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February 29, 2008

As debates end, we're going to miss this gang - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-trailtop29feb29,1,2639028.s...
They've been the political equivalent of a long-running road show -- 20 debates, starting last spring, among the Democratic presidential candidates, and 16 featuring the Republican contenders. But the GOP players appear to have ended their engagements, and Tuesday's results in Ohio and Texas could bring down the curtain for the Democrats. Here's what we've learned.

Democrats compete to outbash NAFTA - The Boston Globe

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/02/29/democrats_compete_to_outba...
Cranking up their populist rhetoric, Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are outbidding each other as they attack NAFTA before their showdown in Ohio's Democratic presidential primary Tuesday. Both have threatened to withdraw from the 14-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement if Mexico and Canada refuse to negotiate changes, and both have ramped up their criticism of trade with China, saying investors in the global economy have profited at the expense of American workers. The reason American trade policy has suddenly moved to the center of the Democratic contest is clear - it plays in Ohio and other Midwestern states, where many voters blame NAFTA and other trade agreements for the loss of manufacturing jobs - 231,200 in Ohio in the past seven years. Some Democrats believe trade will be an issue with at least strong regional appeal in the general election against Senator John McCain, a Republican who ardently supports so-called free trade agreements. But opting out of NAFTA or even amending the agreement would be foolhardy, unrealistic, or at least very difficult, according to several trade policy analysts who span the political spectrum.

Reenergized Clinton Talks Poverty and Healthcare | The Trail | washingtonpost.com

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/02/28/reenergized_clinton_talks_po...
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, in an emotional townhall with working mothers here on Thursday, said that her rival only wanted to provide health insurance to the women's children -- not the women themselves. "He has a mandate to cover children; he does not have any requirement for adults," Clinton said afterwards at a news conference with reporters. It was a sharp dig from Clinton just as her campaign was hoping to turn a corner heading into the March 4 contests here and in Texas. Clinton seemed, for the first time in days, to show new life. Fresh off the news that her campaign had raised $35 million in the last month, Clinton said the fundraising "says a lot" about the condition of her campaign. "Contributions are another way of judging" how much support a candidate has, Clinton said. "When people found out we didn't have the resources to compete, and I did put my own money in, it just set off a chain reaction across the country."

On the Trail, Spouses' Roles Evolve - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/28/AR2008022804212....
Bill Clinton has not turned belligerent or angry in front of television cameras for weeks now. No controversial statements, few interviews with the media, just one vote-hunting event after another -- precisely the way his wife's campaign wants it. Michelle Obama drew unwanted attention to her husband a little more than a week ago when she said that "for the first time in my adult lifetime, I'm really proud of my country." But she brushed aside charges that she isn't a patriot and stuck to her schedule of media interviews and ever-larger rallies, hoping to live up to her campaign nickname of "the closer." Days before crucial primaries in Texas and Ohio that could determine who becomes the Democratic nominee for president, the political arcs of Clinton and Obama have been nearly as surprising as the historic campaigns of their spouses.

Clinton camp shells out for mariachis - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-trailband29feb29,1,5788188....
In Texas, where Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama are in an intense battle to win Tuesday's primary, the Clinton camp is going the extra mile to appeal to voters. During Bill Clinton's two-day swing through the state this week to campaign for his wife, nearly every rally featured a mariachi band. The Clinton campaign has been criticized for its spending, but the mariachi bands weren't complaining.

Obama Cutting Into Clinton’s Edge Among Superdelegates - New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/29/us/politics/29delegates.html?ref=us...
Senator Barack Obama has made significant inroads over the last month among the Democratic elected officials and party leaders known as superdelegates who will cast a fifth of the votes at the party’s convention, cutting into Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s long-held advantage with the group. What began for Mr. Obama as a trickle of support from the superdelegates has grown into more of a stream as he has won the last 11 nominating contests in a row against Mrs. Clinton, of New York. Those victories have led to a few prominent defections — Representative John Lewis of Georgia formally switched sides this week — and prompted other undecided superdelegates to get off the fence and to support Mr. Obama. At least nine superdelegates have declared their support for Mr. Obama in the last few days. The effect has been to whittle away at Mrs. Clinton’s lead with a group that her campaign had been counting on as a bulwark against the nomination’s going to Mr. Obama, of Illinois.

