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5:35 PM ET, February 18, 2008

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Jeff Zeleny / New York Times:
An Obama Refrain Bears Echoes of a Governor's Speeches  —  CHICAGO — Senator Barack Obama adapted one of his signature arguments — that his oratory amounts to more than inspiring words — from speeches given by Gov. Deval Patrick of Massachusetts during his 2006 campaign.
RELATED:
Mike Allen / The Politico:
Clinton aide accuses Obama of plagiarism  —  Howard Wolfson, the Clinton campaign's communications director, today accused Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) of committing “plagiarism” in a speech in Milwaukee on Saturday night.  —  Wolfson made the explosive charge in an interview with Politico …
David Kurtz / Talking Points Memo:
IT'S ALL ABOUT AUTHENTICITY  —  By now, you've probably heard of the new attack line from the Hillary campaign, accusing Obama of plagiarism because an ad-libbed portion of his stump speech mimicked the language and rhythm of a two-year-old speech by his friend and supporter, Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick.
Ed Morrissey / Captain's Quarters:
Is This Really Plagiarism?  No  —  The New York Times makes a big deal about some similarities between elements in Barack Obama's speech and similar constructs in speeches given earlier by Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick in 2006.  While the wording appears too close for coincidence …
Jennifer Parker / Political Punch:
The Clinton Campaign Just Now...  In a conference call just now the Clinton campaign would not guarantee that Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-NY, has never used someone else's rhetoric without crediting them.  —  I asked Clinton communications director Howard Wolfson and Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass …
Discussion: The Ruckus
Big Head DC:
Obama Caught Plagiarizing 2006 Speech?  —  Big Head DC has discovered alarming similarities between a speech made by Sen. Barack Obama on February 16 while campaigning for president in Wisconsin and an October 2006 speech made by Deval Patrick, the current Democratic governor of Massachusetts.
Jeralyn / TalkLeft:
Obama and Duval Patrick's Shared Language: Issue or Not?  —  I'm just getting online today and I see there's a big to-do in the media over Barack Obama's use of Mass. Gov. Duval Patrick's words in his speeches.  —  The Clinton campaign says it's plagiarism.
Discussion: Political Radar and NO QUARTER
John McCormick / The Swamp:
Obama says he should have credited Patrick
Joe Gandelman / The Moderate Voice:   Clinton Campaign Can't Say It Never “Borrowed” Anyone Else's Rhetoric
Dan Balz / The Trail:
What's the Matter with Wisconsin
Discussion: The New Republic
Hillary Clinton / CNN:
Obama, Clinton camps point to ‘borrowed rhetoric’
Discussion: Hot Air and The Ruckus
Taylor Marsh / The Huffington Post:
‘I Have a Dream’ Becomes Obama's ‘I Have a Con’
Joe Gandelman / The Moderate Voice:
Clinton And Obama Campaigns Accuse Each Other Of “Borrowing” Rhetoric
Discussion: CNN
James Joyner / Outside The Beltway:
Obama ‘Steals’ from King and Jefferson
Discussion: The Caucus
Eric Kleefeld / TPM Election Central:
Hillary Campaign: Obama Plagiarized Speech From Supporter
Discussion: Spin Cycle
USA Today:
Clinton campaign accuses Obama of ‘flip-flop’
Discussion: Talking Points Memo
Jeff Fecke / Shakespeare's Sister:   Is Barack Obama a Plagiarist? (No.)
Matthew Mosk / Washington Post:
System Worries Clinton Backers  —  Supporters of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton are worried that convoluted delegate rules in Texas could water down the impact of strong support for her among Hispanic voters there, creating a new obstacle for her in the must-win presidential primary contest.
RELATED:
Ben Smith / The Politico:
Who's calling who a second-class delegate?  —  A co-chairman of Hillary's Michigan campaign and has a line that's sure to drive a whole bunch of red state governors up the wall:  —  “Superdelegates are not second-class delegates,” says Joel Ferguson, who will be a superdelegate if Michigan is seated.
