Wednesday’s campaign 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:

* How strong was the turnout in Hawaii’s Democratic caucuses yesterday? The state has never topped more than 5,000 participants. The Obama campaign speculated a few days ago that as many as 18,000 might show up. The final number? Over 37,000. Wow.

* It’s safe to guess why John McCain is desperate to keep the general election within the public-financing system: “Republican Sen. John McCain raised nearly $12 million in January, propelled by victories in New Hampshire and South Carolina that solidified his place as the leading candidate for the GOP presidential nomination. According to filings with the Federal Election Commission late Tuesday, McCain had $5.2 million cash on hand at the start of February and $5.5 million in debts, including a loan of nearly $4 million.”

* What’s the current state of the delegate race? Different news outlets, of course, show different results, but everyone seems to agree that Obama is ahead, whether superdelegates are included or not, by a fairly comfortable margin. According to NBC News Political Director Chuck Todd, Obama is up by about 150 pledged delegates, and leads overall (counting superdelegates) by 80 delegates. The margin, Todd said, is probably too large for Clinton to catch up before the convention.

* Clinton is poised to get a little help making more attacks against Obama: “A group of Hillary Clinton backers have set up a new 527 called the American Leadership Project, with the intention of running ads in Ohio and possibly Texas and Pennsylvania. The ads will compare Hillary and Obama on various issues, and be an appeal to look beyond mere rhetoric in politics. The tag-line for the ads: ‘If speeches could solve problems…'”

* Obama has an op-ed in USA Today on his willingness to participate in the public-financing system.

* The Clinton campaign launched a new ad in Ohio this week, called, “Night Shift.” It tells viewers, “You pour coffee, fix hair, you work the night shift at the local hospital,” a voice says as images of blue-collar workers flash across the screen. “You’re often overworked, underpaid and sometimes overlooked. But not by everyone. One candidate has put forth an American family agenda to make things easier for everyone who works so hard… . She understands. She’s worked the night shift, too.” Critics have noted that Clinton has not, in fact, worked a night shift, though the campaign insists the ad is referring to the nights Clinton has worked during her political career.

* Clinton ally Lanny Davis told Fox News yesterday that Obama is like Ned Lamont, while Clinton is like Joe Lieberman. I don’t think that’s a helpful message right now.

* More fuel for the electability fire: in Pennsylvania, McCain beats Clinton, 44% to 42%, while Obama beats McCain, 49% to 39%.

* In Texas, CNN shows Clinton with a two-point lead over Obama, 50% to 48%, while SurveyUSA shows her up by five, 50% to 45%.

* Not helpful: A co-chairman of Hillary’s Michigan campaign and has a line that’s sure to drive a whole bunch of red state governors up the wall: ‘Superdelegates are not second-class delegates,’ says Joel Ferguson, who will be a superdelegate if Michigan is seated. ‘The real second-class delegates are the delegates that are picked in red-state caucuses that are never going to vote Democratic.'”

* And in Mississippi: “Ronnie Shows, a former Democratic congressman from Mississippi, announced today that he has dropped his nascent Senate bid against Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) and endorsed the candidacy of former Democratic Gov. Ronnie Musgrove. ‘After weeks of talking to my family and friends, I have come to the conclusion that we would not be able to raise the millions of dollars needed to compete with a former governor and the handpicked candidate from the sitting governor,’ Shows said in a statement.”

That Lanny Davis is quite the Clinton hack. Everytime I think he’s going to run out of ridiculous things to say he pulls another rabbit out of his hat.

  • Clinton ally Lanny Davis told Fox News yesterday that Obama is like Ned Lamont, while Clinton is like Joe Lieberman. I don’t think that’s a helpful message right now.

    Does the DC bubble even like Leiberman any more? Who does this play to besides David Broder, who hates Hillary with a seathing passion of white-hot hate on the order of which only a soft-spoken heartlander like him is capable?

  • New one to add to the Cult of Clintonistas chapbook:

    The real second-class delegates are the delegates that are picked in red-state caucuses that are never going to vote Democratic.

    Truculent. Zealous. And just the right amount of Clinton scorched earth hubris.
    File it under the chapter “Yes she can!”

  • A co-chairman of Hillary’s Michigan campaign and has a line that’s sure to drive a whole bunch of red state governors up the wall: ‘Superdelegates are not second-class delegates,’ says Joel Ferguson, who will be a superdelegate if Michigan is seated. ‘The real second-class delegates are the delegates that are picked in red-state caucuses that are never going to vote Democratic.’”

