Today’s installment of campaign-related news items that wouldn’t generate a post of their own, but may be of interest to political observers:
* In about a half an hour, the political arm of the National Organization for Women will endorse Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign. A message posted on the NOW website says PAC Chair Kim Gandy and “a special guest will make a major announcement regarding the 2008 election.” The Associated Press quotes Democratic officials as saying Gandy will be joined by Senator Clinton at Washington’s Sewell-Belmont House, the historic home of the National Women’s Party, to accept the group’s endorsement.
* Speaking of Hillary, Harris Interactive released a poll this week showing that half of voting-age Americans say they would not vote for Sen. Clinton is she’s the Dems’ presidential nominee. I’m not inclined to believe it. For one thing, there are plenty of other polls showing Clinton leading GOP rivals in hypothetical head-to-head match-ups with more than 50% support. For another, the Harris Interactive poll was conducted online, which raises questions about reliability.
* The WaPo reports that John Edwards’ presidential campaign has enjoyed an outpouring of support since last week’s announcement about Elizabeth Edwards’ cancer. The Edwardses received more than 24,000 emails in 24 hours and, in the past five days, “the campaign received more than 5,000 donations totaling half a million dollars — about 50 percent of the total it raised online in the previous three months.”
* Magazine publisher and former presidential candidate Steve Forbes has endorsed Rudy Giuliani’s presidential bid. Forbes, for reasons that were never altogether clear, ran for the GOP presidential nomination in 1996 and 2000.
* MoveOn.org will host the “first ever virtual town hall” meeting on April 10 with presidential candidates of members’ choosing. Eli Pariser, executive director of MoveOn.org Political Action, tells CNN that Clinton, Obama, and Edwards have all agreed to attend if invited. The discussion will focus exclusively on the war in Iraq.
* And following up on an item from yesterday, some media outlets are worked up about Barack Obama mis-remembering a Life magazine article from his childhood. For all the implications that Obama made the whole thing up, reader N.J. points to this 1966 Time magazine article as a possible explanation.