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10:35 AM ET, February 6, 2008

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Mike Allen / The Politico:
Obama claims delegate lead  —  In a surprise twist after a chaotic Super Tuesday, Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) passed Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) in network tallies of the number of delegates the candidates racked up last night.  —  Clinton was portrayed in many news accounts …
RELATED:
The Politico:
Berman's count: 606-534  —  David Plouffe, on a conference call just now, offered the Obama campaign's estimate of where they stand at this moment in terms of delegates.  —  “We are, in terms of delegates, ahead currently: about 606 to 534, in terms of pledged delegates awarded tonight,” he said.
MSNBC:
Clinton wins Calif.; Obama wins in South  —  But party's delegate rules mean Democratic race to end up virtually tied  —  Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton greets supports as she enters her Super Tuesday primary night rally in New York.  —  It's far from over  —  Feb. 5: NBC News Washington …
Washington Post:
Clinton and Obama Trade Victories  —  N.Y. Senator Withstands Push By Surging Rival in Key Battlegrounds  —  Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton won victories over Sen. Barack Obama in California, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York last night, giving her presidential campaign a crucial boost.
Ari Melber / The Nation:
OBAMA CAMPAIGN PROJECTS 72 DELEGATE LEAD (FOR NOW)...  Barack Obama's presidential campaign is claiming an early lead in pledged delegates for Super Tuesday.  —  In a media conference call at 10:30pm, Campaign Manager David Plouffe estimated that Obama leads Hillary Clinton in pledged delegates by 606 to 534.
Josh Marshall / Talking Points Memo:
SUMMING IT UP  —  Before we give way to the night, let me try to pull together some rough thoughts on what happened here tonight.  It's probably best to start with the indisputable facts.  I haven't had a chance to look at the popular vote.  But every estimate I've seen says this was close to an exact tie in delegates.
The Politico:
Super Tuesday: A split decision  —  The clarity Democrats so desperately sought escaped them on Super Tuesday, as both candidates found cause to claim victory even as one of them cemented her front-runner status.  —  By winning critical contested strongholds in Massachusetts, New Jersey …
New York Times:
Clinton and McCain Win in California; Obama Stays Close as G.O.P. Rivals Lag  —  Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton won primaries in New York, New Jersey and Arizona and captured the biggest prize of all, California, while Senator Barack Obama strung together nearly a dozen victories from Georgia …
Los Angeles Times:
With no losers, the fight goes on
Todd Beeton / MyDD:
A Tie Goes To Clinton
Harold Meyerson / Washington Post:
The Repudiation of Rove  —  John McCain had a surprising but pleasant evening last night — watching Mitt Romney go down to defeat in nearly every contest and encountering a newly victorious but ultimately unnominatable Mike Huckabee all across the Bible Belt.
Discussion: The Sideshow and Political Machine
RELATED:
Michael Levenson / Boston Globe:
After tough Tuesday, Romney forces to meet on next steps
Discussion: AMERICAblog
CNN:
McCain emerges as GOP leader; Romney reassesses
Discussion: DownWithTyranny!
Jed Babbin / Human Events:
McCain Didn't Close the Deal  —  John McCain's strong showing in the February 5 primaries wasn't enough to close the deal.  He could have done it by winning enough delegates to be the prohibitive favorite or — conversely — by Mitt Romney making so poor a showing that he would be unwilling to fight on.
Discussion: TIME
RELATED:
Ed Morrissey / Captain's Quarters:
Democrats' Identity Politics Getting More Sharply Defined  —  Exit polling for Super Tuesday contests show a growing trend towards division by ethnicity among Democrats.  With the race as tight as it is, the identity politics that the party has fostered over the years has now become one of the points of division.
RELATED:
Amy Goldstein / Washington Post:   Democrats' Votes Display a Racial Divide
Michelle Malkin:
Where Hillary's Latino votes came from
Discussion: The American Mind
Mark Steyn / The Corner:
The Morning After  —  I think John O'Sullivan is right.  There was an explicit anti-Romney vote in the South.  A mere month ago, in the wake of Iowa and New Hampshire, I received a ton of e-mails from southern readers saying these pansy northern states weren't the “real” conservative heartland …
The New Republic:
Who Won Super Tuesday?  —  It's hard to say, but if you put a gun in my head, I'd say John McCain and (very slightly) Hillary Clinton, but the elections revealed weaknesses in McCain and in both of the leading Democratic candidates.  McCain blunted Mitt Romney's challenge, but he failed consistently to win over conservative voters.
ABCNEWS:
Top Officer Calls U.S. Forces ‘Stressed’  —  Top Uniformed Officer Says U.S. Forces ‘Significantly Stressed’ by Iraq, War on Terror  —  The military's top uniformed officer says U.S. forces are “significantly stressed” by fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan while simultaneously trying to stem the tide of violent extremism elsewhere.
Discussion: The Newshoggers
RELATED:
Anne Flaherty / Associated Press:   Senior Democrat: Iraq strategy failed
San Francisco Chronicle:
Long lines of voters - may be record turnout  —  (02-06) 00:14 PST SAN FRANCISCO —  An extraordinary surge of California voters cast ballots in Tuesday's presidential primary - resulting in long lines, a shortage of ballots, criticisms about voting procedures and polls that remained open late in Alameda County.
Discussion: Crooks and Liars and Calitics
Robert Perez / Orlando Sentinel:
Confused Florida voters try to cast ballots in Super Tuesday primaries  —  The problem?  Florida had its presidential primary LAST week.  —  Millions of Americans in 24 states are turning out vote to in Super Tuesday presidential primaries from Georgia to Alaska today.
 
 
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 More Items: 
Bill Ardolino / The Long War Journal:
Inside Iraqi politics - Part 1. Examining the Iraqi executive branch
Discussion: BLACKFIVE
Lauren Frayer / Associated Press:
US says al-Qaida in Iraq using children
Discussion: Captain's Quarters
Maureen Dowd / New York Times:
Darkness and Light  —  Hillary Clinton denounced Dick Cheney …
The Hill:
GOP leaders' votes split on striking out earmarks
Discussion: Think Progress and Redstate
Tapscott's Copy Desk:
Now we see if McCain really wants conservatives
Discussion: Captain's Quarters
CNN:
Democrats shatter turnout primary season records
Discussion: Pandagon
 Earlier Items: 
Thomas B. Edsall / The Huffington Post:
Super Tuesday Fallout: Where The Race Goes From Here
Aaron Bray / Yale Daily News:
Hill looks back on Giuliani's campaign
John Bresnahan / The Politico:
NRCC probe scares GOP
Matthew Yglesias:
The Wrap Up  —  The Obama campaign points out that their man won …
Stanley Kurtz / The Corner:
No-Mentum, Democrat-Style  —  Something about the Obama campaign …
Discussion: Matthew Yglesias
ABCNEWS:
CIA Chief: We Waterboarded
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Mandy Dalugdug / Music Business Worldwide:
UMG, ABKCO, and Concord sue Believe and its subsidiary TuneCore for $500M+, alleging Believe built its business via “industrial-scale copyright infringement”

Daniel Thomas / Financial Times:
BBC Chair Samir Shah calls for UK's “outdated” regulatory regime to be improved to let public service broadcasters compete with US streaming giants for viewers

Reuters:
French judicial source: investigators searched Netflix's offices in France and the Netherlands as part of a preliminary investigation into tax fraud laundering

 
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