Poweroftruth’s Weblog

Obama is Leading, Yet Hillary Hints He should Be HER VP!!??

March 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment

 

What a Mental Case! Obama is Leading, Yet Hillary Hints He should Be HER VP!!??

http://evilbeetgossip.com/?attachment_id=3432
ABC News   |  Sunlen Miller   |   March 8, 2008 04:00 PM
Q: You’ve raised $55 million in February and in your speech today you said “I was against the war in ‘03, ‘04, ‘05 — all the way on through 2010, and you specifically mentioned Hillary Clinton and John McCain. Could you ever see yourself on the same ticket as Senator Clinton?
A: Well, you know, I think it’s premature. You won’t see me as a vice presidential candidate — you know, I’m running for president. We have won twice as many states as Senator Clinton, and have a higher popular vote, and I think we can maintain our delegate count — but you know, what I’m really focused on right now, because all that stuff is premature, is winning this nomination and changing the country. And I think that’s what people here are concerned about. How are you going to provide health care to every American? So I spend a lot of time talking about the plan I wanted to put in place that would not only lower costs for those who already have health insurance, but also make sure people who don’t have health insurance can get health care as good as the health care I have as a member of Congress. Those are the kinds of issues that really make a difference in people’s lives, and we’re going to keep on talking about them.

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Have the Clintons Outsmarted Themselves?

March 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Paul AbramsPaul Abrams

The Clinton campaigns (all of them) have masterfully used suggestion and innuendo to entice supporters and undermine opponents. For example, Bill Clinton began the primary campaign season saying that “he always told Hillary that she’d win the general election easily, but getting the nomination would be tough”.

What was the point? The voice of wisdom showing everyone how smart he was, that he understood everything that the rest of us, including his wife’s entire campaign staff, did not get? Was he not on the phone to donors talking about her “inevitability” at the same time? Her whole campaign was geared to February 5 and nothing beyond, suggesting the inevitability argument was persuasive.

What Bill was doing was telling people not to worry about the general election—about which everyone remains VERY worried—and that the challenge was the nomination, so that, if they supported her, they would overcome that problem (that, in their minds, did not exist), and that was her “last” major challenge.

Bill Clinton did NOT predict the Obama phenomenon. He was playing with peoples’ psyches, and abusing his status as the voice of wisdom in the party. Reverse psychology.

They now employ this tactic to suggest, not so subtly, that Obama can be on the ticket—just not at the top. Vote for Hillary, and Obama makes a great deal of sense, because they appeal to different constituencies, says Bill.

Ok, Bill, if Hillary would even entertain putting Obama on the ticket, does that not mean that she considers him to be able to take over on a moment’s notice? Every Presidential nominee, in both parties, has always said that the first criterion for a VP choice is “ready on day 1″.

Thus, Bill and Hillary, if you are entertaining putting Barack on the ticket, does that not mean you both agree that he passes muster on that criterion?

Or, are you just cynically trying to manipulate peoples’ psyches—again? I’m shocked, shocked!

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When Dirty Tricks Are Rewarded # 2

March 7, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Friday, March 7, 2008

Hillary Clinton’s empty rhetoric and deceit

It is becoming increasingly apparent to Democrats across the country that Hillary Clinton is engaged in a campaign to win the Democratic nomination at any cost, and that she cares not for the future of the party or the progressive movement, but only the fulfillment of her own ambition to become president.Clinton herself is deceiving and misleading voters, and engaging in the very same kind of behavior that she has unfairly condemned Barack Obama for.If you don’t know what I’m talking about, then please follow along in a quick rhetorical exercise of Then & Now. You’ll see what I mean.

All the text in bold that follows is my emphasis.

