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:
* There’s been some movement on the superdelegate front over the last 24 hours. If my count is right, Barack Obama has picked up four new supporters, worth 3.5 superdelegate votes — Colorado’s Pat Waak, Oregon’s Meredith Wood Smith, Wyoming’s Nancy Drummond, and Guam’s Ben Pangelinan. Hillary Clinton picked up one, the Virgin Island’s Kevin Rodriguez, who’s been a little indecisive (Rodriguez first endorsed Clinton, then endorsed Obama, and has now gone back to Clinton again).
* In a general-election match-up in Iowa, which Bush won in 2004, SurveyUSA shows Obama leading John McCain by nine, 47% to 38%. A month ago, Obama led by seven.
* There’s been considerable discussion of late about whether Sen. Jim Webb (D-Va.) would be a good addition to the Democratic ticket. Yesterday, Kathy G. writes up the definitive take on why he wouldn’t be a good choice. Similarly, Ed Kilgore summarized the various pros and cons against a Webb VP nomination.
* Francis Fukuyama, who helped create the neoconservative movement before denouncing it, endorsed Obama this week.
* Arab-American voters constitute 3.5 million people in this country, and as Juan Cole explains today, they’re not exactly enamored with John McCain: “Recent polls show a tight race between either Democrat and McCain in Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Ohio, all states where Arab-Americans account for an appreciable percentage of the vote. Such polls have limited utility with November so many months away, but that it will be a close election in those key states seems clear. In a tight election, the votes of a well-placed minority — Arab-American votes — can be crucial.”
* I have to say, Obama’s ability to read Spanish is pretty impressive. (Does anyone know if he actually speaks any Spanish?)
* Gallup: “In the 20 states where Hillary Clinton has claimed victory in the 2008 Democratic primary and caucus elections (winning the popular vote), she has led John McCain in Gallup Poll Daily trial heats for the general election over the past two weeks of Gallup Poll Daily tracking by 50% to 43%. In those same states, Barack Obama is about tied with McCain among national registered voters, 45% to 46%.”
* AP: “Polls this month show the Illinois senator leading McCain among women, running even with him among Catholics and suburbanites and trailing him with people over age 65. Results vary by poll for those without college degrees. And though Obama trails decisively with a group that has shunned him against Clinton — whites who have not completed college — he’s doing about the same with them as the past two Democratic presidential candidates.” (thanks to V.S. for the tip)
* HuffPost: “‘I don’t know if [Barry Goldwater] would recognize the Republican Party today,’ Alison Goldwater Ross, a registered Democrat and granddaughter of the 1964 GOP presidential candidate, told The Huffington Post. ‘I’m sure if we were to raise his ashes from the Colorado River… he would be going, ‘What? This is not my vision. This is not my party.'”
* In the McCain campaign’s new TV ad, it appears McCain shakes hands with a woman wearing an Obama shirt.
* NRSC Chair John Ensign recently said that the Republican Party is confident that Jim Ogonowski “can be a very serious candidate” against John Kerry this year in Massachusetts. Making Ensign look a little foolish, Ogonowski failed this week to get enough signatures to qualify for the GOP primary ballot. Ouch.
* And on a related note, “Finding a candidate to replace Representative Vito J. Fossella, who will step down at the end of the year, is proving much harder than Republican Party leaders ever imagined.” All of the possible leading candidates have decided to take a pass, in part because it’s not expected to be a GOP-friendly year.