Candidates trade shots over economy - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-campaign29feb29,1,5152354.s...
After repeatedly taking shots at Republican John McCain over the past few days, Barack Obama denied Thursday that he was taking victory over Democratic rival Hillary Rodham Clinton for granted and pivoting into the fall presidential campaign. "To the extent that he's initiating this debate a little early -- maybe a little bit prematurely, that is -- that's something we don't want to leave unanswered," Obama said of McCain during a flight between campaign stops in Texas. "But Sen. Clinton is working tirelessly, as is Bill Clinton, in both Ohio and Texas. These races are extraordinarily tight, and I want to make sure that we are doing everything we can to win these next two contests," Obama said. "That's how we've won in the past, is just focusing on what is in front of us." Asked if pundits were prematurely drafting Clinton's political obituary, the Illinois senator referred to her surprise victory in the first primary state after finishing third in the Iowa caucuses. "Remember New Hampshire," he told reporters crammed in the aisle of his campaign charter plane.

Democrats Blaze Trails In February Fundraising - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/28/AR2008022804208....
Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama continued to rewrite fundraising records this month, with Clinton announcing yesterday that she had rebounded from a disappointing showing in January to raise $35 million in February, by far her biggest one-month total of the campaign. Obama (Ill.), who raised $36 million in January, has not yet announced a total for February, but aides said it will be "considerably more" than that raised by his rival for the Democratic nomination. Their combined total appeared poised to surpass the $71 million raised by President Bush and Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) in March 2004, the previous record for fundraising by two candidates for the presidency in a single month. The display of fundraising muscle came even as Clinton (N.Y.) slipped in national polls and suffered several setbacks at the ballot box. She said more than doubling what she had raised in January has left her well positioned for another primary-season comeback. Clinton attributed the jump in donations to a core of passionate supporters who sent money when they saw her campaign struggling. Aides said online contributions, which accounted for $30 million of the total, soared after Clinton revealed in late January that she had lent the campaign $5 million to keep her bid afloat.

Obama cracks a ruler, and the crowd goes wild - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-trailwow29feb29,1,275141.st...
They came to cheer. They got a lecture. The crowd went wild. During a Barack Obama town-hall meeting on the economy, the topic turned to education, which, the Illinois senator said, could not be remedied by spending alone. "It doesn't matter how much money we put in if parents don't parent," he scolded. The line is one the Democrat delivers often, but on Thursday in Beaumont, Texas, he struck a remarkable chord with his mostly African American audience. "It's not good enough for you to say to your child, 'Do good in school,' and then when that child comes home, you've got the TV set on," Obama lectured. "You've got the radio on. You don't check their homework. There's not a book in the house. You've got the video game playing." Each line was punctuated by a roar, and Obama began to shout, falling into a preacher's rhythm. "Am I right?"

NAFTA both political symbol and economic reality - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-naftaqa29feb29,1,762577.sto...
Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama have become tough critics of U.S. trade policy as they campaign in Ohio, a state battered by trade-related job losses that holds a crucial presidential primary Tuesday. In most of their exchanges on the issue, each candidate has accused the other of having spoken in positive terms about the North American Free Trade Agreement, a pact that is extremely unpopular among Ohio's blue-collar workers. But the skirmishing has done little to illuminate the complicated politics and policy questions surrounding NAFTA.