Then:

“Well, I think that if your candidacy is going to be about words, then they should be your own words. That’s, I think, a very simple proposition…And, you know, lifting whole passages from someone else’s speeches is not change you can believe in, it’s change you can Xerox.”- Hillary Clinton, February 21st, 2008 (Texas Democratic Debate)

Now:

“This is America. And we do believe you can be anything you want to be. And we want our sons and our daughters to dream big. I have big dreams for America’s future. The question is not whether we can fulfill those dreams; it’s whether we will. And here’s our answer: Yes, we will.”- Hillary Clinton, March 4th, 2008 (Ohio Victory Speech)

Then:

“Well, you know, these are the rules that are followed, and you know, I think that it will sort itself out. I’m not worried about that. We will have a nominee, and we will have a unified Democratic Party, and we will go on to victory in November…And, you know, no matter what happens in this contest — and I am honored, I am honored to be here with Barack Obama. I am absolutely honored.- Hillary Clinton, February 21st, 2008 (Texas Democratic Debate)

Now:

“I have a lifetime of experience I will bring to the White House. I know Senator McCain has a lifetime of experience he will bring to the White House…And Senator Obama has a speech he made in 2002.- Hillary Clinton, March 3rd, 2008 (to reporters)“I think that since we now know Sen. (John) McCain will be the nominee for the Republican Party, national security will be front and center in this election. We all know that. And I think it’s imperative that each of us be able to demonstrate we can cross the commander-in-chief threshold…I believe that I’ve done that. Certainly, Sen. McCain has done that and you’ll have to ask Sen. Obama with respect to his candidacy.- Hillary Clinton, March 6th, 2008 (to reporters)

Then:

“If you come to Ohio and you go give speeches that are very critical of NAFTA… and then we find out that your chief economic adviser has gone to a foreign government and basically done the old wink-wink – ‘Don’t pay any attention, this is just political rhetoric‘ — I think that raises serious questions.”Peering at the 50 or so reporters packed into a small hotel conference room here, she added: “I would ask you to look at this story and substitute my name for Sen. Obama’s name and see what you would do with this story…Just ask yourself [what you would do] if some of my advisers had been having private meetings with foreign governments.- Hillary Clinton, March 3rd, 2008, (to reporters)

Now:

The leak of a confidential diplomatic discussion that rocked the U.S. presidential campaign began with an offhand remark to journalists from the Prime Minister’s chief of staff, Ian Brodie.[...]Mr. Brodie, apparently seeking to play down the potential impact on Canada, told the reporters the threat was not serious, and that someone from Ms. Clinton’s campaign had even contacted Canadian diplomats to tell them not to worry because the NAFTA threats were mostly political posturing.

- Globe and Mail, March 5th, 2008The Canadian government contacted Goolsby [the Obama aide] to clarify Obama’s position on trade, not the reverse. Although Goolsby did meet with Canada’s Chicago consul general George Rioux (not, as was reported in the original leak, Ambassador Michael Wilson), there’s no evidence that he ever described Obama’s position as mere political posturing.Instead, Goolsby responded to Canadian questions by clarifying that Obama wasn’t pushing to scrap the agreement entirely, but that labor and environmental safeguards were important to him.

The memo was simply inaccurate, as even the Harper government now acknowledges after a firestorm of criticism by opposition parliament members, calling the leak ‘blatantly unfair,’ and saying ‘there was no intention to convey, in any way, that Senator Obama and his campaign team were taking a different position in public from views expressed in private, including about NAFTA.’

- Paul Rogat Loeb, March 6th, 2008 (The Smirking Chimp)

Then:

“We haven’t ruled out rerunning these contests,” said Harold Ickes, a top adviser to Mrs. Clinton and her chief delegate hunter.“We’ve said we think it should be settled. We believe some configuration could be devised that each party is not happy with but each party is willing to accept.- New York Times, March 6th, 2008 (published in March 7th edition)

Now:

“I would not accept a caucus…I don’t think that there should be any do-over or any kind of a second run in Florida. I think Florida should be seated.”- Hillary Clinton, March 6th, 2008 (U.S. News & World Report)

See the pattern? It’s pretty simple: the Clinton campaign is blatantly contradicting itself and failing to practice what it preaches. In short, Hillary Clinton is fueling her campaign with empty rhetoric, deceit, and mean spiritedness (of which there are nearly endless examples, plenty coming from her surrogates, especially Communications Director Howard Wolfson).She chastises Obama for her own campaign’s behavior. She puts herself and John Dubya McCain on an equal footing while insulting Barack Obama, despite having previously talked about the importance of unity in the Democratic Party.Unity? Hillary Clinton’s campaign could care less about unity. All Hillary Clinton’s campaign cares about is Hillary Clinton. And that’s reason enough for any Democrat to decline to support her candidacy in the primary.

