure, I’d have liked to see Massachusetts, New Jersey, and California in our column, and was rather dismayed when those pesky exit polls — which had us winning in MA and NJ — turned out to be bunk. But, around 10pm or so, the tide turned, with Obama racking up a slew of states and drawing particularly notable wins in Connecticut, Colorado, Kansas, Minnesota, and Missouri. California didn’t fall, of course, but I’d written it off hours earlier thanks to that early exit poll data.

The thing is, Super Tuesday was meant to be Clinton’s knockout punch — as little as two weeks ago, she was up 20 in the national polls. And, now, Obama is not only still standing, it looks like he may be (ever-so-slightly, of course) in the lead. At the end of the night, we ended up with more states (13 to 8, with NM outstanding) and — more importantly — basically split the delegates (we should know the exact figures in the next few days, but the late tally is 841-837 for Obama, and, regardless, all we had to do is stay close.) And, while Senator Clinton’s support has held steady, Senator Obama has jumped 15 points nationally in just the past two weeks. Now, the Obama campaign has money to burn and time to spend on a smaller — and more favorable — playing field. We have a ways to go yet, but now that we’ve made it over the Super Tuesday hurdle, time is on our side.

Update: It’s still not absolutely official, but Sen. Obama seems to have won more delegates last night. And, as that was kinda the point of the evening, this is very good news.

Showtime | Barack Obama for President.

It’s Super Tuesday. Do you know where your voting station is?

GitM’s endorsement of Barack Obama | GitM’s Obama archives

Why Obama is progressive | Why Clinton is not | A Note for the Boomers

Some great Obama speeches.

List of over 100 Newspaper Endorsements.

More: Rafael Anchia | Joan Baez | Xavier Becerra | Bill Bradley | Michael Chabon| George Clooney | Kent Conrad | Clive Crook | Larry David | Rosa DeLauro | Robert De Niro | Todd Gitlin | The Grateful Dead | Kevin Drum | Maria Elena Durazo | Susan Eisenhower | Charlie Gonzalez | Tom Hayden | Christopher Hayes | Hendrik Hertzberg | Hulk Hogan | Robert Kagan | Gary Kamiya | Garrison Keilor | Caroline Kennedy | Ethel Kennedy | Ted Kennedy | John Kerry | Stephen King | Harry Knowles | George Lakoff | Patrick Leahy | Dave Matthews | Claire McCaskill | Kate Michelman | Liam Moore | Toni Morrison | Janet Napolitano | Ben Nelson | Move On | Alma Rangel | Frank Rich | Linda Sanchez | Kathleen Sebelius | Maria Shriver | Ted Sorenson | Stella | Andrew Sullivan | Cass Sunstein | Paul Volcker | Oprah Winfrey

Looking for more reasons (other than those in the GitM endorsement) to vote against Clinton? How about: trying to cheat in Florida and Michigan | “choose your own scandal” | corporate donors | dabbling in drug hysteria | dabbling in fear-mongering | dabbling in Reagan hysteria | dismissive of campaign finance reform | dubious claims to superior experience | the dynasty issue | false abortion mailer | “false hope”-mongering | false tax mailer | the gender card | “imaginary hip black friend” | kindergarten oppo research | lying about Obama’s Iraq stance | playing the race card | Rovian tactics | shady donors | union-busting rhetoric | voter suppression in NV | Wild Bill

Yes, we can.

Pe[e/a]king at the Polls.

As I said before, I don’t want to put too much emphasis on polls anymore — partly because of what happened in New Hampshire, partly because they’re all over the place. Still, it looks like Senators Obama and Clinton may now be tied nationally. (Obama even has a statistical lead in one poll.) And, again, while polls differ — some suggest an Obama lead, some don’t — all seem to indicate the Senator from Illinois is not only surging in California (Thank you, Maria Shriver!), but even threatening Clinton’s tri-state home base in Connecticut and New Jersey(!)

A lot of what happens tomorrow will depend on the ground game, and the race will go on past Super Tuesday in almost any event. Still, if we all get out there and make our voices heard, it looks like there’s an outside chance Obama could emerge the delegate leader tomorrow night. Sure, a sweep would be wondrous, but let’s face it — it’s extremely unlikely. There’s still a lot of game left to play, and — after tomorrow, of course — slow and steady wins the race. Let’s at least get Senator Obama in a good position to move forward. As long as he can keep it close tomorrow, we’re good to go.