    Dear God

  • Critics have noted that Clinton has not, in fact, worked a night shift, though the campaign insists the ad is referring to the nights Clinton has worked during her political career.

    Why, O WHY, would Camp Clinton go the Rud!e Ghooliani “I’m one of them” route?

    Sad.

  • Why, O WHY, would Camp Clinton go the Rud!e Ghooliani “I’m one of them” route?

    One word: desperation

  • Unlike Ned, Obama’s an astute campaigner. With friends like those, who needs Repubs?

    And if she decides to pull a Joe Lie by starting Hils: Party of One? Good luck with that. She’ll completely wipe out her name and condemn the US to McCainiac’s rule.

  • Clinton ally Lanny Davis told Fox News yesterday that Obama is like Ned Lamont, while Clinton is like Joe Lieberman. I don’t think that’s a helpful message right now.

    One benefit of the Clinton campaign is that it’s bringing all the idiot staffers out from behin the scenes. They need to be marginalized from the party as soon as we can.

  • One thing Hillary has shown herself accomplished in is her seeming ability to surround herself with total morons in her state campaign teams. I mean really, do any of them bother to think before they shoot themselves in the mouth? Doesn’t sound like it.

  • Ya, know, if Hillary didn’t surround herself with such oafish people, or have such callous,boorish supporters with name recognition who get press, I think her campaign wouldn’t be in such dire straits. And note to Hils: pulling an all nighter talking campaign strategy or writing position papers is NOT anything like working 40 hours a week on your feet as a waitress, nurse or assemblyline worker. Personally, if I had one of those jobs and saw that Hillary equated herself to working the nightshift, I’d be offended as hell.

    And that’s amazing about the Hawaii turnout, I mean I know Obama is a native son, but still phenomenal.

    And Thad Cochran is also up for re-election. I realize he’s a sitting Senator, but why would 2 Dems run for Lott’s open seat, and no one run against Cochran?

    Oh Burnt Orange Report and several others have an amazing story about a 7.5 mile 2,000 strong march the students at Prairie View A&M held yesterday in protest of only one early voting sight for their county. Was heartwarming to see. And those kids deserve all sorts of kudos and gratitude. (Sorry no link)

  • McCain had $5.2 million cash on hand at the start of February and $5.5 million in debts, including a loan of nearly $4 million.

    Does this stat count the loan twice, as part of his cash on hand and as part of his debt, or is it meant to be considered outside the two?

    Either way, that’s borderline broke as campaigns go.

  • Cindy McCain on her 2004 stroke as quoted by Paul Alexander in a 9/07 More article, “Cindy McCain at Full Throttle”:

    “I have short-term memory loss. I can remember all the major details of my life, but I sometimes can’t remember what happened last week.”

    Quite a handicap for a First Lady, I would think.

  • Those last few grains in the hourglass disappear quickly. March 5. Let’s just start chanting “March 5! March 5! March 5!” She’ll get the message. This is not about her. It’s about us. “We’re the ones we’ve been waiting for.”

  • “Clinton has not, in fact, worked a night shift, though the campaign insists the ad is referring to….”

    Don’t you people understand what the meaning of “is” is? How many times to I have to explain that DADT means “integrating the armed forces through Executive Order No. 1”? What DOMA? Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.

  • Obama said:

    I propose a meaningful agreement in good faith that results in real spending limits. The candidates will have to commit to discouraging cheating by their supporters; to refusing fundraising help to outside groups; and to limiting their own parties to legal forms of involvement. And the agreement may have to address the amounts that Senator McCain, the presumptive nominee of his party, will spend for the general election while the Democratic primary contest continues.

    In l996, an agreement on spending limits was reached by Sen. John Kerry and Gov. William Weld in their Massachusetts Senate contest. They agreed to limits on overall and personal spending and on a mechanism to account for outside spending. The agreement did not accomplish all these candidates hoped, but they believe that it made a substantial difference in controlling outside groups as well as their own spending.

    We can have such an agreement this year, and it could hold up. I am committed to seeking such an agreement if that commitment is matched by Senator McCain. When the time comes, we will talk and our commitment will be tested.

    I will pass that test, and I hope that the Republican nominee passes his.

