Monday’s campaign round-up

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 NYT reports today that the Republican presidential field is going all out in Florida. John McCain, who shut down his Florida operation last summer, opened six offices in the state yesterday and hits the airwaves today. Mitt Romney’s TV ads return on Wednesday, and he’s not planning to leave the state again until after the primary. Rudy Giuliani spent his 48th day of campaigning in Florida yesterday.

* AP: “Barack Obama is stepping up his effort to correct the misconception that he’s a Muslim now that the presidential campaign has hit the Bible Belt. At a rally to kick off a weeklong campaign for the South Carolina primary, Obama tried to set the record straight from an attack circulating widely on the Internet that is designed to play into prejudices against Muslims and fears of terrorism ”I’ve been to the same church — the same Christian church — for almost 20 years,” Obama said, stressing the word Christian and drawing cheers from the faithful in reply. ‘I was sworn in with my hand on the family Bible. Whenever I’m in the United States Senate, I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America. So if you get some silly e-mail … send it back to whoever sent it and tell them this is all crazy. Educate.'”

* Chuck Norris, still campaigning aggressively on Mike Huckabee’s behalf, questioned John McCain’s age at a campaign event yesterday. “If John takes over the presidency at 72 and he ages 3-to-1, how old will he be in four years? Eighty-four years old — and can he handle that kind of pressure in that job?” Norris said, as Huckabee looked on. Norris added, “That’s why I didn’t pick John to support, because I’m just afraid the vice president will wind up taking over his job within that four-year presidency.”

* Things really didn’t turn out in Nevada the way John Edwards had hoped, and now his aides concede that they expect Edwards to lose every primary contest in which he competes. But he’s still not planning to withdraw: “There’s just no reason not to go to South Carolina, pick up delegates and watch the dynamics of the race play out for a while,” one adviser said. In other words, if Edwards can’t be president, he wants to be a kingmaker.

* For what it’s worth, at least Edwards isn’t in denial: “I got my butt kicked. That is what happened in Nevada,” the former North Carolina senator told Wolf Blitzer.

* Following up on an earlier item, House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, South Carolina’s most powerful Democrat, urged Bill Clinton to dial his campaign efforts down a notch. In an interview on CNN, Clyburn said, “I think they would say in Gullah-Geechee country, he needs to chill a little bit. I hope he understands what that means,” Clyburn said. “I can understand him wanting to defend his wife’s honor and his own record, and that is to be expected. But you can’t do that in a way that won’t engender the kind of feelings that seem to be bubbling up as a result of this.”

* Responding to some of the anti-Obama smears, spread via email and whisper campaigns, seven Jewish U.S. Senators released an “open letter to the Jewish community” on Saturday — none of whom have endorsed any presidential candidate — rejecting the baseless talk. “Over the past several weeks, many in the Jewish community have received hateful emails that use falsehood and innuendo about Senator Barack Obama’s religion and attack him personally,” reads the letter. “Jews, who have historically been the target of such attacks, should be the first to reject these tactics.”

* On a related note: “The military has warned soldiers not to use official computers to forward a chain e-mail that falsely accuses Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama of being a Muslim who attended a radical Muslim school, saying distribution of the information is a violation of Army regulations and constitutes unlawful political activity.” The memorandum also reminds the troops that the email smear, “like virtually all chain e-mails,” is “false.”

I do appreciate that Edwards still has his sense of humor with his “I just hope what happened in Vegas stays in Vegas” bit.

  • I notice that Lieberman was not among the Jewish senators who responded to the anti-Obama smears.

    Obama is doing the right thing by responding to the smears. The other approach (ignoring them and hoping that they won’t spread) doesn’t work.

  • Since Edwards is the only one of the Democrats I see expressing my views of the direction the country should head, I am happy with his doing anything to add to the discussion–even from a distant third place. And if his ideas broaden the scope of Obama’s rhetoric and inject into Clinton’s more talk about economic disparities between rich and poor, then I encourage his “kingmaker” status.