Clinton misstates Obama's stance on healthcare - The Boston Globe

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/02/29/clinton_misstates_obamas_s...
Senator Hillary Clinton, who has accused rival Barack Obama of sending misleading mailers to voters about her healthcare plan, misstated his healthcare views before an audience yesterday in rural Ohio. Clinton, speaking on poverty and family wellness at a community center, told a couple hundred people that she was committed to universal healthcare because families cannot be fully healthy unless every member of the family is. "If you don't have health insurance for everyone, we're never going to get out of this," she said. "We're just going to keep running around in circles." This, Clinton said, was one of the big differences between her and Obama. "I want . . . each and every member of the family to have health insurance. My opponent only wants your children to have health insurance," she said. "I don't think that's smart." The main difference in their healthcare proposals is this: Clinton would require that everyone purchase insurance, a mandate she says she would impose in tandem with bringing costs down through subsidies and other measures. Obama would impose such a mandate only on parents, requiring them to cover their children.

Parenting Tips from Obama Please a Crowd | The Trail | washingtonpost.com

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/02/28/parenting_tips_from_obama_pl...
It's more about heft than hope these days as Sen. Barack Obama tries to lock up victories in the Lone Star State and in Ohio on Tuesday. His speeches are bordering on wonkish, packed with details about energy and education and worrisome talk about the economy. But at a townhall meeting here before a mostly African American audience this afternoon, Obama couldn't resist a brief exegesis on one of his favorite subjects, parenting -- and he got a foot-stomping response worthy of an evangelical church service in reply. The Illinois senator raised the issue at the end of a lengthy answer to a question about education. After discussing teacher pay, afterschool programs, summer school and recess, Obama added, "Can I make this one last point?"

Obama: The $50 million man -- chicagotribune.com

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-democrats-campaign-funds-feb2...
Fundraising numbers in the Democratic race for president shot into the stratosphere in the month of February, with reports from aides to Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama putting the staggering combined figure at somewhere in the range of $85 million. Clinton touted the news that she had raised $35 million as evidence of the vitality of her campaign, as she conducted a furious day of campaigning in Ohio and Texas, where voters could decide her fate in the campaign on Tuesday. The Obama camp responded coyly, saying only that they would surpass the $35 million figure by reporting "considerably more"—and then sat back without official comment amid news reports of their skyrocketing February total.

Race watched round the world -- chicagotribune.com

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-election-overseas-feb29,1,232...
This year's U.S. campaign, with its groundbreaking crop of candidates and its focus on international concerns like Iraq, is reshaping the world's view of the United States, political analysts say. In some places, officials see the candidacies of Clinton, fellow Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain as a chance to heal rifts with the U.S. over such issues as the war on terror and global warming. Many people abroad are surprised to find the United States is perhaps not as racist as they had imagined. Others, impressed at the lively campaign, are regaining faith in American democracy. Concerns that the U.S. has used torture against terrorism suspects, has continued to support authoritarian rulers in nations like Pakistan and has backed away from international institutions like the United Nations have blemished the United States' reputation abroad, experts say. The election campaign, some believe, has made a different impression. "It's an exciting race, an example of participative democracy and unprecedented mobilization," El Pais, one of Spain's leading daily newspapers, wrote in an editorial in the wake of the Super Tuesday primaries.

Bush hits Obama on foreign policy - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-bush29feb29,1,6613718.story...
Setting aside his stated reluctance to enter the presidential campaign, President Bush on Thursday strongly criticized Barack Obama's expressed readiness to meet with foreign leaders cast as tyrants, warning that such discussions "can be extremely counterproductive" and "send the wrong signal." He also challenged Democrats' skepticism about the North American Free Trade Agreement, and reminded Obama that Al Qaeda has been seeking to establish a base in Iraq "for the past four years."

To some, McCain's financial tangle ironic - The Boston Globe

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/02/29/to_some_mccains_financial_...
Former Federal Election Commission chairman Bradley Smith, columnist George Will, and a host of other conservatives have spent years criticizing Senator John McCain's push for further rules on the nation's campaign-finance system. Now, McCain's critics on the right have new ammunition: the senator's own woes with the FEC.