    Anyone who believes the Republicans would agree to this – or would follow it if they did – probably believes cows jump over the moon.

  • I’ve finally figured it out most Obama supporters are MoveOn.org members because its always been their motto to tear good people down to pander to the left wing lunies in the democratic party. Good luck with that. No far lefty is going to win in November and that includes Obama

  • ***a new 527 called the American Leadership Project***

    Translation: “I’m a born-again Neocon!”

    ***She’s worked the night shift, too.***

    Translation: “I’m a born-again Neocon, and I can lie through my teeth with the best of ’em!”

    ***Obama is like Ned Lamont, while Clinton is like Joe Lieberman.***

    Translation: “I’m a born-again Neocon, I can lie through my teeth with the best of ’em, and I’m a Sith Lord who’ll stab my own constituency in the back for my own personal gain! Call me Darth!”

    Maybe she can get a job with a traveling carnival. She can be the poor slob that sticks her head through a canvas tarp at the back of a sideshow booth, where everyone throws shaving-cream pies at her face.

    That 527 has Hillary’s fingerprints all over it.

  • Cleaver:

    Anyone who believes the Republicans would agree to this – or would follow it if they did – probably believes cows jump over the moon.

    Exactly.
    The kid knows how to play his hand. He won’t give up his advantage on a whim.

  • Clinton ally Lanny Davis told Fox News yesterday that Obama is like Ned Lamont, while Clinton is like Joe Lieberman.

    And Clinton once again proves the old adage “with friends like these, who needs enemies?”

    Perhaps next he can explain how Clinton is like George W Bush and Obama is like Al Gore! Because that comparison is SURE to wow over those who vote in Democratic primaries!

    Jeez Louise. My biggest over-arching concern about Clinton is her poor judgement. Primarily focusing around US policies towards Iraq and Iran. And every time I turn around there’s yet another example of Clinton choosing to have slimy weasels and incompetent fools as her close allies and advisors – thus reinforcing the idea that she has poor judgement. It’s like she’s going out of her way to make absolutely SURE I don’t push the button for her on March 4th or something…

  • “A group of Hillary Clinton backers have set up a new 527 called the American Leadership Project, with the intention of running ads in Ohio and possibly Texas and Pennsylvania.”

    Well! Rush has been busy!!!!

  • Clinton ally Lanny Davis told Fox News yesterday that Obama is like Ned Lamont, while Clinton is like Joe Lieberman.

    Lanny is just mad at Obama for backing Lamont in 2006 while Davis was working hard for Lieberman. No, wait, Obama backed Lieberman for some strange reason I didn’t understand at the time. Lanny Davis is an opportunistic slimeball, no other explanation is necessary.

  • Jim –

    No far lefty is going to win in November and that includes Obama

    WHA?

    “Far lefty”? Obama and Clinton’s platforms are so indistinguishable you need to pick nits to find differences between them. The only “far leftie” I can think of in this year’s race was Kucinich – even Edwards was only kinda to the left of Clinton and Obama overall. Point to one issue where Obama is “far” to the left of the mainstream – or even slightly to the left of Clinton. I’d like examples and a link, please.

    “Far lefty”? Jeebus. If Obama is what passes for a “far lefty” in 21st century America then we are well and truly screwed. Because our political dialogue needs to be able to handle a bit more of the spectrum than from “moderate left” over to “screeching monkey-poo flinging insane right”.

  • From AmericaBlog:

    Wednesday, February 20, 2008

    Clinton supporters raising “at least” $10 million for anti-Obama Swift Boat campaign
    by Joe Sudbay (DC) · 2/20/2008 10:04:00 AM ET · Link

    It had to come to this. Clinton allies are raising millions in a desperate, last ditch effort to defeat Obama by ruining his image with a Swift-Boat-style 527.

    ABC’s Jake Tapper reports the new group, called “The American Leadership Project,” is planning to run anti-Obama ads in Ohio — and maybe Texas and Pennsylvania, too. According to Tapper, the ads are “aimed at tarnishing” Obama. Marc Ambinder adds these details:

    Allies of Hillary Clinton plan an expensive, stealth campaign to buttress her standing in the must-win states of Ohio, Texas and Pennsylvania.

    They’re canvassing Clinton donors for pledges of up to $100,000 in the hope of raising at least $10M by the end of next week. The money will be placed in the account of a political committee organized under section 527 of the tax code.
    Not so stealthy anymore.

