Top Items:
Jessica Van Sack / Boston Herald:
Poll shocker: Scott Brown surges ahead in Senate race — + Recent Articles + Recent Blog Entries + Email + Bio — Riding a wave of opposition to Democratic health-care reform, GOP upstart Scott Brown is leading in the U.S. Senate race, raising the odds of a historic upset that would reverberate …
Discussion:
Steve Kornacki, Commentary, The Strata-Sphere, Another Black Conservative, Outside The Beltway, Boston Globe, Townhall.com, Power Line, Taylor Marsh, RedState, Fox News, Pajamas Media, The Confluence, Scared Monkeys, No More Mister Nice Blog, Ruby Slippers, The Lonely Conservative, The Note, Politics Daily, PoliBlog, NO QUARTER, Washington Wire, The Natural Truth, Ben Smith's Blog, Sister Toldjah, Gateway Pundit, Blue Mass. Group, The Jawa Report, Michelle Malkin, Hot Air, The Daily Caller, National Review Online, Left Coast Rebel, No Sheeples Here, race42008.com, The Corner on National …, Riehl World View and TPMDC
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Byron York / Washington Examiner:
Massachusetts: ‘Bottom has fallen out’ of Coakley's polls; Dems prepare to explain defeat, protect Obama — Here in Massachusetts, as well as in Washington, a growing sense of gloom is setting in among Democrats about the fortunes of Democratic Senate candidate Martha Coakley.
Discussion:
Boston Herald, Power Line, Moonbattery, Jules Crittenden, JammieWearingFool, Althouse, Gateway Pundit, No Sheeples Here, Weasel Zippers and Hit & Run
Mickey Kaus / Kausfiles:
How Health Care Reform Could Crash — Poll watcher Sean Trende (if that really is his name) thinks Massachusetts GOP challenger Scott Brown may have peaked too soon. Hmm. Doesn't necessarily look like it. .... Mark Blumenthal has some guidance for reading and reconciling all the Mass. polls …
Nate Silver / FiveThirtyEight:
OK, It's a Toss-Up — Earlier today I tweeted about how there wasn't enough evidence to describe the Massachusetts special election as a “toss-up”, as some other forecasters have done, based on the information available to us at that time. — Well, now there's some new evidence.
Brian McGrory / Boston Globe:
Race is in a spinout — Martha Coakley made a jaw-dropping declaration earlier this week at the only live televised debate in Boston that she has deigned to do. She said, and I quote, “I've traveled the state and met tremendous people.” — If she did, it was under the cover of darkness, with an assumed name.
Washington Post:
White House nears deal on health care — Gripped by a building sense that its window of opportunity could be closing, the White House on Thursday broke the last major logjam blocking enactment of far-reaching health-care legislation, cutting a deal with organized labor on how to tax high-cost insurance policies.
Red Mass Group:
Coakley: “You can have religious freedom but you probably shouldn't work in the emergency room” — Last evening, while on Broadside with Jim Braude, I told Jim that Scott Brown was trying to prevent Nuns like the Sisters of Charity that taught me from performing medical procedures contrary to their religious beliefs.
Roger L Simon / Pajamas Media:
Massachusetts shocker: Brown Up 15% in Pajamas Media/CrossTarget Poll — A new poll taken Thursday evening for Pajamas Media by CrossTarget - an Alexandria VA survey research firm - shows Scott Brown, a Republican, leading Martha Coakley, a Democrat, by 15.4% in Tuesday's special election for the open Massachusetts US Senate seat.
