Top Items:
Jeanne Cummings / The Politico:
GOP fears Obama's money machine — With Hillary Clinton's campaign coming to an end this weekend, Barack Obama's rise as the Democratic nominee brings serious bad news to a new group — John McCain's finance team. — A review of campaign finance data offers not one ounce of good news …
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Sam Stein / The Huffington Post:
McCain Rips Off Obama's Slogan And Logo — Is John McCain trying to be the older, whiter, more conservative Barack Obama? — On Tuesday, the Senator co-opted the slogan that has come to personify Obama's candidacy, taking the Illinois Democrat's “Change You Can Believe In” and altering it into “A Leader You Can Believe In.”
Alexander Bolton / The Hill:
GOP roots for Clinton
GOP roots for Clinton
Discussion:
The Hill's Blog Briefing Room, The Swamp, No More Mister Nice Blog, Hot Air and The Plank
Jackie Calmes / Wall Street Journal:
Clinton Unlikely as No. 2 — Concession Expected Saturday; Obama Camp Discounts VP Talk — WASHINGTON — Supporters of Sen. Hillary Clinton suggested she would like to be Sen. Barack Obama's running mate, but close advisers to Sen. Obama are signaling that an Obama-Clinton ticket is highly unlikely.
Discussion:
Matthew Yglesias, Comments from Left Field, the talking dog, Commentary, Roger L. Simon, PSoTD, Donklephant and Top of the Ticket
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Washington Post:
Clinton Pullout Likely Saturday — Endorsement of Obama, Bid for VP Slot Seen — Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton is likely to suspend her presidential campaign on Saturday and endorse Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic Party's presumptive nominee, according to informed sources …
The Politico:
Dems struggle to heal wounds on Hill — Party unity may have been the theme of the day for Democrats on Wednesday, but as Barack Obama made his victory lap on Capitol Hill, there was no road map for how to heal the party's wounds, and Hillary Rodham Clinton's supporters — like the candidate herself …
The Hill:
Sen. Warner avoids backing would-be GOP successor — Sen. John Warner (R-Va.) is avoiding an endorsement in the closely watched Senate contest to succeed him, so far declining to support fellow Republican Jim Gilmore several days after the former Virginia governor clinched the GOP nomination.
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Mark Murray / MSNBC:
FIRST THOUGHTS: OBAMA'S WIDER MAP — From Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Domenico Montanaro — *** Obama's wider map: About two months ago, we unveiled our early look at the electoral map. And this being the second official day of the general election, now's as good a time as any to see where we stand in the McCain vs. Obama race.
inRich.com:
Three Va. figures probably long shots for VP — These days Virginia looks like the mother of vice presidents. — But it could be a long shot for one to surpass such prospects as Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. — The state's top three Democrats — Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, U.S. Sen. Jim Webb …
Sam Stein / The Huffington Post:
Obama In Heated Conversation With Lieberman — Update: Obama and Lieberman had a heated conversation on the floor of the Senate later today. Details below. — Senator Joe Lieberman, serving aptly as John McCain's foreign policy attack dog, jumped on a conference call with reporters …
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Karen Tumulty / Time:
How Obama Did It — Barack Obama was campaigning last October in South Carolina when he got an urgent call from Penny Pritzker, the hotel heiress who leads his campaign's finance committee. About 200 of his biggest fund raisers were meeting in Des Moines, Iowa, and among them, near panic was setting in.
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Andrew Malcolm / Top of the Ticket:
Inside Hillary Clinton's decision to quit: The 5 hidden emotional stages
Inside Hillary Clinton's decision to quit: The 5 hidden emotional stages
Greg Gordon / McClatchy Washington Bureau:
Clinton's dilemma: Awash in both cash and debt
Clinton's dilemma: Awash in both cash and debt
Discussion:
Eschaton
ABCNEWS:
Clinton Will Drop Out of Presidential Race
Clinton Will Drop Out of Presidential Race
Discussion:
Ben Smith's Blogs, CNN, Foreign, Scared Monkeys, culturekitchen, Buck Naked Politics, Gateway Pundit, Hot Air, Comments from Left Field, Wizbang, THE GUN TOTING LIBERAL™, Liberal Values, Truthdig, Political Machine, The Democratic Daily, Wonkette, Reason Magazine, Wake up America, The Stump, Real Clear Politics, MyDD and Political Radar
Marcus Mabry / New York Times:
Many Blacks Find Joy in Unexpected Breakthrough — Kwabena Sam-Brew, a 38-year-old immigrant from Ghana, doubted that Nana, his 5-year-old American-born daughter, would remember the rally that effectively crowned Senator Barack Obama as the Democratic nominee Tuesday night.
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Robert M. Goldberg / New York Post:
HOW ‘LIBERAL’ CARE WOULD KILL TED — IRONICALLY enough, the dangers of the lib eral health-care agenda are being made clear by the care that a liberal icon, Sen. Ted Kennedy, has received since his brain seizure last month. — One day after an MRI detected a tumor, Kennedy was quickly diagnosed …
CBS News:
CBS Poll: Obama Leads McCain — Obama Ahead By Six Points; But Many Clinton Voters Plan To Back McCain — (CBS) Presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama holds a six point lead over his Republican counterpart John McCain, a new CBS News poll finds. Obama leads McCain 48 percent …
George F. Will / Washington Post:
The Gas Prices We Deserve — Rising in the Senate on May 13, Chuck Schumer, the New York Democrat, explained: “I rise to discuss rising energy prices.” The president was heading to Saudi Arabia to seek an increase in its oil production, and Schumer's gorge was rising.
Patrick Cockburn / The Independent:
Revealed: Secret plan to keep Iraq under US control — Bush wants 50 military bases, control of Iraqi airspace and legal immunity for all American soldiers and contractors — A secret deal being negotiated in Baghdad would perpetuate the American military occupation of Iraq indefinitely …
Discussion:
VetVoice, The Swamp, Attackerman, Philly.com, Informed Comment, Rising Hegemon, Newshoggers.com and Think Progress
Kevin Sullivan / Washington Post:
Overseas, Excitement Over Obama — In Presumptive Nominee, Many See Chance for New Direction and New Attitude — For much of the world, Sen. Barack Obama's victory in the Democratic primaries was a moment to admire the United States at a time when the nation's image abroad has been seriously damaged.