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:
* [tag]Rudy Giuliani[/tag]’s family “issues” have made his presidential campaign unacceptable to at least one high-profile religious right leader. [tag]Richard Land[/tag], head of public policy for the Southern Baptist Convention, said evangelicals believe the former mayor showed a lack of character in his divorce from second wife Donna Hanover. “To publicly humiliate your wife in that way, and your children … that’s rough,” he said. McCain’s divorce is a “molehill compared to Giuliani’s mountain,” Land added.
* Sen. [tag]Chuck Hagel[/tag] (R-Neb.) seems to be inching closer to throwing his hat into the ring. This week, he told two labor groups — the International Association of Fire Fighters and the Building and Construction Trades Department — that he’d like to be included in their upcoming presidential “cattle calls.” Jeff Zack, a spokesman for the International Association of Fire Fighters, said, “It was made absolutely clear to him that he was coming to speak at a forum where all the major presidential candidates were invited to speak.”
* [tag]Mitt Romney[/tag] will run his first radio ad targeting Spanish-speaking voters with the help of Al Cardenas, former chairman of the Florida Republican Party and a close ally of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. “It is a difficult time in the world, in the Americas, and in our Cuba in transition,” Cardenas says in his native Spanish during the spot, which promotes Romney’s speech Friday at a Lincoln Day Dinner in Miami-Dade County. “Mitt Romney understands the dynamic of Cuba.”
* As Sen. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.) continues to recover, Republicans are finding it difficult to recruit a top-tier challenger to take him on next year. Before his health problems, Johnson was expected to be a key GOP target in 2008. Now, as Roll Call noted, “Republicans have been leery of launching even the mildest rhetorical attack against Johnson since he was hospitalized Dec. 13, and they acknowledge that his illness temporarily has frozen any effort to oust him.”
* And the Republican Leadership Council, created in 1993 to help drag the GOP back towards the middle, hasn’t been doing much lately, but that’s apparently going to change. Former Gov. Christie Whitman of New Jersey, former Sen. John Danforth of Missouri and former Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael S. Steele reportedly want to revitalize the RLC, which was recently combined with Whitman’s political action committee IMP-PAC — It’s My Party, Too. Tom Ridge, former homeland security secretary and former governor of Pennsylvania, is also involved with the effort.