Top Items:
Geoff Garin / Washington Post:
Fair Is Fair — What's wrong with this picture? Our campaign runs a TV ad Monday saying that the presidency is the toughest job in the world and giving examples of challenges presidents have faced and challenges the next president will face — including terrorism, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan …
Discussion:
TalkLeft, American Street, The Opinionator, Daily Kos, The Common Ills, Donklephant, HillaryClinton.com, The Page, Political Punch and The Campaign Spot
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Paul Krugman / New York Times:
Self-Inflicted Confusion — After Barack Obama's defeat in Pennsylvania, David Axelrod, his campaign manager, brushed it off: “Nothing has changed tonight in the basic physics of this race.” — He may well be right — but what a comedown. A few months ago the Obama campaign was talking about transcendence.
Discussion:
Anglachel's Journal, The Corner, TPMCafe, The Confluence, The Democratic Daily, Liberal Values, BlueOhioan and PoliGazette
Charles Krauthammer / Washington Post:
Obama's ‘Distractions’? — Real change has never been easy. . . . The status quo in Washington will fight. They will fight harder than ever to divide us and distract us with ads and attacks from now until November. — Pennsylvania primary night speech — With that, Obama identified …
Discussion:
Hot Air, Salon, Political Machine, Publius Pundit, Fausta's blog, Blue Crab Boulevard and Betsy's Page
National Journal Online:
Q&A: David Plouffe — Obama's Manager Discusses Clinton's Negatives & The Delegate Race — Fri. — National Journal's Linda Douglass sat down with David Plouffe, Barack Obama's campaign manager, for the April 25 edition of “National Journal On Air.” This is a transcript of their conversation.
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Perry Bacon Jr / Washington Post:
Clinton's Hopes May Lie With N.C.
Clinton's Hopes May Lie With N.C.
Discussion:
Charlotte Observer, The Caucus, MSNBC, The Washington Independent, The Crypt's Blogs and TPM Election Central
Michael Goldfarb / Weekly Standard Blog:
McCain: “Clear Who Hamas Wants to be the Next President” — McCain spoke with bloggers this morning on a number of issues ranging from William Ayers to Rev. Wright to Tony Rezko. Jennifer Rubin noted that Hamas had endorsed Senator Obama and asked McCain whether Obama might have given “an unhelpful signal” to the terrorist group.
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Sean Hackbarth / The American Mind:
JOHN MCCAIN: “I WILL BE HAMAS' WORST NIGHTMARE”
JOHN MCCAIN: “I WILL BE HAMAS' WORST NIGHTMARE”
Discussion:
Outside The Beltway
Hugh Hewitt / TownHall Blog:
McCain On The Blogger Conferencee Call: Obama Must Repudiate Ayers …
McCain On The Blogger Conferencee Call: Obama Must Repudiate Ayers …
Discussion:
Fausta's blog
Mark Halperin / The Page:
Obama-DNC Fundraising Deal — After a series of discussions, the Obama campaign and the Democratic National Committee have decided to file papers with the Federal Election Commission establishing a “joint fundraising agreement.” Under the law, such a committee can accept up to $28,500 from individuals …
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The Politico:
Obama has a punctuation problem — Barack Obama's real opponent now is not Hillary Rodham Clinton. It is a pair of punctuation marks. — The first is a question. The second is an asterisk. — Both threaten to hover over Obama if he wins the Democratic nomination without confronting …
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Associated Press:
ElBaradei slams Israel for attacking Syrian nuclear reactor — The head of the UN nuclear monitoring agency on Friday criticized the US for not giving his organization intelligence information sooner on what Washington says was a nuclear reactor in Syria being built secretly by North Korea.
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Ari Melber / The Huffington Post:
PBS Breaks Media Blackout of Pentagon Propaganda Bombshell — While most TV news organizations have refused to report or even comment on the bombshell Times article exposing a secret Pentagon propaganda campaign to sell Iraq policy, PBS just aired an important segment on the controversy.
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Online NewsHour:
Government Curries Favor With Military News Analysts — The Pentagon may influence the analysis of some retired military personnel who appear on television news programs, the New York Times recently reported. Media insiders discuss the details of this murky world of defense companies, the current administration and the war in Iraq.
Gallup:
Gallup Daily: Obama and Clinton Tied at 48% to 47% — Clinton's increased support has mainly come from undecided voters — PRINCETON, NJ — The Democratic nomination race is now tied, with Barack Obama favored by 48% of national Democratic voters and Hillary Clinton by 47%.
Alexander Bolton / The Hill:
John Edwards's supporters are flocking to Sen. Obama — Donors, activists and members of Congress who backed former Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.) are flocking to Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.). — This and the fact that Obama is likely to win the North Carolina primary could prompt Edwards to endorse Obama …
Times of London:
The men in black vanish and Basra comes to life — The first Western journalist to enter the city since Operation Charge of the Knights was launched a month ago — Young women are daring to wear jeans, soldiers listen to pop music on their mobile phones and bands are performing at wedding parties again.
Discussion:
Newshoggers.com, QandO, Commentary, Hot Air, USA Today, PoliGazette, The Long War Journal and The Strata-Sphere
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Dana Milbank / Washington Post:
Iraq War Is Everyone Else's Fault, Feith Explains — Mistakes were made. But not by him. — Doug Feith, the No. 3 man at the Pentagon before, during and after the invasion of Iraq, has come in for his share of blame for the failures there — in large part because he led the Pentagon policy shop …
Philip Taubman / New York Times:
Lesson on How Not to Build a Navy Ship — With the crack of a Champagne bottle against its bow, the newly minted Navy warship, bedecked with bunting, slid sideways into the Menominee River in Wisconsin with a titanic splash. — Moments before the launching on Sept. 23, 2006, Adm. Mike Mullen …
New York Post:
THE WORST OF TIMES — STAFF BRACES FOR LAYOFFS AFTER BUYOUTS FALL SHORT — THE New York Times' news room is bracing for a bloodbath in the next 10 days. — The word from inside is that approximately 50 unionized journalists have accepted the buyout proposal, and only another 20 non-union editorial employees have gotten on board.