Top Items:
Ben Smith / Ben Smith's Blogs:
Obama plans major race speech tomorrow — Barack Obama will give a major speech on “the larger issue of race in this campaign,” he told reporters in Monaca, PA just now. — He was pressed there, as he has been at recent appearances, on statements by his former pastor, Jeremiah Wright.
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Marc Ambinder:
Kristol Fails To Check His Sources, And So Bungles Key Fact In Anti-Obama Column — Bill Kristol's New York Times column about Barack Obama this morning contains a major, prejudicial error. — Paragraph five: … The error is in trusting the source without checking.
Ross Douthat:
Falwell and Wright — Ezra Klein's a smart guy, so I'm assuming this is a parody of liberal cluelessness rather than the real thing: … What horses**t. If John McCain were an evangelical Christian and a longstanding member of Jerry Falwell's congregation, and if he had written a memoir describing …
William Kristol / New York Times:
Generation Obama? Perhaps Not. — Sunday evening, Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner held a “Generation Obama” fund-raiser at Boston's Rumor Nightclub. In case you're not up on the Boston club scene, I should tell you that Rumor “brings together the sexiest and hippest people from around the globe” …
Rasmussen Reports:
Just 8% Have Favorable Opinion of Pastor Jeremiah Wright
Just 8% Have Favorable Opinion of Pastor Jeremiah Wright
Discussion:
ABCNEWS, MyDD, Hot Air, American Power, Top of the Ticket, BuzzFlash.org, Commentary, Taylor Marsh, TPM Election Central and The New Republic
Lee Speigel / Political Radar:
Obama: Discussion Over Wright's ‘Stupid Statements’ Have Been a Distraction
Obama: Discussion Over Wright's ‘Stupid Statements’ Have Been a Distraction
Ron Fournier / Associated Press:
ON DEADLINE: Obama walks arrogance line — WASHINGTON - Arrogance is a common vice in presidential politics. A person must be more than a little self-important to wake up one day and say, “I belong in the Oval Office.” — But there's a line smart politicians don't cross — somewhere between …
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USA Today:
USA TODAY/Gallup Poll: Clinton up 5 points on McCain; Obama up 2 — If the election were held today (and yes, we know it won't be), Democratic contender Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton would get 51% of the vote to Republican candidate Sen. John McCain's 46%, the latest USA TODAY/Gallup Poll estimates.
Paul Steinhauser / CNN:
Poll: Majority of Democrats prefer Obama — (CNN) — A majority of Democrats would like to see Barack Obama rather than Hillary Clinton win their party's presidential nomination, according to a national poll out Monday. — Fifty-two percent of registered Democrats questioned …
Discussion:
TPM Election Central
Stamford Advocate:
Lieberman explains support for McCain — STAMFORD — U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn, told the editorial board of The Advocate and Greenwich Time he's supporting Republican John McCain for president because he's the most likely to bring about change in Washington.
Gallup:
Gallup Daily: Clinton Now at 47%, Obama at 45% — Both Democrats run about even with McCain — PRINCETON, NJ — Gallup Poll Daily election tracking from March 14-16 finds Hillary Clinton's bid for the 2008 Democratic nomination supported by 47% of national Democratic voters, and Barack Obama's candidacy favored by 45%.
Discussion:
Don Surber
Ben Smith / Ben Smith's Blogs:
Florida gives up on re-vote — Florida Democratic chairwoman Karen Thurman sends out an angry email abandoning hope of a re-vote in the state: … This is a real setback for Hillary, who could have gotten both delegates, momentum, and — crucially — a stronger chance to claim a popular vote lead out of the revote.
Discussion:
The Swamp, Megan McArdle, Jonathan Martin's Blogs, 2008Central.net and Blue Crab Boulevard
RELATED:
Brendan Farrington / Associated Press:
Florida Dems abandon mail-in vote plan — TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Facing strong opposition, Florida Democrats on Monday abandoned plans to hold a do-over presidential primary with a mail-in vote and threw the delegate dispute into the lap of the national party.
CNN:
No new primary for Florida Democrats — WASHINGTON (CNN) — After weeks of negotiations, the Florida Democratic Party said Monday it will not hold a second primary in the state. — State party leaders have been seeking a way to have Florida's delegation seated at the Democratic National Convention.
RGE Monitor:
A Generalized Run on the Shadow Financial System — Since the onset of the liquidity and credit crunch last summer this column has been arguing that monetary policy would be impotent to address such a crunch because, in part, of the existence of a non-bank “shadow financial system”.
RELATED:
Steven Lee Myers / New York Times:
Bush, Praising Fed's Intervention, Faces Criticism
Bush, Praising Fed's Intervention, Faces Criticism
Discussion:
The Caucus
Kos / Daily Kos:
The Clinton civil war — Al Giordano, on the laughable Clinton-supporters “strike” of this blog: … I would add one more item to the list above — this site has also been hostile to the corrosive consultant class that gave us our timid and weak party until Howard Dean shook it up in 2004.
Discussion:
TownHall Blog, The Confluence, Comments from Left Field, Salon, Booman Tribune, Hot Air, AMERICAblog, Publius Pundit and The Field
Ace / minx.cc:
WRIGHT: ISRAEL A “DIRTY WORD;” JOKES THAT BLACKS GET ALL QUIET AT MENTION OF ISRAEL — Scared to speak, he says. — Why? Would that be anti-semitism that many left-indoctrinated blacks are reluctant to to express out loud? — Well, Obama's 20 year political ally and spiritual mentor encourages …
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New Orleans Times-Picayune:
News from the Louisiana delegation in the nation's capital — Sen. David Vitter, R-La., has been mostly mum on the prostitution scandal that forced Democratic New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer to announce his resignation last week. But Vitter let down his guard a bit in a conference call with constituents.
RELATED:
Marc Ambinder:
A Last Minute Hurdle Erected In Michigan? — The proposed primaru re-vote legislation in Michigan prevents those who've voted in the Republican primary from voting in the re-vote. — Fair enough, right? — But about 32% of the those who vote in the GOP primary, according to the exit polls, were Democrats or independents.