Top Items:
USA Today:
Clinton makes case for wide appeal — Hillary Rodham Clinton vowed Wednesday to continue her quest for the Democratic nomination, arguing she would be the stronger nominee because she appeals to a wider coalition of voters — including whites who have not supported Barack Obama in recent contests.
Discussion:
Ben Smith's Blogs, MSNBC, Jules Crittenden, QandO, The Carpetbagger Report, No More Mister Nice Blog, The Moderate Voice, Pam's House Blend, The Page, MyDD, The Jed Report, Too Sense, American Street, Comments from Left Field, Truthdig, Lawyers, Guns and Money, Blog of the Moderate Left, The RBC, The Reaction, Political Insider and The New Republic
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Nicholas D. Kristof / New York Times:
The Too-Long Goodbye — After the Tuesday primaries, Hillary Rodham Clinton now has maybe a 2 percent chance of winning the Democratic nomination. But if she pursues her losing battle, she has perhaps a 20 percent chance of costing the Democrats the presidency in the fall.
Discussion:
Reproductive Health, Los Angeles Times, Real Clear Politics, NewsBusters.org and Prairie Weather
Sam Stein / The Huffington Post:
Ed Koch: Obama Is A Sure Loser, Clinton Should Fight On — As Democrats coalesce around Sen. Barack Obama, one of Hillary Clinton's must outspoken supporters is not mincing words: the party is walking needlessly and unaware into a general election buzzsaw. — “I believe Obama probably will win …
ABCNEWS:
George's Bottom Line on Clinton for Veep — Clinton Might Be Negotiating Spot on '08 Ticket, George Says — Is Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., staying in the race to get the vice presidential slot? — George thinks so. — Clinton vowed to fight on today, despite a growing chorus …
Thomas B. Edsall / The Huffington Post:
Big Rewards Await Clinton If She Ends Campaign Now — Clinton Fundraising, Clinton Dropping Out, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Dropping Out, Politics News — She has ruled it out, but a prompt withdrawal from the contest for the Democratic nomination offers Sen. Hillary Clinton the prospect of major rewards.
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo, Althouse, Fausta's blog, AMERICAblog, Outside The Beltway and No More Mister Nice Blog
Washington Post:
Did Rush Limbaugh Tilt Result In Indiana? — Even as Barack Obama's campaign celebrated Tuesday's primary results, aides charged yesterday that they would have had an even stronger showing were it not for meddling by an unlikely booster of Hillary Rodham Clinton: the popular conservative radio host …
New York Times:
Support for Clinton Wanes as Obama Sees Finish Line
Support for Clinton Wanes as Obama Sees Finish Line
Discussion:
New York Times, The Page, BizzyBlog, MSNBC, Commentary, NewsBusters.org, FiveThirtyEight.com and AMERICAblog
Washington Post:
Mr. Obama Moves On — The next task: strategy and substance for the general election
Mr. Obama Moves On — The next task: strategy and substance for the general election
Chadwick Matlin / Slate:
The Hillary Deathwatch — MCGOVERN, LOANS, AND SUPERDELEGATES …
The Hillary Deathwatch — MCGOVERN, LOANS, AND SUPERDELEGATES …
Discussion:
Political Machine, Associated Press, Trailhead, The New Republic and Personal Democracy Forum
Karen Tumulty / Time:
The Five Mistakes Clinton Made — For all her talk about “full speed on to the White House,” there was an unmistakably elegiac tone to Hillary Clinton's primary-night speech in Indianapolis. And if one needed further confirmation that the undaunted, never-say-die Clintons realize their bid might …
Oliver Willis:
Barack Obama's Big Mistake: He's Getting Too Many Votes — Following in the footsteps of other bloggers like Jeralyn Merritt and Armando, I must urge the superdelegates, the media and other creative class left blogs to be aware of something before it is too late.
Don Campbell / USA Today:
Wright story: What took so long? — The controversial reverend's 20-year relationship with Obama was left to simmer for a year. In our 24/7 media age, how could this have happened? — Barring some really strange math or a lot of second thoughts, the Democrats seem poised to nominate …
Bryan Caplan / New York Times:
The 18-Cent Solution — BOTH Hillary Clinton and John McCain say that we should suspend the 18-cent-per-gallon federal gas tax this summer. After her beating at the polls Tuesday, there may not be much reason left to worry about what Senator Clinton thinks, but the McCain proposal is alive and well.
Kathy Barks Hoffman / Detroit Free Press:
Mich. Dems settle on how to split delegates — LANSING — Michigan Democratic leaders settled today on a plan to give presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton 69 delegates and Barack Obama 59 as a way to get the delegates seated at the national convention
Gateway Pundit:
A Gift From Tehran— ARMED HEZBOLLAH THUGS Roam Beirut, Gunfights & Beatings Reported — A GIFT FROM TEHRAN— Boy, this says it all... Beirut Spring posted this photo of a bridge banner in Beirut that reads: “A gift from the municipality of Tehran to the righteous, resisting Lebanese people.”
Victor Davis Hanson / The Corner:
Veto and Drill! — Nancy Pelosi chanted “Veto and Drill”, “Veto and Drill” in caricaturing the threatened presidential veto of windfall oil company taxes and desire to drill in ANWR and elsewhere. But all that might sound, in fact, good to most Americans.
Discussion:
The Sundries Shack
Spencer / Attackerman:
Wages Of Sin, We Keep Paying — There once was an Islamic extremist who was radicalized by the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the Egyptian peace treaty with Israel. After the assassination of Anwar Sadat — in which his role was, at most, peripheral — he was arrested by the Egyptian security forces and tortured extensively.
Twinmom / MyDD:
A Comparison of NC Win With VA Win — This is my first Diary, so I'll gladly take any constructive criticism. Full disclosure, I am a Hillary Clinton supporter. I strongly and fervently believe her to be the stronger candidate to beat McCain and also the stronger option for President of the US.
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Foon Rhee / Boston Globe:
Republicans still voting against McCain — It's not clear yet whether the results are a real cause for concern for John McCain, but the presumptive Republican nominee still isn't exactly sweeping the primaries. — In Indiana on Tuesday, McCain won 78 percent of the vote …
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