Today’s edition of quick hits.
* More discouraging economic news: “Consumer confidence plunged, the wholesale inflation rate soared, the number of homes being foreclosed jumped, home prices fell sharply and a report predicts big increases in health care costs. Consumer confidence weakened significantly as Americans worry about less-favorable business conditions and job prospects. The New York-based Conference Board says in a report released on Tuesday that its Consumer Confidence Index plunged in February to 75.0 from a revised 87.3 in January. The reading — the lowest since the index registered 64.8 in February 2003 — is far below the 83.0 analysts expected.”
* Sounds like a bad scene: “Widespread power outages were reported Tuesday from Miami to Jacksonville on Florida’s east coast and as far north as Tampa on the Gulf Coast, police and utility officials said. As many 800,000 Florida Power & Light Co. customers are without power Tuesday afternoon, the company said. Mike Stone, a Florida Department of Emergency Management spokesman, said 2 million to 3 million people were affected.” As of now, no one seems to know what caused the outage.
* Fallout from the “60 Minutes” report on the Siegelman scandal continues. Karl Rove went on (what else?) Fox News to address the scandal publicly for the first time. Rove, among other things, denied ever even knowing Republican lawyer Dana Jill Simpson. The man Bush calls “Turd Blossom” went on to scold CBS for not having interviewed him for the piece, though “60 Minutes” did speak to his attorney.
* On a related note, Simpson has an excellent idea, telling MSNBC: “Since Karl Rove has said that and he feels so good saying that, what I want him to do is go and swear before the United States Congress and swear what he’s saying is true.”
* And in still more related news: “Malfunctioning equipment blocked an Alabama TV station’s broadcast of a ’60 Minutes’ report suggesting that imprisoned former Gov. Don Siegelman was the victim of a Republican conspiracy, station officials said. After promoting the segment for days, WHNT-TV of Huntsville went black just as the report was to air Sunday night…. WHNT general manager Stan Pylant said Monday that despite what some unhappy viewers said, the problem was caused by a malfunctioning receiver at the station.” I think the phrase I’m looking for is, “Yeah, right.”
* Any time the far-right blogs wants to apologize, we’re listening: “Gen. George Casey, the Army’s chief of staff, said Tuesday he has no reason to doubt Barack Obama’s recent account by an Army captain that a rifle platoon in Afghanistan didn’t have enough soldiers or weapons. But he questioned the assertion that the shortages prevented the troops from doing their job. Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Casey said the incident would have occurred in 2003 and 2004 following the Iraq invasion. He said he remembers it as a ‘difficult time’ trying to rush armor and other equipment to the troops.”
* No matter what, Bush’s hyper-confidence is an unshakable force: “President Bush predicted Monday that voters will replace him with a Republican president who will ‘keep up the fight’ in Iraq. ‘I’m confident we’ll hold the White House in 2008,’ Bush told donors at the Republican Governors Association annual dinner, which raised a record $10.6 million for GOP gubernatorial candidates. ‘When I say I’m confident, I am so because I understand the mentality of the American people,’ Bush said.”
* Right-wing commentator Bill Cunningham, an Ohio native, appeared at an official McCain rally today, and lashed out at Obama, emphasizing his middle name and calling him a “hack, Chicago-style Daly politician.” Cunningham also, predictably, went after Hillary Clinton. McCain was not on stage for the unhinged diatribe, but distanced himself from Cunningham’s tirade after the event. “I absolutely repudiate such comments, and again I will take responsibility it will never happen again,” McCain said. “It will never happen again.” Good for him.
* Isn’t it interesting that those who know what they’re talking about are convinced the White House is wrong? Richard Clarke (former head of counterterrorism at the National Security Council), Rand Beers (former Senior Director for Combating Terrorism at the National Security Council), Lt. Gen. Don Kerrick (former Deputy National Security Advisor), and Suzanne Spaulding (former assistant general counsel at the CIA) wrote a joint letter to say that McConnell and the administration were “distorting the truth about surveillance capabilities after the lapse of the Protect America Act. The country is not ‘at greater risk,’ they write. ‘The intelligence community currently has the tools it needs to acquire surveillance of new targets and methods of communication.'”
* Florida wants to join the mess over state promotion of the Confederate Flag.
* And tonight in Ohio, Obama and Clinton will meet for what may very well be the last debate of the 2008 primary season. I’m not going to be able to stay up, but savor it — we probably won’t see another debate until the fall.
Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.