Did McCain say 'liberal'? He meant 'completely not liberal' - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-trailalso29feb29,1,4992580....
Even though John McCain is the presumptive Republican nominee for president, he has kept up a brisk campaign schedule. By Thursday, the Arizona senator was showing signs of fatigue. During a town hall-style meeting in Richardson, Texas, he described himself as "a proud conservative liberal Repub -- " and then froze mid-word, realizing he'd just said the L-word. "Conservative Republican," he corrected. Wiggling his eyebrows and drawing out his words for comic effect, McCain added, "Hellooo, easy there," as the audience laughed.

Bush Assails Democratic Candidates' Foreign Policy Views - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/28/AR2008022801049....
President Bush has tried, with varying degrees of success, to avoid playing the role of "pundit in chief" on daily campaign developments. But yesterday he weighed in on some of the foreign policy issues that have cropped up recently on the trail, criticizing the Democratic presidential contenders for their positions on Iraq and trade and, in the case of Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.), for his willingness to meet with U.S. adversaries. In a wide-ranging news conference at the White House, his first in two months, Bush appeared especially animated in shooting down the proposition that a president should meet with the leaders of Cuba and Iran without preconditions, an idea that has been an element of Obama's foreign policy agenda and that has led to sparring with Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.). "Sitting down at the table, having your picture taken with a tyrant such as Ra¿l Castro, for example, lends the status of the office and the status of our country to him," Bush said, referring to the new Cuban president. "He gains a lot from it by saying, 'Look at me, I'm now recognized by the president of the United States.' " Bush said a decision to meet with some foreign leaders could be counterproductive. "It can send chilling signals and messages to our allies. It can send confusion about our foreign policy. It discourages reformers inside their own country. And, in my judgment, it would be a mistake" with Iran and Cuba, he said.

Bill Would Remove Doubt on Presidential Eligibility - New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/29/us/politics/29mccain.html?ref=us...
Senator John McCain said Thursday that he had no concerns about his meeting the constitutional qualifications for the presidency because of his birth in the Panama Canal Zone. A Democratic colleague said she wanted to remove even a trace of doubt. The Democrat, Senator Claire McCaskill of Missouri, introduced legislation that would declare that any child born abroad to citizens serving in the United States military would meet the constitutional requirement that anyone serving as president be a “natural born” citizen. “In America, so many parents say to their young children, ‘If you work hard and you play by the rules, in America someday you can be president of the United States,’ ” said Ms. McCaskill, a supporter of the presidential bid of Senator Barack Obama, Democrat of Illinois. “Our brave and respected military should never have to spend a minute worrying whether or not that saying is true for their child.”

Get out your pencils: Paper ballots make a return - USATODAY.com

http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics/election2008/2008-02-28-votinginside_N.htm...
The people involved in overseeing elections will be watching closely Tuesday as Ohio's most populous county votes, but it won't have anything to do with Barack Obama, Hillary Rodham Clinton or John McCain. No place in the nation has had as much trouble running an election in recent years as Cuyahoga County. As it moved from punch cards in 2004 to touch screens in 2006, servers crashed, printers jammed, memory cards disappeared and poll workers were overwhelmed. So this year, it's back to basics: paper. Voters will fill in ovals the way high school students do on the SATs. They'll drop the ballots in a box, which will be taken to a county warehouse to be counted. Sound simple? It's not. The county had 74 days to make the latest switch after Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner decreed that touch screens were out, paper ballots in. Since then, it has mothballed 5,100 touch-screen machines, retrofitted 6,300 old punch-card voting stations, installed 15 high-speed scanners and rewired the warehouse.

Drum Roll, Please: Nader Picks a Runningmate | The Trail | washingtonpost.com

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/02/28/drum_roll_please_nader_picks...
Ralph Nader (I-Harold Stassen), beginning his third long-shot run for the presidency, called a press conference for noon today at the National Press Club to announce his running mate. To add to the intrigue, Nader aides teased those arriving by handing out sheets of paper identifying the vice-presidential candidate only as "?" Nader entered the room. Aides removed the duct tape covering the campaign poster on the lectern -- revealing the running mate's name. Drum roll, please. "Nader/Gonzalez '08" said the poster. Baffled silence in the room. The former Green Party nominee had hooked up with President Bush's former attorney general? Actually, it turned out to be rather less exciting than that. Nader's choice wasn't Alberto Gonzales but another son of Texas, Matt Gonzalez.

