Today’s edition of quick hits.
* Watch The Decider become The Delegator. It’s nearly four years and the president never thought about applying the code of military conduct to hired guns? Please, watch the clip.
* The reaction to “heated” the Wolf Blitzer/Lynne Cheney interview from the weekend continues to reverberate a bit. Blitzer gave an on-air response today, while Dick Cheney seems quite pleased with his wife’s performance. “We refer to it around the house as the slapdown,” the VP told Fox News today.
* It’s a clean sweep — there are 22 daily newspapers in Florida, and all 22 endorsed Sen. Bill Nelson (D) over challenger Katherine Harris (R) this year.
* Jim Webb’s (D) novel that Sen. George Allen (R-Va.) is so worked about? It’s listed on the Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps Official Reading List. As far as Allen’s concerned, is the whole Corps a bunch of perverts?
* Speaking of Allen, interest in his arrest records continues to linger.
* I’ve received several inquisitive emails about the president and a “martial law” provision in legislation recently passed by Congress. Professor Michael Froomkin tackles the issue in a terrific post today.
* Michael J. Fox gave a pretty classy response to Rush Limbaugh. I have to give Fox a lot of credit; it would have been easy to deliver a far angrier, more personal, response.
* In 2004, many of you may recall that Bob Poulsen created an incredibly helpful online resource with presidential polling data. Thankfully, Bob has restarted the project this year in a site called 2.006k.com.
* What’s the latest with the Mark Foley scandal? On yesterday’s edition of The Chris Matthews Show, NBC Congressional Correspondent Chip Reid offered an interesting response during Matthew’s “Tell Me Something I Don’t Know” segment. “I’m going to be a little cryptic here,” Reid began, then added, “”the Mark Foley scandal investigation is going to widen a little bit.” Hmm.
* By way of reader J.W., the district attorney’s office in Orange County, Calif., has charged 11 people with fraudulent voter registration stemming from a Republican registration drive this year that resulted in dozens of Democrats unwittingly being signed up as Republicans. Shameless.
* Nevada gubernatorial hopeful Jim Gibbons (R) has a new defense for allegedly costing a woman in a Las Vegas parking lot — surveillance tapes, which didn’t exist last week, have surfaced and “prove that Jim Gibbons was never in that garage.” It’s an odd defense, since Gibbons and the cocktail waitress in question both agree that they were both in the garage together at the same time. (What a tangled web….)
* Slate created a new game: “Match the porn with the politician who wrote it.” Fun for the whole family.
* Finally, a reason for conservatives to be paranoid about electronic voting machines.
* In Iraq, the verdict in Saddam’s trial may be delay just a little bit — until after the midterm elections.
* I liked this paragraph from Andrew Sullivan: “American freedom and Bush-Rove Republicanism are increasingly at odds. Don’t let them intimidate you. If you’re a conservative who actually values the constitutional freedoms these people are stripping away, vote Democrat or abstain. If today’s GOP wins, they will take it as vindication for their authoritarian streak. And the path we have already embarked upon will only get darker.”
* More than one third of Americans (35%) say they check the Internet for political updates about campaigns and candidates, a number that grows to 43% if you limit the field to likely voters. What about blogs? The AP poll found that “only one in 10 of those who browse online for politics participate in the blogs — though more than twice that many check them out.”
If none of these particular items are of interest, consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.