Hillary Clinton’s campaign has become so divisive and unfair that her behavior was described by Keith Olbermann on last night’s Countdown telecast as “nuts”.

We already get empty rhetoric and deceit delivered to us by the truckload every day and every week from the Republican Party. It’s bad enough that Democrats in Congress can’t stand up to the administration. It’s appalling and disgusting that Hillary Clinton is bloodying the Democratic presidential contest to selfishly put herself ahead at not only her competitor’s expense, but that of her party’s.

Source:Northwest Progressive Institute Official Blog

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When Dirty Tricks Are Rewarded

March 6, 2008 · Leave a Comment

 

When Dirty Tricks Are Rewarded
There is a perception
 by some that
most people
 are intelligent
enough to tell the difference between fear mongering, lies, deception etc.
However,the outcome of Ohio and Texas showed me that most Americans are easily manipulated. This is not to say that there weren’t substantial amounts who were truly thinking for themselves and understood what Hillary was doing.
But there seems to be a truly amazing loss of analytical ability and honor for truth in this nation.
Here’s some of what they looked over when they elected Hillary to take over this nation:
Signs She Will Say and Do Anything To Be President:
Hillary said she’d NOT meet with our “enemies” and belittled Barack over it, implying he’s naive (stupid) for stating he would.
Weeks later she was asked essentially the same question by MSNBC’s  Keith Olbermann and stated emphatically “absolutely” and promptly parroted Obamas reasons why she would.~ LIAR?
Nukes or no nukes. On ‘Meet the Press’ there was a clip of her saying she would not “engage in hypothetical’s”(meaning she would NOT say if she would use nuclear weapons)The host apparently showed her In a clip from the Bloomberg channel where she empathetically  states that “NUKES ARE OFF THE TABLE” ~LIAR?
Her network CNN (Clinton News Network) staff asks an audience member (Maria Parra-Sandoval, 22, a senior political science major at the University of Nevada) to give a softer question “diamonds or pearls” instead of a more serious question about the Yucca Mountain nuclear repository.
~DECEPTIVE? TRICKING THE PUBLIC for a warm feel good moment for a falsely positive last impression?
She takes federal lobbyist monies (while Obama doesn’t) and when asked if she would continue taking the monies, she said “yes I will” will no shame! Yet she tells people in her rally’s she’s against lobbyists and will stop the power they have in Washington! $$HRC$$ is bought and will owe them. Meaning she will be forced to do their bidding against the interests of the American people. ~LIAR?
Earlier in her campaign she said wanted to” turn the heat up on the republicans”. This let’s you know her mentality once she’d get into office. Confrontations over negations have been rewarded with gridlock against laws that favor the American people as well as creates a smokescreen to sellout to the lobbyists while claiming “gridlock.”
~LIAR?
Her husband tried to make Obama a ‘for blacks only’ president to turn off White voters while she continued to defend Bill on his assaults against Obama.
~LIARS? DECIEVERS? Divide and conquer?
Hillary attempted to call Obama a plagiarist for using several phrases a member of his campaign suggested he use.
~LIAR?
Hillary’s chief advisor Mark Penn attempted to ghettoize him with reflections of Obamas drug use (that he admitted to in his first book in the 1990’s) as a young man. She didn’t demote or fire him.
~DECIEVER? ANOTHER ATTEMPT DEVIDE AND CONQUER?
She continues to say Obamas Universal Healthcare plan leaves out 15 million no matter how often he tells her in detail how it does not! ~LIAR?
She claims to have observed enough of the workings of the White House of nearly 10 + years ago as if EVERYTHING is still the same. ~SELF DECIET?
She speaks how she visited around 80 countries. By boasting of such, she acts as if every leader she visited is still alive and in power as well as the countries she visited (again around 10+ years ago) are in the same political and social condition. ~SELF DECIET?
She refuses to stop claiming Obama was fully aware of a meeting with a staff member in Canada. Even when the Canadian government stated clearly that Obama did not say one thing about his position contradicting his on air position on his 20th debate with Hillary regarding NAFTA (the North American Free Trade Agreement). ~LIAR?
Why are some people willing to excuse this evil as “politics”?
We shouldn’t expect those who ‘represent’ us to be lairs, deceivers, dividers!
If there’s more stuff I’ve missed, I’m sorry. I’d love to have you fill in whatever I left out!