February 28, 2008

Obama Rebuffs Challenges on His Israel Stance - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/27/AR2008022703512....
Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) is engaged in a concerted effort to reassure Jewish leaders in the face of an increasingly aggressive Republican campaign to question his tolerance and his commitment to supporting Israel. In a typical attack, the Tennessee Republican Party, under the headline "Anti-Semites for Obama," said Monday that it was joining "a growing chorus of Americans concerned about the future of the nation of Israel, the only stable democracy in the Middle East, if Sen. Barack Hussein Obama is elected president of the United States." Two controversial Chicago figures -- Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan and the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, pastor of Obama's church -- have figured prominently in the criticism of Obama. In Tuesday's Democratic debate in Cleveland, Obama disavowed an endorsement from Farrakhan but did not directly answer a question about Wright once having said that Farrakhan "epitomizes greatness." Asked by moderator Tim Russert what he could do to reassure Jewish Americans, Obama cited his belief that Israel's security is "sacrosanct." He also said he has strong support in the Jewish community because of his opposition to anti-Semitism and his efforts to rebuild the relationship between Jews and African Americans. On Sunday, Obama took time from his campaign to air out concerns with about 100 Jewish leaders in Cleveland, assuring them of "an unshakable commitment to the security of Israel and the friendship between the United States and Israel."

Clinton Campaign Pours Resources Into Two Crucial Primaries - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/27/AR2008022703360....
Aides to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.), coming to terms with the idea that she must win contests in both Texas and Ohio next week or face enormous pressure to drop out of the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, are pouring all of the campaign's dwindling resources into the March 4 primaries. With each passing day, her climb appears steeper. The latest setback came Wednesday when, after weeks of equivocation, Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, a civil rights leader, officially switched his support from Clinton to Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.). Despite a subdued mood inside her campaign, Clinton soldiered on Wednesday, holding an economic roundtable in Ohio, and her dash across the two states will culminate in a "Texas-size" town hall event to be broadcast on cable next Monday. Pennsylvania Gov. Edward G. Rendell, who is backing Clinton, said the New York senator would win his state's April 22 primary, the next major contest on the calendar after March 4, if she were to beat Obama in Texas and Ohio on Tuesday. Without those victories, he said, the campaign will not get to Pennsylvania.

Despite Nafta Attacks, Clinton and Obama Haven’t Been Free Trade Foes - New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/28/us/politics/28nafta.html?ref=washington...
As they have tussled for votes in economically beleaguered Ohio, Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton have both excoriated the North American Free Trade Agreement while lobbing accusations against their opponent on the issue. Lost amid the posturing, however, is that both have staked out nuanced positions in the past on Nafta and have supported similar trade deals. Although their language has become much more hostile to free trade as they have exchanged charges and countercharges, neither of them would have been mistaken in the past for an ardent protectionist or a die-hard free trader. Instead, both appear to have been part of the conflicted middle ground within the Democratic Party that is groping for a proper balance between being friendly to free trade agreements, believing they are beneficial to the economy, but also seeking to level the playing field for the United States when it comes to labor and environmental standards and addressing job losses that come with globalization. “The bottom line,” said Lori Wallach, director of the Global Trade Watch division of Public Citizen and a fierce free trade foe, “is neither of the current Democratic candidates were in the category of leaders fighting for improving U.S. trade policy to try to come up with different terms for globalization, but in the course of their campaign they have come to see both the political necessity and the substantive problems, pushing them to some interesting new thinking.”

