Friday’s political round-up

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:

* After several months of lackluster fundraising, John Edwards’ presidential campaign will reverse itself and opt into the public finance system. The former senator insisted he made the decision out of a heartfelt commitment to the system, but the claim is not entirely credible — he’s accepting the constraints (including spending caps) that come with public funds because he needs the money to keep up with Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Marc Ambinder goes over the pros and cons of Edwards’ controversial decision.

* For every person who believes the Democratic primary race is effectively over, consider this tidbit from the latest CNN/WMUR poll in New Hampshire: 55% of Granite State Democrats are still “trying to decide” which presidential candidate to support.

* John McCain, more so than at any point in his political career, is relying on his military background to get ahead with voters. Yesterday, his campaign unveiled its newest TV ad: “[It] opens with black-and-white footage of a haggard and badly injured 31-year-old McCain being interrogated by an off-camera enemy. The footage is from 1967, when he was a prisoner of war in Vietnam. McCain lies on a bed, holding a burning cigarette, grimacing in pain. The camera pans to a heavily bandaged arm.”

* Edwards suffered a little more bad news yesterday when his work with the Fortress Investment Group hedge fund came back to cause him some embarrassment: Fortress companies foreclosed on sub-prime mortgage borrowers in Iowa — 107 of them, to be exact — while Edwards worked with the firm.”

* It appears that Michelle Obama was misquoted yesterday when she said her husband’s race was dependent on an Iowa victory. “Iowa will make the difference,” she said. “If Barack doesn’t win Iowa, it is just a dream.” The campaign said the candidate’s spouse was just trying to rally Iowa supporters, not make an official pronouncement.

* The crowded Republican primary in Nebraska’s open Senate race will get a little thinner today when Hal Daub ends his campaign, just 12 days after throwing his hat into the ring. Daub’s announcement comes on the heels of former Gov. Mike Johanns’ resignation from the Bush administration and expected entry into the race.

* And good ol’ Newt Gingrich told supporters yesterday that if “they pledge at least $30 million to his campaign over a three-week period starting Monday and ending Oct. 21, he will compete for the nomination.”

And good ol’ Newt Gingrich told supporters yesterday that if “they pledge at least $30 million to his campaign over a three-week period starting Monday and ending Oct. 21, he will compete for the nomination.”

Yay Newt!

  • Maybe Ms. Obama had a point though.

    Iowa has selected the winner for the past 3 elections and has mostly only failed when a local boy (Harkin / Gephardt) was a contender. When it picks a non-local, they win the nomination. Almost every time.

    Edwards (NC) and Hil (AR or NY) don’t apply.
    Obama is the closest though so it may be his to lose.
    Kucinich (OH) Gravel (AK or VA), Dodd (CT) Biden (DE), and Richardson (NM)
    If he does lose it, I’m not sure he can dig out from the momentum problem. (Lord knows the rest of the country shouldn’t hang on Iowa so, but it appears they do.)

  • …55% of Granite State Democrats are still “trying to decide” which presidential candidate to support.

    Good! Hopefully they are paying close attention to people who is carelessly throwing around the t-word and setting us up for more war.

  • … 55% of Granite State Democrats are still “trying to decide”

    I wonder how many of these are Republican voters hoping for a credible alternative…

  • It appears that Michelle Obama was misquoted yesterday […]

    It appears that the campaign is now saying she didn’t really mean what she said, but they’re not denying she said it.

    The quote still stands.

  • Yay Newt!

    I’m making fun of him, of course.

    What’s John McCain going to show off next, his collection of ElfQuest comic books?

    McCain has started down a terrible spiral that ends in proving clearly that one is a nerd.

  • I figured Daub would throw in the towel. He’s still too much of a polarizing figure in Omaha. And with Mike Johanns in the mix, his chances were very slim, to say the least.
    State AG Jon Bruning is about the only real threat that Johanns is going to face on the GOP side.
    I’ve heard rumblings that Bruning’s going to be in the back pocket of the Club For Growth, but he, at least in my mind, comes off more brash than Johanns.
    Johanns has a “Tom Osbornish” demeanor that Nebraskans like.

    On the Democratic side, Bob Kerrey is the only Democratic candidate that’s even mean mentioned. There really isn’t anyone else.

    “And good ol’ Newt Gingrich told supporters yesterday that if “they pledge at least $30 million to his campaign over a three-week period starting Monday and ending Oct. 21, he will compete for the nomination.””

    And if he doesn’t, will God “call him home”?

    Please, oh PLEASE, Dear Lord? Do us that one favor?

  • I did my part for Newt. Mailed him my contribution yesterday. One penny taped to a sheet of paper bearing an outline of my hand sending him the one-finger salute.

  • Newt’s campaign could be the most deeply satisfying phenomenon in modern American political history.

    Here you have a guy who says, at every possible opportunity, that he wants to run a campaign on “issues and ideas.” On some level I believe he’s sincere; occasionally (as with modernizing the keeping of medical records) he’s even correct on the merits.

    But he’s going to run straight into the buzzsaw of celebrity/horserace politics that he helped design in the ’90s. Consider you’re a TV network news division or a print/new media editor: given the choice between a detailed examination of Gingrich’s views on realigning tax policy to support inner-city entrepreneurship or talking about how he was getting blowjobs from a woman a quarter-century his junior while trying to impeach Clinton for doing the exact same thing, which way are you gonna go?

    Add in that he’s going to get shivved sotto voce by the many vicious scumbag Republicans who loathe him–like DeLay–and it couldn’t happen to a more deserving guy.

    I’ve long considered the withdrawal announcements of Republican presidential contenders the way that other men think about pornography; when Newt hangs ’em up I might be incapacitated for days.

  • If you’ve got a thrist for two-fisted action, read about John Kerry’s life, instead of watching John McCain play it up for the camera while he’s waiting to kiss up to the VC off-camera. John McCain is an over-hyped fly-boy; John Kerry is a walking Erroll Flynn film-festival.

  • …given the choice between a detailed examination of Gingrich’s views on realigning tax policy to support inner-city entrepreneurship or talking about how he was getting blowjobs from a woman a quarter-century his junior while trying to impeach Clinton for doing the exact same thing…

    Exhibit I in why I so want Gingrich to run and ideally win the GOP nomination. he’s the one candidate I’m convinced even Clinton could beat in the general.

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