Top Items:
Susan Page / USA Today:
Swing States poll: A shift by women puts Obama in lead — MILWAUKEE - President Obama has opened the first significant lead of the 2012 campaign in the nation's dozen top battleground states, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds, boosted by a huge shift of women to his side.
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ThinkProgress, American Prospect, Washington Monthly, Politico, Washington Post, Hullabaloo, The Raw Story, Hot Air, Outside the Beltway, No More Mister Nice Blog, FITSNews, americanthinker.com, Zandar Versus The Stupid, Ballot Box, Taylor Marsh, ABCNEWS, MiamiHerald.com, BuzzFeed, Prairie Weather, The Moderate Voice, American Spectator, Newshoggers.com, Little Green Footballs, The Reaction, Conservatives4Palin and The Spectacle Blog
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Lois Romano / Politico:
Ann Romney is the Romney Democrats fear most — Ann Romney's unexpected rock star status has the political arena buzzing about how her husband's campaign will leverage her popularity in an election in which Michelle Obama — one of the most admired first ladies in history — will have an outsized and substantive portfolio.
Discussion:
CNN
Jeffrey M. Jones / Gallup:
Obama 49%, Romney 45% Among Registered Voters Nationwide — Obama, Romney supporters equally enthusiastic about voting — PRINCETON, NJ — If asked to choose between them today, 49% of U.S. registered voters say they would vote for Barack Obama for president, while 45% would choose likely Republican opponent Mitt Romney.
Discussion:
Politico, Guardian, The Spectacle Blog, The Maddow Blog, FiveThirtyEight and The PJ Tatler
Christian Heinze / GOP 12:
Swing state poll makes key omissions — USA Today released a seemingly-rough poll for Mitt Romney over the weekend, but it's not nearly as lopsided as it first appears. — The substance: Barack Obama has jumped to a 9% lead over Romney, overall, in swing states (Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico …
Discussion:
Hot Air and The Raw Story
Justin Sink / The Hill:
‘Mad Men’ character knocks Mitt Romney's father as ‘a clown’ — Sunday's episode of “Mad Men” — the popular drama about an ad agency in the 1960s — gave a nod to the current political scene, with one character taking a not-so-subtle jab at the father of 2012 Republican front-runner Mitt Romney.
Discussion:
CNN
Paul Krugman / New York Times:
Pink Slime Economics — The big bad event of last week was, of course, the Supreme Court hearing on health reform. In the course of that hearing it became clear that several of the justices, and possibly a majority, are political creatures pure and simple, willing to embrace any argument …
Discussion:
The Hill, The Huffington Post, Paul Krugman, Suburban Guerrilla, Daily Kos, Washington Wire and Prairie Weather
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E.J. Dionne Jr / Washington Post:
The right's stealthy coup — Right before our eyes, American conservatism is becoming something very different from what it once was. Yet this transformation is happening by stealth because moderates are too afraid to acknowledge what all their senses tell them.
Discussion:
The Mahablog
Jake Tapper / ABCNEWS:
Former President Clinton on Mitt Romney: Etch-a-Sketch “Is What He's Got to Do” — Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, currently faces a dynamic similar to the one President Bill Clinton faced during his first presidential run 20 years ago: a long, bruising primary, driving up his unfavorable ratings.
Discussion:
Politico, Yahoo! News, CNN and Taegan Goddard's …
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Christian Heinze / GOP 12:
Clinton: Flip-flops will doom Romney
Jonathan Easley / The Hill:
Rep. Clyburn: Obama should campaign against Supreme Court if health law falls — Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.) said President Obama should campaign against the Supreme Court, painting it as a conservative, activist institution if it rules that the administration's healthcare law is unconstitutional.
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Alexander Bolton / The Hill:
Obama extends olive branch to Cantor after passage of jobs bill — President Obama has extended an olive branch to Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) and invited him to the White House this week to attend a signing ceremony for bipartisan jobs legislation.
Discussion:
Prairie Weather
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Greg Sargent / Washington Post:
Obama allies launch ad campaign hitting back over gas prices
Obama allies launch ad campaign hitting back over gas prices
Discussion:
American Prospect
Andrew Restuccia / The Hill:
Facing voter anger at home, lawmakers play gas prices blame game
Facing voter anger at home, lawmakers play gas prices blame game
Discussion:
ThinkProgress and The Heritage Foundation
Washington Examiner:
Spike Lee puts the ‘twit’ in Twitter — Just when you thought the controversy over the Trayvon Martin shooting couldn't get any worse, it got worse. Or, more accurately, several parties helped make it worse. — Enter Marcus Davonne Higgins, a Los Angeles man no one's probably ever heard of …
Ylan Q. Mui / Washington Post:
Senior citizens continue to bear burden of student loans — New research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York shows that Americans 60 and older still owe about $36 billion in student loans, providing a rare window into the dynamics of student debt. More than 10 percent of those loans are delinquent.
Discussion:
US Politics and Via Meadia
Howard Kurtz / The Daily Beast:
Keith Olbermann's Angry Email Trail Traces Breakup With Current TV — His bitter divorce from Al Gore's network followed months of escalating complaints to Current TV executives. Howard Kurtz unearths the acrimonious correspondence. — It was a terrible marriage from the beginning.
Discussion:
The Daily Caller, New York Times, The Other McCain, Poynter, New York Magazine, Betsy's Page and The Sideshow, more at Mediagazer »
Alicia M. Cohn / The Hill:
Nikki Haley would say ‘thank you, but no’ if offered VP slot — South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley closed the door on the possibility of being the GOP's vice presidential pick this year. — “I'd say, ‘Thank you, but no’ [if asked],” Haley told ABC News in an interview airing Tuesday on “Nightline.”
Discussion:
ABCNEWS, Taegan Goddard's … and CNN
Steven Lee Myers / New York Times:
At Summit, Nations Move to Increase Aid for Syrian Rebels — ISTANBUL — The United States and more than 60 other countries moved closer on Sunday to direct intervention in the fighting in Syria, with Arab nations pledging $100 million to pay opposition fighters and the United States agreeing …
Discussion:
ABCNEWS, americanthinker.com, Campaign 2012, LewRockwell.com Blog and Michael J. Totten's blog
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