Chris Dodd on the Nomination Fight: "Bring this to a Close Within the Next Month"
Days Until Bush Leaves Office = 269
Ran across this interesting interview with Chris Dodd (apologies for the commercial at the beginning):
iPol: [EYE-pawl] - n. pseudo-English idiom ~ the Personal Pronoun, as applied to politics
Days Until Bush Leaves Office = 269
Ran across this interesting interview with Chris Dodd (apologies for the commercial at the beginning):
Posted by iPol at 10:25 PM 0 comments
Labels: Dodd
Days Until Bush Leaves Office = 269
A few quick glances askance going into the weekend.
Hillary Clinton's win in Pennsylvania on Tuesday is still being hotly debated: does this mark the beginning of the end for Barack Obama, or is it, despite the 10-point margin of victory for Hillary Clinton, her last hurrah on the way to the political wilderness? Charles Krauthammer of the Washington Post, among others, takes the former view, while Madison Powers of Congressional Quarterly sees Clinton limping out of the Keystone State "broke, bitter, and diminished in national stature."
Meanwhile, a new poll from Indiana, which is shaping up as the next battleground and goes to the polls on May 6, comes up a virtual tie with Obama at 48% and Clinton at 47%. AP notes, "A similar poll conducted March 31-April 2 found 49 percent support for Clinton, with Obama's support at 46 percent. The new poll asked which candidate had run the more negative campaign, with 48 percent saying Clinton, 23 percent Obama and 21 percent equal."
John McCain, meanwhile, continues coasting on the FreeRide Express. McCain's wink-and-nod plea to the North Carolina GOP not to run an anti-Obama ad is the presumptive nominee's latest "maverick" moment: he gets to promote himself as an above-the-fray statesman while at the same time raising the profile of the ad that he ostensibly opposes and that the NC GOP runs anyway. I'm beginning to wonder whether McCain is actually starting to buy into the damaged Democrats theme that been the flavor of the week in the mainstream media, and thinks as a result that his rise in the poll reflects something other than just seven weeks of nobody running against him. If so, here's a word of advice for Senator McCain: though it is dragging on longer than most expected, the Democratic nomination battle will end in plenty of time for the party to unify around its eventual candidate, and against you. When that happens, you will find yourself at the wrong end of the toughest campaign you've ever imagined. Enjoy the holiday while you may.
Posted by iPol at 9:25 AM 0 comments
Labels: Hillary Clinton, McCain, Obama