For Ohio win, Clinton banks on the disaffected - The Boston Globe

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/02/28/for_ohio_win_clinton_banks...
Clinton is banking on these disaffected voters to stand with her in Tuesday's Ohio primary, one she must win to remain competitive with Senator Barack Obama in the Democratic nomination race. She spent yesterday promising to be their advocate in the White House. "It's time that we had a president who's going to be a fighter and a champion for our people again," Clinton said at an economic summit she convened here with Ohio's governor, Ted Strickland, and a host of other political and business leaders from across the country. In contrast with her sharp words for Obama in other recent public appearances, Clinton offered little, and only implicit, criticism of him at the summit. Her goal was to demonstrate her mastery of the economy, economic development, and job creation, and to show her capacity for empathy. She said she would wake up every day in the White House and ask, "What are we going to do today to improve the lives of hard-working Americans?" Clinton vowed to reinvest in manufacturing and reiterated her pledge to create 5 million jobs, and she cited Germany's public investments in solar power as a model.

Civil rights leader John Lewis switches to Obama - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-endorse28feb28,1,4362474.st...
Civil rights leader John Lewis dropped his support for Hillary Rodham Clinton's presidential bid Wednesday in favor of Barack Obama. Lewis, a Democratic congressman from Atlanta, is the most prominent black leader to defect from Clinton's campaign in the face of near-unanimous black support for Obama in recent voting. He also is a superdelegate who gets a vote at this summer's national convention in Denver. In a written statement, Lewis said the Illinois senator's campaign "represents the beginning of a new movement in American political history" and that he wants "to be on the side of the people." "After taking some time for serious reflection on this issue, I have decided that when I cast my vote as a superdelegate at the Democratic convention, it is my duty . . . to express the will of the people," the statement said.

Early Obama Commitment on Money Becomes Target - New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/28/us/politics/28obama.html?ref=washington...
Just 12 months ago, Senator Barack Obama presented himself as an idealistic upstart taking on the Democratic fund-raising juggernaut behind Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton. That was when Mr. Obama proposed a novel challenge aimed at limiting the corrupting influence of money on the race: If he won the nomination, he would limit himself to spending only the $85 million available in public financing between the convention and Election Day as long as his Republican opponent did the same. Now his challenge to his rivals has boomeranged into a test of Mr. Obama’s own ability to balance principle and politics in a very different context. After taking in $100 million in donations, Mr. Obama is the one setting fund-raising records, presenting a powerful temptation to find a way out of his own proposal so that he might outspend his Republican opponent. And the all-but-certain Republican nominee, Senator John McCain, is short on cash and eager to take up the fund-raising truce.

Race a wild-card factor - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-race28feb28,1,1572022.story...
When John McCain apologized to Barack Obama this week for the comments of his warm-up act at a rally, it was not the first time -- and probably won't be the last -- that the most competitive black presidential candidate in U.S. history has heard the words, "I'm sorry." In his yearlong quest to win the White House, the Democratic senator from Illinois has changed the rules of political engagement, forcing his rivals to step delicately in a normally no-holds-barred arena. As the possibility grows that voters may bestow the nation's highest public office on an African American, serial public apologies -- largely by Democrats -- show just how sensitive race remains. What is less clear is how race could help or hinder Obama, who has struggled to keep it in the background. If current or future opponents focus on Obama's race, it could help them by playing on some voters' racial prejudice, or it could help Obama if he is seen as a sympathetic victim of his rivals' insensitivity.

Singular Unease for Michigan's Power Couple - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/27/AR2008022703295....
If the angst of a superdelegate were a portrait, it would look just like Debbie Dingell, the wife of Rep. John Dingell (D- Mich.), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Dingell the superdelegate -- the blond one, not the bald one; they're both superdelegates -- is losing sleep over the political mess she helped cause in her state by pushing for an early Democratic primary in defiance of national party rules. "I probably haven't slept since February 4th," said Dingell, vice chair of the General Motors Foundation, maybe only half-jokingly. "Because it does matter. I really care about the people of my state." Dingell is scrambling to help find a solution so that her people, including herself, will have a voice at the Democratic convention this summer. When she and other Michigan Democratic insiders pushed so aggressively to buck the Democratic National Committee's calendar and place their primary in mid-January, how were they to know the stakes would be so high, or the race this close, so far beyond Super Tuesday? "Nobody foresaw this," she said. Certainly not Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), who, unlike Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), didn't even put his name on the Michigan ballot. Clinton received 55 percent of the beauty-contest vote, while Obama supporters in the Wolverine State secured 45 percent of the vote for "uncommitted."