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Hillary Should Get Out Now

February 26, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Hillary Should Get Out Now

Clinton has only one shot—for Obama to trip up so badly that he disqualifies himself.

By Jonathan Alter 

Newsweek.com

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Hillary’s Donors Drying Up?!

February 23, 2008 · 1 Comment

Donors rail against Hillary Clinton’s spending

By Alex Spillius in Austin, Texas

Last Updated: 1:52am GMT 23/02/2008

Hillary Clinton’s faltering White House campaign spent £2.5 million on consultants, £50,000 on party food in Iowa and £12,500 on rooms at a luxury hotel last month, according to an internal financial report.

Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton during a televised debate————————————————————————–
 
As the debate came to an end, Hillary Clinton said she was ‘honoured to be here with Barack Obama’, and shook his hand—————————————-

Her lavish spending has prompted complaints of mismanagement and flawed priorities from campaign insiders and donors, while a leading Democratic strategist said she had run a “Ritz-Carlton” campaign.

Cash shortages forced Mrs Clinton to lend her campaign £2.5 million earlier this month, while her campaign manager stepped down after failing to keep a close enough eye on spending. The campaign’s financial woes have helped Barack Obama take a seemingly insurmountable lead in the race for the nomination.

Mrs Clinton’s strategists and media advisers have come in for particular criticism. The firm of Mark Penn, her pollster and image guru, was paid £1.9 million in January and has received a total of £5 million for consulting, direct mail and other services.

Howard Wolfson, Mrs Clinton’s communications director, was paid £135,000 last month and has raked in £390,000 so far. Mandy Grunwald, an aide since Bill Clinton’s presidency, has collected £1.2 million in fees and expenses.

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Mr Wolfson said: “Fees and payments are in line with industry standards. Spending priorities have been consistent with overall strategic goals.”

Observers agree that the campaign made two major errors: spending too much at the top and not enough on the ground, and presuming Mrs Clinton would wrap up the nomination on Feb 5, when 24 states voted.

When the contest continued, there was little money and no plan for ensuing states. Mr Obama, meanwhile, carried on raising £500,000 a day, most of it from a network of small contributors he had cultivated over recent months and which grew with his crucial victory in Iowa on Jan 3.

Joe Trippi, an adviser to John Edwards, who dropped out of the race after Super Tuesday, said: “Hillary ran a campaign like they were staying at the Ritz-Carlton. Everything had to be the best, the best décor; the biggest plane.”

Furthermore, Mrs Clinton relied too heavily on a network of donors built up over the years with Mr Clinton. Under new rules, each can give a maximum of only £2,300.

 

Having spent £54 million, her campaign is struggling to keep pace with Mr Obama. His financial advantage allowed him to spend more than her in every state that has voted since Super Tuesday – and he has won them all.

Mrs Clinton had hoped to claw back some ground at a debate on Thursday night in Austin, Texas, which votes on March 4. But she failed to lay a blow on a well-rehearsed Mr Obama, and at the end struck an almost valedictory note.

“You know, whatever happens, we’re going to be fine. I just hope that we’ll be able to say the same thing about the American people. And that’s what this election should be about,” she said.

She will fight on, but for how much longer is not clear.

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How Much Damage Will Clinton Do Before She Folds?

February 22, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Posted February 21, 2008 |

The Huffington Post

February 22, 2008

In the wake of ten straight losses, Clinton’s going to need some miracles to win, and Mike Huckabee’s already ahead of her in line for divine intervention. But the question is how much damage she’ll do to Obama and the Democratic chances before she quits.