Andrew Malcolm / Los Angeles Times:
Nearly-naked hotties for Ron Paul!  Really!  —  You better hurry because the last batch of Ron Paul pinup calendars is going quickly.  Which pleases Juliet Annerino no end because she sank a sizable chunk of her own change into printing up hundreds of these calendars to help fund the campaign of her favorite politician.
RELATED:
Ross Douthat:
The Wrong War  —  Ryan Lizza does a fine job of sketching …
Paul Steinhauser / CNN:
Texas poll shows dead heat among Dems  —  CNN deputy political director  —  (CNN) — It's all tied up in Texas.  —  A new CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll suggests the battle for the Democratic presidential nomination between Sens. Hillary Clinton of New York and Barack Obama of Illinois …
Ed Morrissey / Captain's Quarters:
How Evangelical Leaders Blew It  —  Dan Gilgoff does a post-mortem on how the evangelical movement managed to allow John McCain to win the Republican Party nomination over two candidates more amenable to their cause.  Gilgoff focuses on their failure to back Romney, and makes it plain …
RELATED:
Daniel Gilgoff / USA Today:
Why the Religious Right is stuck with McCain
Discussion: Ross Douthat and Hot Air
William Kristol / New York Times:
Democrats Should Read Kipling  —  Browsing through a used-book store Friday — in the Milwaukee airport, of all places — I came across a 1981 paperback collection of George Orwell's essays.  That's how I happened to reread his 1942 essay on Rudyard Kipling.
Little Green Footballs:
Hizballah = Nazis  —  A photo that says everything about the Lebanese terror gang Hizballah, as they pay tribute to dead mass murderer Imad Mughniyeh with a straight-armed Nazi salute.  The Associated Press caption, of course, takes no notice of it.
Discussion: Solomonia
New York Times:
Kosovo Is Recognized by U.S., France and Britain  —  BRUSSELS — The United States formally joined France and Britain in recognizing the independence of Kosovo on Monday, a day after the breakaway province declared itself independent of Serbia.  —  In a statement, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice …
BBC:
Whistle-blower site taken offline  —  A controversial website that allows whistle-blowers to anonymously post government and corporate documents has been taken offline in the US.  —  Wikileaks.org, as it is known, was cut off from the internet following a California court ruling, the site says.
 
 
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 More Items: 
Lydia Saad / Gallup:
JFK and Ronald Reagan Win Gallup Presidents Day Poll
Discussion: Don Surber and The Swamp
Ryan Lizza / New Yorker:
ON THE BUS  —  Can John McCain reinvent Republicanism?
Big Tent Democrat / TalkLeft:
Will A President Obama Do Anything On Health Care?
Gleaves Whitney / National Review:
Whitney: It's Washingtons Birthday, Not Presidents Day
Discussion: Politics Blog and GINA COBB
Michael Powell / New York Times:
Sense of Freedom Follows a Career Crisis
Guardian:
‘Nazi Philip wanted Diana dead’
Discussion: Harry's Place
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
First on the Scene, Again, Is the College Newspaper
Big Tent Democrat / TalkLeft:
PPP Poll: Obama With Comfortable WI Lead
 Earlier Items: 
Daily Mail:
Life for Muslim fanatic in soldier kidnap plot who showed son …
Ben Smith / The Politico:
More Obama and Patrick  —  Mike Allen has more on a pretty …
Discussion: The New Republic
David Denby / New Yorker:
KILLING JOKE  —  The Coen brothers' twists and turns.
Discussion: The New Republic
Daniel Martin / Daily Mail:
A&E patients left in ambulances for up to FIVE hours 'so trusts …
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
It's All Uphill From Here  —  It was 15 degrees outside …
Robert D. Novak / Washington Post:
Why Torts Trumped Terrorism
Michael J. Totten:
The Dungeon of Fallujah