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:
* A huge new poll from the New York Times is chock full of interesting data, including widespread ennui among Republicans. 40% of GOP voters expect a Dem presidential candidate to win next year, and nearly 60% would like to see additional choices in 2008 candidates beyond the current presidential field.
* John McCain announced yesterday that he will skip yet another important right-wing gathering: the winter gathering of the Club for Growth. McCain is the only major GOP candidate who will not attend, and this is his fourth conservative snub of the movement, having already skipped the Conservative Political Action Conference, the Heritage Foundation’s members’ retreat, and the National Review Institute’s conservative summit.
* The Schiavo controversy apparently lingers as a politically relevant event. Yesterday, Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) picked up the support of Bobby Schindler, the brother of the late Terri Schiavo. The endorsement came one day after former Gov. Mitt Romney said he opposed state intervention in the case.
* A new Rasmussen poll shows Al Franken a little closer to incumbent Sen. Norm Coleman (R) in next year’s Senate race in Minnesota, with Coleman’s lead shrinking to 10 points, 46% to 36%. Other polls showed Coleman with a much bigger lead when Franken announced last month.
* Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) announced yesterday that he will seek the GOP presidential nomination. This is Paul’s second presidential campaign, after running as the Libertarian Party nominee in 1988.
* And Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) appeared on The Daily Show last night, and posted on his website an entertaining look behind-the-scenes. It’s worth watching.