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:
* Maybe we’ll get lucky? “Democratic Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, once so eager to debate she ran two ads questioning why her rival wouldn’t, has yet to say whether she’ll debate Sen. Barack Obama in North Carolina next month. Both presidential candidates plan to participate in an ABC News debate on April 16 in Philadelphia. Pennsylvania holds its primary days later, on April 22. Obama also has agreed to a debate April 19 hosted by CBS in North Carolina. North Carolina holds its primary May 6. Clinton spokesman Howard Wolfson said Monday that the campaign has not made a decision about the CBS debate and is still working through the details.”
* James Carville, who compared Bill Richardson to Judas on Friday for endorsing Obama, bragged yesterday about how pleased he is with the comparison. “I was quoted accurately and in context, and I was glad to give the quote and I was glad I gave it,” Carville said. “I’m not apologizing, I’m not resigning, I’m not doing anything.” After a Clinton campaign spokesperson suggested Carville might want to apologize, the NYT called him back: “For several seconds he laughed – cackled might be more accurate – and then said he stood by his quote fully.”
* In what was billed as a major speech on his economic ideas, John McCain said he doesn’t want to do anything about the housing crisis: “Republican John McCain, who has conceded economics is not his strong suit, says government isn’t in the business of saving and rewarding banks or small borrowers who behave irresponsibly.”
* Top Clinton aide Harold Ickes is still talking openly about the options available for pledged delegates.
* Pennsylvania is leaning towards Clinton, and Oregon is leaning towards Obama, but no one knows what’s going to happen in Indiana.
* Gordon Fischer, a former chair of the Iowa Democratic Party and Obama supporter, wrote an intemperate item on his blog yesterday about a certain former president: “Bill Clinton cannot possibly seriously believe Obama is not a patriot, and cannot possibly be said to be helping — instead he is hurting — his own party. B. Clinton should never be forgiven. Period. This is a stain on his legacy, much worse, much deeper, than the one on Monica’s blue dress.” The Clinton campaign expressed outrage, accusing the Obama campaign of “gutter tactics,” though there’s no reason to believe the Obama campaign was involved with the blog post. Fisher later removed the item and apologized.
* All three of the remaining presidential candidates have been missing a lot of votes in the Senate, but McCain barely seems to show up for his day job at all.
* No matter who wins Pennsylvania’s primary, Dems have to be happy about this: “Democratic registration in Pennsylvania set a new record yesterday, at the close of yesterday’s deadline to register for the state’s closed primary. Over 4 million Pennsylvanians are now registered as Democrats, out of 8.2 million total registered voters. Republican and independent registrations both shrank slightly — a possible sign of crossover voters for Barack Obama — while 120,000 previously unregistered people entered the rolls.”
* Facing a looming deadline, Republicans in New Jersey finally found a candidate to run against Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D) in November: Andrew Unanue, a former executive with Goya Foods Inc. Unanue “was ousted from the leadership of Goya Foods in a family feud in 2004 and has since run a financial consulting firm and a New York nightclub.”
* And in Virginia, Lt. Gov. William Bolling (R) announced yesterday he will not run for governor, clearing the way for state Attorney General Robert McDonnell, and giving the state GOP its first good chance of winning the governorship in a decade.