Top Items:
John Whitesides / Reuters:
Poll shows McCain in 5-point lead over Obama — WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In a sharp turnaround, Republican John McCain has opened a 5-point lead on Democrat Barack Obama in the U.S. presidential race and is seen as a stronger manager of the economy, according to a Reuters/Zogby poll released on Wednesday.
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Zogby:
Reuters/Zogby Poll: McCain Makes a Move, Takes 5-Point Lead Over Obama — Obama loses ground among Dems, women, Catholics & even younger voters — UTICA, New York - As Russian tanks rolled into the Republic of Georgia and the presidential candidates met over the weekend in the first joint issues forum …
Jim Rutenberg / New York Times:
Obama's Ads in Key States Go on Attack — WASHINGTON — Senator Barack Obama has started a sustained and hard-hitting advertising campaign against Senator John McCain in states that will be vital this fall, painting Mr. McCain in a series of commercials as disconnected from the economic struggles of the middle class.
Discussion:
Los Angeles Times, The Jed Report, Guardian, Electoral-vote.com, BuzzFlash.org, Washington Post, Towleroad.com and Don Surber
David Paul Kuhn / The Politico:
McCain winning in new poll, follows trend
McCain winning in new poll, follows trend
Discussion:
The Washington Independent
Nick Pisa / Telegraph:
Barack Obama's ‘lost’ brother found in Kenya — Senator Barack Obama's long lost brother has been tracked down for the first time living in a shanty town in Kenya, reports claimed. — The Italian edition of Vanity Fair said that it had found George Hussein Onyango Obama living in a hut …
Thomas L. Friedman / New York Times:
What Did We Expect? — If the conflict in Georgia were an Olympic event, the gold medal for brutish stupidity would go to the Russian prime minister, Vladimir Putin. The silver medal for bone-headed recklessness would go to Georgia's president, Mikheil Saakashvili, and the bronze medal …
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Andrew Miga / Associated Press:
Sen. Joe Lieberman to speak at GOP convention — WASHINGTON - Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, the Democratic Party's vice presidential candidate in 2000 and now an independent who is one of John McCain's strongest supporters, will speak at the Republican National Convention, an official said.
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Andrew Malcolm / Top of the Ticket:
Denver's homeless get free haircuts to look good for Obama and his Democrats — Last month The Ticket wrote that officials in Denver, worried about the impression that 50,000 visitors to the Democratic National Convention would get next week, were planning to hide the estimated 4,000 homeless people …
National Enquirer:
JOHN EDWARDS BLOCKBUSTER NEW EXPOSE! — The NATIONAL ENQUIRER's exclusive ongoing investigation uncovers shocking new revelations about The John Edwards Scandal! — The day prior to Edwards bombshell admission to an affair on ABC's Nightline, Rielle Hunter and her 6 month old daughter …
Borys Krawczeniuk / The Times-Tribune:
Local Clinton backers, McCain adviser meet — A brother of New York Sen. Hillary Clinton and local Democrats who backed her unsuccessful presidential campaign socialized privately Monday with a top surrogate of the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, Arizona Sen. John McCain.
Maureen Dowd / New York Times:
Two Against The One — In the dead of night in a small hideaway office in the deserted Capitol, a clandestine meeting takes place between two senators with one goal. — They grin at each other as they lift their celebratory shots of brutally cold Stolichnaya.
Michael Moore:
“Caroline: Pull a Cheney!” An Open Letter to Caroline Kennedy (head of the Obama VP search team) from Michael Moore — We've never met, so I hope you don't find this letter too presumptuous or inappropriate. As its contents involve the public's business, I am sending this to you via the public on the Internet.
Alexander Burns / The Politico:
McCain scores a bump from Saddleback — He clashed with their leaders in his 2000 campaign. He struggled to gain their votes during the 2008 primaries. And he still doesn't spend much time talking about the issues they consider most important. — But after Saturday night's televised forum …
Discussion:
QandO
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Jose Antonio Vargas / Washington Post:
Obama's Wide Web — From YouTube to Text Messaging, Candidate's Team Connects to Voters — Amid the cramped, crowded cubicles inside Sen. Barack Obama's campaign headquarters here, sandals are as ubiquitous as iPods. Two young guys in shorts and T-shirts throw a football around.
New York Magazine:
Heilemann: McCain's Pro-Choice V.P. Bluff — The alarm bells started ringing last week in the rightmost corners of Republican Nation, when John McCain suggested to The Weekly Standard that the door was still open to the possibility of his naming Tom Ridge as his running mate.
Discussion:
michellemalkin.com
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Elisabeth Bumiller / New York Times:
Talk of McCain's No. 2 Concerns Conservatives
Talk of McCain's No. 2 Concerns Conservatives
Discussion:
The New Republic, Hot Air, The Reaction, American Power, TRAIL BLAZERS, Jonathan Martin's Blogs, Chicago Tribune, Democratic Strategist, Deadline USA, The Washington Independent, Political Machine, Commentary, The Carpetbagger Report, Daily Kos, God-o-Meter, The Crypt's Blogs, marbury, TIME.com, www.redstate.com, Think Progress, Real Clear Politics, The Swamp, The Moderate Voice, Weekly Standard Blog, PoliticalBase.com Blog and Taylor Marsh
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Conservative Group Finds Networks Positive on Obama — It's no secret that Barack Obama has gotten awfully good coverage from the media in this campaign, and plenty of it. — Now the conservative Media Research Center says the imbalance is far greater than anyone imagined.
Ezra Klein / American Prospect:
BASHING SOROS. — Jesse makes fun of it here, but the Right's success in making “Soros-funded” an epithet has been startling, and the effects depressing. Soros himself is now cautious about who he funds, refusing to act as lead donor in controversial initiatives where his presence could endanger the project's credibility.
Jonathan Weisman / Washington Post:
Candidates' Abortion Views Not So Simple — The narrative of the presidential campaign appeared to be set on the issue of abortion: Sen. Barack Obama was the abortion-rights candidate who was reaching out to foes, seeking common ground and making inroads. Sen. John McCain was the abortion …
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