Michael Cooper / New York Times:
3rd-Party Candidate Named Kennedy Could Tip Senate Race in Massachusetts
3rd-Party Candidate Named Kennedy Could Tip Senate Race in Massachusetts
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, Boston Herald, The Note, Boston Globe, Bloomberg, The Caucus, The Fix, Political Punch and The Hill
Glen Johnson / Associated Press:
Mass. Senate poll shows shift toward GOP candidate
Mass. Senate poll shows shift toward GOP candidate
Discussion:
Scorecard's Blog, AMERICAblog News, PostPartisan, Hotline On Call, Washington Post, Associated Press and Gateway Pundit
Jessica Taylor / The Politico:
Suffolk poll: Brown up by 4
Suffolk poll: Brown up by 4
Discussion:
Boston Herald, The Other McCain, AmSpecBlog, CNN, The Daily Caller, Hot Air, Weasel Zippers and The Political Carnival
David Axelrod / Washington Post:
What Karl Rove got wrong on the U.S. deficit — For its Topic A feature last Sunday, The Post invited a panel of political operatives to offer their advice to the Democratic Party on strategy for 2010 [Sunday Opinion, Jan. 10]. Improbably, one of the operatives asked was Karl Rove …
Amanda Terkel / Think Progress:
Limbaugh stands by his Haiti remarks, tells critical caller she's a ‘bigot’ with ‘tampons in her ears.’ — Yesterday, hate radio host Rush Limbaugh controversially said that President Obama was going to try to use the devastating Haitian earthquake to boost his credibility with the …
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Jason Horowitz / Washington Post:
Former Tennessee congressman Harold Ford Jr. — Harold Ford Jr. has gone viral. — “You can judge from the editorials in the city, and just the response in the city and in the state that people don't want party bosses telling anyone that you can't run,” Ford said in a phone interview between meetings …
Discussion:
Ben Smith's Blog
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The Politico:
‘Very angry’ Dem sounds alarm — Democrats moved closer to a final deal on health care reform Thursday — and for some vulnerable members, the end can't come soon enough. — In an emotional talk with other Democrats on the Ways and Means Committee this week, North Dakota Rep. Earl Pomeroy …
Charles Krauthammer / Washington Post:
One year out: President Obama's fall — What went wrong? A year ago, he was king of the world. Now President Obama's approval rating, according to CBS, has dropped to 46 percent — and his disapproval rating is the highest ever recorded by Gallup at the beginning of an (elected) president's second year.
Laura Myers / Las Vegas Review-Journal:
Black activists sing Reid's praises — Senator's re-election event scheduled before brouhaha over ‘Negro dialect’ comment — It felt more like a religious revival than a political rally, with shouts of “Amen” filling the air. A choir of third-graders raised their voices in song before a Baptist preacher led a prayer.
Myglesias / Matthew Yglesias:
Health Care Paranoia — Obviously, the excise tax deal by which collectively bargaining health benefits get a special two-year exemption from the tax is a bit of a grubby interest-group compromise. Igor Volsky offers a case on the merits, but I think it's clear enough that the merits weren't the driving consideration here.
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Dorothy Rabinowitz / Wall Street Journal:
Martha Coakley's Convictions — The role played by the U.S. Senate candidate in a notorious sex case raises questions about her judgment. — The story of the Amiraults of Massachusetts, and of the prosecution that had turned the lives of this thriving American family to dust, was well known to the world by the year 2001.
Discussion:
The Natural Truth, Michelle Malkin, Riehl World View, NO QUARTER, Betsy's Page, The Lonely Conservative and RedState
Paul Krugman / New York Times:
Bankers Without a Clue — The official Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission — the group that aims to hold a modern version of the Pecora hearings of the 1930s, whose investigations set the stage for New Deal bank regulation — began taking testimony on Wednesday.
Kathryn Jean Lopez / The Corner on National …:
Testing the Waters: Santorum Makes It Official — By: Kathryn Jean Lopez — In a letter that went in the mail yesterday to his PAC, the America's Foundation, Rick Santorum talks about his concerns about Barack Obama's first year of “Change we can't afford.”
Discussion:
The Awl
Jon Walker / Firedoglake:
Exclusive: Arkansas Democrat Vic Snyder Trailing Tim Griffin 39% to 56%; Individual Mandate Penalty Unpopular with 3 of 4 Voters — FDL/SurveyUSA poll, 1/11-1/13, likely voters, Margin of Sampling Error: ± 3.9% … In a new SurveryUSA poll sponsored by Firedoglake …
Ian Swanson / The Hill:
White House budget director blames old computers for ineffective government — A big reason why the government is inefficient and ineffective is because Washington has outdated technology, with federal workers having better computers at home than in the office.