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:
* Hoping to capitalize on his success in Iowa, Barack Obama arrived in New Hampshire this morning (at 4:30am), and talked briefly about his intention to take his model nationally: “We felt good for the last two weeks because we were so proud of what was happening on the ground. We were seeing the crowds, and so regardless of how the numbers played out exactly, we were really confident about us having changed how politics operated in this caucus. And it makes me very optimistic about the country. I think we can do it for the country as a whole.”
* John Edwards has a new ad up in New Hampshire that strikes an interesting note: “Corporate greed is not just stealing the future of the children of Democrats,” Edwards says. “It’s doing the same thing to the children of independents; the same thing to the children of Republicans.” Clever — it’s Edwards’ message, with a tri-partisan Obama twist.
* Mitt Romney arrived in New Hampshire early this morning (3:30am), and vowed to learn from his mistakes. “I let one guy slip by me, hats off to him,” Romney told an early morning rally of supporters at the Portsmouth airport, referring to Huckabee. “We’re not going to let that happen in New Hampshire, or anywhere else.”
* Bill Clinton told ABC News this morning that New Hampshire can make Hillary Clinton the “comeback kid,” just as it did for him 16 years ago. He sounded an optimistic note: “She’s got a better profile here. They know more about her now than they did about me then. And I think she’ll be fine. We just get out and go.”
* Just how close did Clinton come to finishing second instead of third? Extremely close.
* And finally, despite finishing with just 0.4% of the vote in Iowa, Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) will press ahead with his presidential campaign. “Absolutely, he is staying in,” his top aide said. Given that he’s already announced that he will not seek re-election to Congress, Hunter apparently has nothing better to do.