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:
* The polls in Pennsylvania are all over the place, but taken together, it looks like an increasingly competitive contest. The latest InsiderAdvantage poll shows Hillary Clinton leading Barack Obama by just two, 45% to 43%. The Morning Call newspaper finds Clinton up by 11 (49-38), down from 14. Strategic Vision shows Clinton with an eight-point lead (49-41), though the margin is down from an 18-point lead a few weeks ago. However, the Strategic Vision poll has one key piece of good news for Clinton — she leads McCain in Pennsylvania by six, while the Republican pollster shows McCain beating Obama by five.
* Speaking of polls and primaries, a new poll in Indiana shows another tight race, with Clinton leading Obama by just three points, 49% to 46%.
* Former President Jimmy Carter seems to have a preference in the Dems’ nomination fight: “Don’t forget that Obama won in my state of Georgia,” Carter said. “My town, which is home to 625 people, is for Obama, my children and their spouses are pro-Obama. My grandchildren are also pro-Obama. As a superdelegate, I would not disclose who I am rooting for but I leave you to make that guess.”
* The good news for Clinton is that her $20 million haul in March was her second best monthly showing to date. The bad news for Clinton is that she only raised about half of Obama’s total for the month.
* John Edwards was a running mate once, and he doesn’t want to be one again: “After his keynote speech at CTIA, the annual U.S. wireless industry showcase, Edwards was asked in a question-and-answer session if he would accept the nomination for vice president. ‘No,’ said Edwards, who also declined to say whether he would endorse Clinton or Obama.”
* New Jersey Sen. Jon Corzine and Pennsylvania Rep. Jack Murtha, two prominent Clinton backers, both said independently yesterday that they believe Clinton needs to win the Democratic popular vote to have a chance at the nomination.
* Self-deprecating humor is always welcome, as was the case with Clinton’s appearance on “The Tonight Show” last night: “[S]he used her entrance to try to defuse the recent unpleasantness about her fictional account of flying into Tuzla, Bosnia, under sniper fire in 1996, a tale that was discredited by witnesses and news footage. ‘I was worried I wasn’t going to make it,’ she said as she walked onto the set (to the theme from ‘Rocky’). ‘ was pinned down by sniper fire at the Burbank airport.'”
* The LAT takes a closer look at the race for superdelegates and finds a narrowing contest: “In December, according to an Associated Press tally, Clinton led Obama by 106 superdelegates. In February, her lead had been cut to 87. As of Thursday, it was 30.”
* CBS had scheduled a Democratic debate in North Carolina for April 19, which Obama agreed to but Clinton did not. Yesterday, the Clinton campaign agreed to an April 27 debate in North Carolina, but the Obama campaign has not yet signed on.
* And House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), for reasons that are unclear, is feeling pretty good about his caucus’ chances in November: “I think we are going to gain seats this year. Period.” We’ll see.