If the fight goes to the convention, we know the answer: Unless she totally routs Obama in Texas, Ohio and Pennsylvania, her sole remaining path to the nomination depends on convincing the superdelegates to overturn the will of the voters, and convincing the credentials committee to honor the problematic Michigan and Florida elections. So she’ll have to practically destroy the party to save it, or more accurately to save herself. Assuming a possible breaking sex scandal doesn’t bring down McCain, he already beats Clinton by 12 points in the latest poll, while Obama defeats him by 7. If the young voters, independents, and African Americans who Obama’s enlisted in droves stay home in disgust come November, Clinton’s chances would be slim to none.

But she still can do real damage to Obama with her negative attacks in the remaining primaries, particularly in swing states like Ohio. Recent match-ups show Obama a solid victor in states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, Virginia, and Oregon, and dead even in Ohio, while Clinton goes down to defeat in all of them. But depending on how negative she gets and how long the primary battle continues, she could cost the Democrats the election by forcing Obama to spend his time responding to an endless succession of petty attacks, and by giving the Republicans ready-made talking points, like Hillary’s comment that only “one of us is ready to be commander in chief.”

The potential damage is magnified if you count Clinton’s surrogates. At the Youngstown, Ohio rally following Clinton’s Wisconsin defeat, International Association of Machinists President Tom Buffenbarger called Obama supporters “latte-drinking, Prius-driving, Birkenstock-wearing, trust fund babies.” That’s despicable rhetoric, echoing the worst Limbaugh/Fox myths about limousine liberals, while it dismisses the majority of union members who just backed Obama in the Wisconsin and Virginia primaries, or the members of unions like SEIU, The Teamsters, and the United Food and Commercial Workers, who just endorsed him. It also happens to totally steal its language from the sleazy “latte-drinking, sushi-eating, Volvo-driving, New York Times-reading” anti-Howard Dean ads of the right-wing Club For Growth, that helped give us the disastrous candidacy of John Kerry.

If repeated enough, though, those myths have the potential to stick. Clinton supporters have just created a new “527″ political committee, which while technically independent and issue-oriented, is explicitly designed to allow Hillary supporters to evade the standard $2300 donation limits. The group aims to get contributions of $100,000 or more from as many as 100 Hillary donors, so they can pour $10 million in ads into the next round of critical races. Whether or not this is legal, and that’s arguable, no other candidate has done anything remotely similar in this election. And since the ads have no checks of accountability, they’ll be as nasty as their backers decide.

Between Clinton’s actions and those of her surrogates, they might just stigmatize Obama so much that some of her supporters stay home in November, instead of voting for him. They’ll also encourage Republicans and independents who’ve been crossing over to support Obama do the same, or even vote for McCain despite his embrace of Bush’s disastrous policies. I think Obama will still win, so long as his supporters do everything possible to make that happen. But Hillary’s attacks will plant the seeds of doubts. And these will diminish the magnitude of Obama’s likely victory just enough to make far harder for him to pass the major changes we need.

Clinton’s attacks could also make a difference in down-ticket races. Right now, Obama mobilizes huge new constituencies that could elect a wave of new Democratic Senators, Congressional representatives, governors and legislators. But if Clinton manages to damage his appeal sufficiently, he will become far less of an asset even if he still wins. Plus the longer she remains in the race, the more he has to spend money responding to petty attack ads like one in Wisconsin where she accused him of avoiding debates, although he’d already participated in 18 and had two more coming up. It also means, as Tom Edsdall has pointed out, that the Democratic National Committee risks getting so starved of cash because it’s all getting diverted to the nomination fights, that the DNC can’t develop the critical grassroots infrastructure to implement its 50-state strategy.

Hillary may give up if she fares poorly in Ohio and Texas. Bill intimated recently that she had to win both or she was likely done. But she’s talked of fighting all the way to the convention, as have her key strategists, so it’s at least possible that she could keep the race in limbo until less than 10 weeks before the November election, making it far harder for Obama to focus on defeating McCain.

One solution, ironically, could come from the superdelegates. They were established originally as a conservative force in the Democratic Party, a bulwark against grassroots insurgencies like McGovern. In 1984, they actually handed the nomination to Walter Mondale, for his disastrous candidacy, despite Gary Hart’s lead in elected delegates. But they also have an ostensible mandate to consider the Party’s greater good, and if they acted in this fashion, they could play a key constructive role.

