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:
* Bush was the featured speaker for the national Republican Party at its annual gala last night, helping the party raise $10.5 million. The AP noted that it was a paltry sum, compared to previous years (Bush raised $17 million last year, $15 million in 2005 and $14 million in 2003. When Bush was seeking re-election to the White House in 2004, the dinner brought in a record $38.5 million).
* As if Rudy Giuliani didn’t have enough trouble right now, ABC News reported last night that the former NYC mayor and his consulting company, Giuliani Partners, have “served as key advisors for the last five years to the pharmaceutical company that pled guilty today to charges it misled doctors and patients about the addiction risks of the powerful narcotic painkiller OxyContin.”
* West Virginia Rep. Shelly Moore Capito (R) has rebuffed NRSC overtures and will not challenge Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D) next year. Rockefeller’s likelihood of winning re-election easily just went up.
* NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg raised a few eyebrows this week when he re-launched the website he used for his mayoral campaigns in 2001 and 2005. “This site will help you learn more about the issues important to me and the causes I’ve supported in business, philanthropy and public life,” it says. Hmm.
* MySpace is organizing a series of “Presidential Town Hall” meetings at college campuses across the country from September through December. Twelve candidates from both parties will participate.
* How fast is the 2008 presidential race moving? The AP reports that the Commission on Presidential Debates is already visiting some of the 19 possible sites for next year’s debates. (We’re still seven months before the Iowa caucuses, right?)