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:
* Barack Obama got his chance to make a good first impression in New Hampshire this past weekend, and Hillary Clinton will get her chance very soon. The state Dem Party confirmed yesterday that it has invited Clinton to be the featured speaker at its major annual fundraiser — known as the “100 Club” fundraiser — early in 2007. If she accepts, it will be the senator’s first visit to New Hampshire since October 1996.
* Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) apparently flirted with the idea of retirement, prompting the Senate GOP to give him some plum committee assignments. It had the desired effect — Alexander will reportedly seek re-election in 2008.
* John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) favorability ratings among independents, once assumed to be his most reliable base of support, have fallen 15 percentage points since March.
* Al Gore may still be a little coy about 2008, but according to his son, the former VP isn’t going to run for president again. “I don’t know all of his reasons – but I know that he has no plans to run in 2008,” Al Gore III said this week. Asked if he’s sure his father definitely isn’t running, the son added, “Well, I guess I have to add his addendum. I think the way he always says it is, ‘I don’t see any circumstances under which I would run for president.'”
* Burns Strider has been helping lead the House Democratic Caucus’ “Faith Working Group,” but will now transition to presidential politics. Strider, a reported expert on winning over evangelicals, has joined Hillary Clinton’s team.
* And the decision about where best to hold the Democratic National Convention is still up in the air, though insiders believe that Howard Dean prefers New York to Denver. Sen. Ken Salazar (D-Colo.) spoke to Dean yesterday about the decision and came away “concerned” that Dean has soured on Denver’s chances, fearful that the city couldn’t pull off such a massive event without a hitch.