Suppose a critical mass of superdelegates did what 400,000 petition-signers asked them to do in a MoveOn/Democracy for America ad that just ran in USA Today — and pledged to honor the will of the voters? Suppose they announced in advance that they’d support whichever candidate had more elected delegates going into the late August convention? Suppose they also came up with a joint solution to the Michigan and Florida mess, where these states lost their delegates by violating a Democratic Party agreement on when states could hold their primaries? It would be a travesty to validate their sham elections given that the candidates couldn’t even campaign in Florida, that Obama and Edwards had pulled their names from Michigan ballot, and that Clinton herself told New Hampshire Public Radio that her staying on the Michigan ballot was irrelevant because Michigan’s vote “is not going to count for anything.”

But what if the superdelegates acted now, to make clear that they will not validate those two elections as they stand, and that they’ll encourage their colleagues on the Credentials Committee to do the same? As an alternative, they could urge those two states to do what the DNC has already suggested, and rerun their elections as caucuses. Yes, this would cost some money and effort, but if the experience of the states that have held them is any guide, it would also offer a major chance for the party to mobilize and engage new supporters, and it would bring participants together in a way that reminded them of the values they shared in common. If the two state parties, both dominated by Clinton supporters, still refused to go along, the superdelegates could also offer the alternative of simply seating Clinton-Obama delegates 50-50, to make it a dead wash. But they need to make clear that Clinton won’t be able to pull out a last-minute victory by gaming the rules.

Facing a relatively united bloc of precisely those superdelegates that Clinton still hopes to win, I suspect she’d be far more likely to quit, and do far less damage while still in the race. Key party elders like Al Gore and Nancy Pelosi are already working to ensure a convention process that pulls the Party together, rather than splitting it apart. They and others might play an additional role by speaking out against destructive negative campaigning (whether by Clinton or her surrogates), and making clear that if this goes too far, she will lose their support.

Were Hillary running less of a scorched-earth campaign, it could continue onto the convention without major damage. But she’s pursued this approach from the moment Obama emerged as a serious challenger, and seems only to be reaffirming it more in recent weeks. That means that if Democrats really want to avoid a divisive fight, they’d do well to unite around Obama now. He just got the endorsement of the 6-million member Change to Win Coalition (and individual member unions like SEIU, the United Food and Commercial Workers, UNITE/HERE, and the Teamsters). The United Steel Workers, a national social justice leader, initially endorsed John Edwards, and will make a decision at their next board meeting. It’s time for the other major industrial unions and progressive organizations to commit too, or to reconsider their earlier support for Clinton.

That’s also true of prominent individuals, like Edwards. In fact, I originally supported him, and gave him more money than I ever had to any previous candidate. But it’s now well overdue for him to encourage his supporters to back the legitimate inheritor of his quest for change. Maybe Clinton will still make an improbable comeback, but the longer she keeps campaigning, the more attacks and divisiveness we’ll see. The more party leaders speak out to prevent this from happening, the less risk that she’ll create lasting damage in her desperation to hold onto a prize that’s now almost certainly slipped away.

Paul Rogat Loeb is the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen’s Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, named the #3 political book of 2004 by the History Channel and the American Book Association. His previous books include Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time. See www.paulloeb.org To receive his articles directly email sympa@lists.onenw.org with the subject line: subscribe paulloeb-articles

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Hillary Gets Free Attack Ads Without Protest

February 22, 2008 · Leave a Comment

February 21, 2008
Hillary Gets Free Attack Ads Without Protest
Posted: 11:55 AM ET
A new Obama fundraising e-mail  sent by campaign manager David Plouffe. David Plouffe
A new Obama fundraising e-mail sent by campaign manager David Plouffe.

(CNN) – Barack Obama’s campaign is using reports of a pro-Hillary Clinton group airing television ads on her behalf in its own fundraising appeals, sending supporters a plea for donations that points to actions by “Swift Boat-style groups and smear campaigns.”

“News broke yesterday that a few wealthy Clinton supporters are gearing up for a massive spending campaign to boost her chances in the big upcoming contests in Texas and Ohio on March 4th,” wrote David Plouffe in the Thursday e-mail message.

“The so-called ‘American Leadership Project’ will take unlimited contributions from individuals and is organized the same way as the infamous Swift Boat Veterans for Truth,” he added.