    (The real pity, of course, was that he never got to be a candidate, since there were only two people ever running on the Democratic ticket, according to the media.)

  • “… this is all crazy…”

    So Obama is disavowing his principled explanation for why he doesn’t wear a flag pin or put his hand on his heart during the national anthem. He’d rather focus on the erroneous claim that he won’t say the Pledge than mention the non-crazy facts that got confused with the lies.

    “If John takes over the presidency at 72 and he ages 3-to-1, how old will he be in four years? Eighty-four years old…”

    In Norris math, 72+4=84, if you assume 4=12. For that matter, he could just as easily endorse Huckabee for McCain’s running mate, if he figures the VP will end up as president anyway.

  • The ability Edwards brings to, for example, the debates is that he can “call bullshit” on the other candidates without the blowback costing him anything.

    Kingmaker, not so much. If he releases his delegates, he can tell them how to vote, but they are still free to vote however they please once released. Look up the party’s delegate rules.

  • * Following up on an earlier item, House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, South Carolina’s most powerful Democrat, urged Bill Clinton to dial his campaign efforts down a notch. In an interview on CNN, Clyburn said, “I think they would say in Gullah-Geechee country, he needs to chill a little bit. I hope he understands what that means,” Clyburn said. “I can understand him wanting to defend his wife’s honor and his own record, and that is to be expected.”

    I think anyone who listens to hom should remember all the tactics the Republicans have been using are the hardball tactics, and remember that this is the game we are playing.

    I think Clyburn and those who are espousing the criticism should take a look at Hillary’s poll and primary contest results, and realize that Bill isn’t either hurting her, or– also judging from poll results– irreparably damaging Obama.

    The complainers are injecting themselves needlessly into the affairs of grown-up, more capable, more intelligent people.

  • Yesterday, in the NYT magazine, there was a very interesting interview with Obama’s half sister (the daughter of his mother’s second marriage). One of the questions and answer, that I’m copying below was very strangely worded and could hurt the Obama campaign in regard to the stupid religious controversy.

    “Are you worried about mentioning Islam because it has already been evoked by negative campaigners trying to tarnish your brother?”

    ” I’m not worried. I don’t want to deny Islam. I think it’s obviously very important that we have an understanding of Islam, a better understanding. At the same time, it has been erroneously attached to my brother. The man has been a Christian for 20 years.”

    Note the wording in her answer of “the man has been a Christian for 20 years”. I assume she meant to say that he’d been a member of the current church he belongs to for 20 years, but it reads as if he’d only been a Christian for 20 years.

    A rival campaign, either Democratic or Republican, could really make hay with that answer.

    Did anyone else read this interview yesterday and think it was odd, and possibly dangerous for Obama’s campaign?

  • “the man has been a Christian for 20 years” does not logically exclude being a Christian for 21 years, 30 years, or an entire lifetime.

    Of course, combined with the “wanted to be president since he was in kindergarten,” this just shows the discipline of a dedicated Muslim sleeper agent.

  • OK, let’s get it all out in the open: Obama is a black man; Hillary Clinton has a VAGINA (OMG!!111); John McCain is old; and Mitt Romeny (aka Voldemort) is sexy as hell but we’ve already had a couple of sexy Presidents and look what that got us: felatio in the oval office and Marilyn Monroe’s classic “Happy Birthday, Mr. President”.

    And what does ANY of this have to do with whether these folks can run this country or not? Not a damn thing.

    I have a ton of reasons not to support John McCain and NONE of them have to do with the man’s age. Just because America is an ageist society, doesn’t mean we have to toss McCain out on his ear for any other reason than the ISSUES namely the war, the economy, civil liberties…and he sucks on all of them.

    Can’t it be about that?

  • Is health a legitimate issue? Mortality statistics?

    Vice president selection?

    This is subjective, but I have been watching McCain, and
    to my eye he doesn’t look so great.

    Opinion polls indicate I am not alone in regarding that (age) as
    a legitimate issue.

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