Clash on Iraq Could Be McCain-Obama Preview - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2008/02/27/ST2008022703886.ht...
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) accused Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) of making ill-informed comments about Iraq and al-Qaeda in Tuesday night's Democratic presidential debate, signaling that a general-election brawl between the colleagues would center in part on who has the foreign policy experience to lead a country at war. Despite McCain's war-hero status and years of foreign policy experience, Obama made it clear that he will not back down from such a fight, issuing a quick rebuke of McCain that linked him to President Bush and the war in Iraq. The spat began when McCain seized on a comment by Obama that he would reserve the right to return to Iraq after withdrawing troops "if al-Qaeda is forming a base in Iraq." "I have some news," McCain told voters at a rally here Wednesday morning. "Al-Qaeda is in Iraq. Al-Qaeda is called 'al-Qaeda in Iraq.' My friends, if we left, they wouldn't be establishing a base. . . . they would be taking a country. I will not allow that to happen, my friends. I will not surrender." McCain has pledged to keep U.S. forces in Iraq as long as it takes to create stability, form a unified government and defeat terrorist groups. He favors adding more troops, if necessary, to achieve those goals.

Amid McCain's new status, old scandals stir - The Boston Globe

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/02/28/amid_mccains_new_status_ol...
As William K. Black watches John McCain move toward the Republican presidential nomination, he thinks of a day 21 years ago that he considers one of the most troubling of his life. Black, a senior federal savings and loan regulator at the time, attended a meeting at which he felt McCain and four other senators pressured federal regulators to back off from investigating the troubled Lincoln Savings and Loan. "I remain very upset that what they did caused such damage," said Black, now a professor at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, recalling how Lincoln's bankruptcy cost the government $3 billion. Moreover, he said he believes McCain intervened partly because his wife had invested money with Lincoln chairman Charles Keating, a campaign contributor who let the McCains use his home in the Bahamas. The story of how the "Keating Five" senators allegedly pressured regulators to lay off a failing Arizona S&L became a major scandal, and marked a turning point in McCain's life - the near-death of his political career followed by his eventual rebirth as a crusader for campaign finance reform.

Obama, McCain trade jabs on Iraq, terror - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-campaign28feb28,1,4693600.s...
They offer a preview of a possible matchup in the general election, while Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton focuses on trade and foreclosures.

Empty, Open Arms - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/27/AR2008022703647....
Chris Pohl came to the recent Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington to peddle hats. As political gimmicks go, his was rather ingenious: a Russian ushanka, complete with fake-fur ear flaps, stamped with the red Communist hammer and sickle and adorned with interchangeable name tags -- Hillary '08 or Obama '08. Twenty-five bucks. In the hallways, he handed out red business cards that listed his name only as "Karl" (as in Marx) and set up a booth at which bottles of red-colored lemonade ("Leninade") were dispensed next to a life-size cardboard cutout of Hillary Clinton herself. Pohl was far down the road of cleverness and -- he hoped -- economic salvation. "I'm a subprime casualty," said Pohl, who lost his job at a mortgage company in November. "So now I'm selling hats." "Karl" was certainly in the right place to unveil his ushanka: CPAC is the preeminent yearly gathering of conservative activists. Here, they embraced the message of his hats, that electing either Clinton or Barack Obama president would be like installing Vladimir Lenin in the White House. High-fives and chuckles everywhere. But it occurred to Pohl, in this uneasy way, that the hat was really a general-election prop, and conservatives are not yet ready to start the general election.