Yesterday, the Obama campaign sent out a statement that used the same comparison – a characterization Jason Kinney, an organizer of the group, called “heavy-handed and hypocritical.”

ALP, which includes veterans of the Clinton administration and longtime supporters, is a “527” group, which means it is not bound by federal campaign finance laws as long as it does not directly advocate on behalf of a particular candidate.

Their new ad praises Clinton and seems to criticize Obama, though the ad released Wednesday does not mention the Illinois senator by name.

original itle:Obama campaign fundraises over pro-Clinton ad

–CNN Associate Political Editor Rebecca Sinderbrand

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Blinkless CNN Debate Coverage

February 21, 2008 · 1 Comment


Feb. 20, 2008, 11:29PM
Blinkless debate coverage
CNN has horde of cameras to note each nuance from Clinton or Obama

CNN will have 10 cameras to catch every word, twitch, smile, laugh, glare or grimace from Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama — and, for good measure, anything noteworthy that crops up from the audience — during tonight’s Democratic presidential debate in Austin.Alec Miran, senior executive producer of special events for CNN, has worked six of CNN’s eight debates during the primary season and has been working live political events since the 1984 campaign season. So while he’s looking to capture the obvious, he’s looking for unusual touches as well.

“There are moments you don’t want to miss,” Miran said. “At our last debate in Los Angeles, Wolf Blitzer asked Obama and Clinton if they would consider being a joint ticket, and Stevie Wonder, in the second row, jumped out of his seat.

“It’s like one of those moments at a baseball game where the ball takes a weird bounce and goes someplace you’re not anticipating. Sometimes, shooting a debate is about what one person is saying, and sometimes it’s about how the other person is reacting.”

Miran will have two handheld cameras to track the interaction between the candidates, plus two cameras on cranes and a ceiling camera to capture the ambience of the audience at the University of Texas’ Recreational Sports Center.

CNN’s Campbell Brown will moderate, and questions will be posed by CNN chief national correspondent John King and Univision news anchor Jorge Ramos, who will ask questions in English and Spanish.

John KingJorge Ramos

CNN’s coverage of the Jan. 31 Democratic debate in Los Angeles drew 8.3 million viewers, a record audience for a primary debate on cable.

The previous record was 4.9 million for the Jan. 21 Democratic debate in South Carolina. The top-rated Republican debate drew 4.48 million viewers on Nov. 28 on CNN.

The Texas debate will air from 7-8:30 p.m. on CNN and CNN International and also will air in Spanish on KXLN (Channel 45) beginning at 10:30 p.m.

Univision is soliciting questions for Ramos to ask via its Web site at Univision.com and also will air the debate on KLTN-FM (102.9) at 10:30 p.m.

david.barron@chron.com

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Why Obama’s Wisconsin win is especially telling

February 21, 2008 · Leave a Comment

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/washington/
Not so long ago — like, earlier this month — one of the dismissive talking points that the Hillary Clinton camp pressed against Barack Obama was that he was winning nominating contests in states the Democratic presidential ticket won’t have a prayer of carrying in November: North Dakota, Idaho, Utah, Alaska, Nebraska.Those triumphs, the case went, offered no clue as to whether he would be a candidate capable of putting together a winning electoral college majority later this year.

As Obama’s winning streak has stretched to 10, that argument has subsided. And Obama’s sweeping victory in Wisconsin should bury it once and for all.

As a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel story astutely notes, the win “came in a 50/50 battleground … that is a virtual must-win for Democrats in November.”

How tight have the recent presidential elections been in the Badger State?

Al Gore carried it over …

George Bush in 2000 by about 0.2 of a percentage point.

 John Kerry slightly improved that margin in 2004, winning it against Bush by about 0.4 of a percentage point — making it the most closely contested state in that year’s race.

In winning Tuesday’s primary by 17 percentage points, Obama dominated Clinton among various demographic groups; exit polling showed he won men by more than 2 to 1 (while running even among women) and carried independents by about 30 points.

That latter statistic, in particular, should put to rest any dispute about which of the Democrats would be best equipped to hold Wisconsin for the party in the general election.

– Don Frederick

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