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:
* After experiencing a financial rough patch, it looks as if the Clinton campaign is back on firm ground, raising $35 million in February, more than double her January haul. “It was incredibly gratifying to see people come forth with this vote of confidence in me,” Clinton told reporters in Hanging Rock, Ohio. “Obviously this is a tremendous benefit to my campaign.”
* And what about Obama’s monthly total? Exact numbers haven’t been released, but almost immediately after the Clinton camp announced its $35 million monthly total, the Obama campaign’s Bill Burton told reporters that they’d raised “considerably more” than that.
* At a town-hall meeting in Texas yesterday, John McCain inadvertently described himself as “a proud conservative liberal Republican.” Quickly realizing he’d used one word too many, McCain corrected himself, adding, “Conservative Republican.” As the audience laughed, McCain said, “Hellooo, easy there.”
* Obama delivered a forceful lecture to some Texas parents yesterday, who seemed to agree with his message: “During a Barack Obama town-hall meeting on the economy, the topic turned to education, which, the Illinois senator said, could not be remedied by spending alone. ‘It doesn’t matter how much money we put in if parents don’t parent,’ he scolded…. Each line was punctuated by a roar, and Obama began to shout, falling into a preacher’s rhythm. ‘Am I right? So turn off the TV set. Put the video game away. Buy a little desk. Or put that child at the kitchen table. Watch them do their homework. If they don’t know how to do it, give ’em help. If you don’t know how to do it, call the teacher.’ By now, the crowd of nearly 2,000 was lifted from the red velveteen seats of the Julie Rogers Theatre, hands raised to the gilded ceiling. ‘Make ’em go to bed at a reasonable time! Keep ’em off the streets! Give ’em some breakfast! Come on! Can I get an amen here?'” The crowd, according to multiple accounts, went wild.
* The big story of the ’08 race? According to Mike Huckabee, it’s him: “What I think has been the phenomenal story is that we had a dime to every dollar that these other candidates have had. And yet our campaign has stayed on the field when the campaigns that were far better financed and organized and staffed with all the establishment people they’ve come and gone. And nobody, I think, would’ve said a few months ago that we would have outlasted Rudy and Fred Thompson and Mitt Romney and many other candidates who have disappeared.”
* Arianna Huffington notices an interesting calendar coincidence: “Should Barack Obama end up winning his party’s nomination, he will give his acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention in Denver on August 28 — 45 years to the day Martin Luther King delivered his ‘I Have a Dream’ speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.”
* The Dems’ Texas primary on Tuesday is open to independents and Republicans, and they may give Obama an edge: “If the latest polling data are to be believed, those Republicans aren’t whispering in Texas, where 195 of the 228 delegates the state will send to the Democratic National Convention will be chosen in a primary and caucuses Tuesday. As many as a tenth of the Texans voting in the Democratic contests could be Republicans, and overwhelmingly they favor Obama, a first-term senator from Illinois, the polls show.”
* Former Secretary of State James A. Baker III endorsed McCain yesterday, comparing him to Baker’s former boss: “John [McCain] appreciates the complexity of the real world, which after all is a world of hard choices and painful trade-offs. Ronald Reagan was a staunch conservative. Nobody ever accused the Gipper of being squishy … Ronald Reagan found solutions that worked, even if they sometimes occasionally failed the rigid tests of the purists.”
* And Ralph Nader has a running mate: Matt Gonzalez, a San Francisco lawyer who came in a close second in the city’s mayoral race in 2003. Gonzalez has served as president of San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors, and is a member of the Green Party.