    You know, this campaign has, for the most part, stayed on the high road. There have been some bursts of negativity of late, but by and large, it’s been pretty clean. Looks like that is about to end.

    Clinton’s supporters are absolutely obsessed with driving up Obama’s negatives. You get the sense that they cannot believe that Obama’s campaign is making them work for what they rightly deserve. Now, instead of picking out their White House office furniture, they’re forced to raise large amounts of money to tear down the Democratic front-runner. After all these years in power, the Clintons clearly have rich, rich friends who can chip in $100,000 on their behalf. To contrast, Obama’s campaign hit an unprecedented landmark today: over 500,000 contributors. Clinton’s campaign couldn’t come close to that — so she needs her wealthy friends to bail her out.

    Over the past year, Obama has shown he can withstand the Clinton’s negative onslaught. But, it does make one wonder how far the Clintons and their allies are willing to push this fight. If they want to make this ugly, it’s not like she (or her husband) have got the cleanest records around. Far from it. And, I’m just talking issues, like those votes where she supported Bush on the Iraq war in October 2002 and the Iran resolution in September 2007.

    Do we really want to go down the path of trying to make our candidates damaged goods should they win the nomination? Clinton and her allies says yes.

  • I’ve finally figured it out most Obama supporters are MoveOn.org members… -Jim

    Oh, poor Jim. Everyone grab a tiny violin and play for Jim.

    If only you knew anything about the origins MoveOn.org, you’d realize the irony of your drivel.

    Concern trolling that National Journal line, still, eh? I figured you’d have come up with something new in the last couple of weeks. I guess nothing is sticking is it.

    I’m actually profoundly sad for you. Like when you see half-dead roadkill and you want to put it out of its misery. Yeah, that’s how you make me feel.

  • Critics have noted that Clinton has not, in fact, worked a night shift, though the campaign insists the ad is referring to the nights Clinton has worked during her political career. — CB

    Why does that remind me of Mitt’s claim that his sons’ working for his campaign equates to serving the country in I-wreck?

  • “If speeches could create jobs, we wouldn’t be facing a recession?”

    That’s it? That’s the best they could come up with?

    Damn, Hillary—if 7 years of Bu$hylvanian speeches weren’t created as a big curtain to hide the financial rape of the Republic by a bunch of Neocon profiteers—THAT YOU’VE ENABLED, YOU INSIDIOUS LITTLE TWIT—then we wouldn’t be facing a recession.

    But you did enable the rape of the Republic, and now we are not only facing a recession, but inflation as well.

  • The comment about red state delegates being something lesser is outrageous. If Joel Ferguson thinks that the Democratic strategy should be to win barely over 50% of the votes, along with just enough electoral votes, no wonder the last 28 years has been a Republican era!! Obama’s campaign and Howard Dean’s 50 state strategy are singing out of the same hymnbook, and they are shooting for progressive Democratic domination for a few decades. And it has to be said that the GOP has offered up an opportunity of that level on a silver platter!

    I think I want to play poker against Mr. Ferguson. He’ll be the guy who spends the whole night trying to draw to an inside straight!

  • I definitely see Hillary’s “nightshift” claim being right up there with Guiliani’s claim to have been at Ground Zero more than many of the workers. It’s a clear sign of self-importance by someone who has no clue what it takes to do actual work and is out of touch with the lives of real people. These are the same kind of people who believe that the CEO of a company really does deserve the huge salaries compared to the grunts doing the work.

    And I’m definitely glad to see Obama taking that stand on the public finance issue. Not only does it allow him to get out of the “pledge” some say he’s made, but it positions him to look like the goodguy trying to create fair rules that McCain will refuse to agree to. And he wins either way. If McCain actually agrees to this stuff, it’ll be a huge mistake on his part, as outside attacks are the only strong ones they can make. But it’s unlikely McCain will agree, allowing Obama to continue to raise more money than McCain. So it’s a win-win for Obama and makes it look like he’s doing the right thing and totally deflates the whole “pledge” issue. I’m telling you, the more I see of this guy, the more I’m convinced he’s the real deal.

  • Clinton ally Lanny Davis told Fox News yesterday that Obama is like Ned Lamont, while Clinton is like Joe Lieberman

    Maybe he’s hoping she’ll run as an Independent.

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