McCain’s Canal Zone Birth Prompts Queries About Whether That Rules Him Out - New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/28/us/politics/28mccain.html?ref=washington...
The question has nagged at the parents of Americans born outside the continental United States for generations: Dare their children aspire to grow up and become president? In the case of Senator John McCain of Arizona, the issue is becoming more than a matter of parental daydreaming. Mr. McCain’s likely nomination as the Republican candidate for president and the happenstance of his birth in the Panama Canal Zone in 1936 are reviving a musty debate that has surfaced periodically since the founders first set quill to parchment and declared that only a “natural-born citizen” can hold the nation’s highest office. Almost since those words were written in 1787 with scant explanation, their precise meaning has been the stuff of confusion, law school review articles, whisper campaigns and civics class debates over whether only those delivered on American soil can be truly natural born. To date, no American to take the presidential oath has had an official birthplace outside the 50 states. “There are powerful arguments that Senator McCain or anyone else in this position is constitutionally qualified, but there is certainly no precedent,” said Sarah H. Duggin, an associate professor of law at Catholic University who has studied the issue extensively. “It is not a slam-dunk situation.”

Bloomberg Not Running for President - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/27/AR2008022703629....
After two years of playing coy about his presidential ambitions, Mayor Michael Bloomberg declared in a newspaper editorial Wednesday that he will not run for president but might support the candidate who "takes an independent, nonpartisan approach." The 66-year-old billionaire businessman, who aides had said was prepared to spend $1 billion to run as an independent, wrote in an editorial on The New York Times' Web site that he will work to "steer the national conversation away from partisanship and toward unity; away from ideology and toward common sense; away from sound bites and toward substance." Bloomberg, who has almost two years left in his second term at City Hall, had publicly denied any interest in running for president since one of his political advisers first planted the seed more than two years ago. But his denials grew weaker in recent months as aides and supporters quietly began laying the groundwork for a third-party campaign. "I listened carefully to those who encouraged me to run, but I am not _ and will not be _ a candidate for president," he wrote.

Mint Rejects Voting Rights Message - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/27/AR2008022703445....
At issue is the inscription the city wanted with the image: "Taxation Without Representation" or "No Taxation Without Representation," referring to the District's decades-long quest for full voting rights in Congress. The Mint said the proposed slogans would violate the coin program's rules against controversial messages. Last year, Congress authorized commemorative quarters for the District, Puerto Rico, American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Northern Mariana Islands. Mint spokesman Greg Hernandez said the process is moving quickly because those coins must be produced by next year. "Changing how the District of Columbia . . . is represented in Congress is a contemporary political issue on which there presently is no national consensus and over which reasonable minds differ," the Mint said in a statement.

February 27, 2008

In a Crucial State, a Contentious Debate - washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/26/AR2008022603715....
In their final debate before critical primaries in Ohio and Texas, Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton clashed sharply on familiar ground, arguing Tuesday night over who has the better health-care plan, who has been right about Iraq and who would move most aggressively to rethink trade policy as president. In contrast to their debate five days ago in Texas, Clinton and Obama butted heads from the opening moments, starting with a clash over whether the senator from Illinois had mischaracterized her plan for universal health care in his campaign mailings, and continuing throughout the 90-minute session. "We should have a good debate that uses accurate information, not false, misleading and discredited information, especially on something as important as whether or not we will achieve quality, affordable health care for everyone," said Clinton (N.Y.). Obama pushed back with equal aggressiveness. "Senator Clinton has, in her campaign at least, has constantly sent out negative attacks on us, e-mail, robo-calls [prerecorded telephone messages], fliers, television ads, radio calls, and we haven't whined about it, because I understand that's the nature of this campaign," he said.

Democrats Clash on Trade, Health and Rival Tactics - New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/27/us/politics/27debate.html?ref=washington...
Mr. Obama, pursuing a front-runner’s strategy of nonconfrontation after winning 11 straight contests, mostly defended his positions and views, though he said he and his team had not “whined” about the Clinton camp’s attacks on him. Sitting a couple of feet from Mrs. Clinton at a circular table, he appeared to listen intently to her attacks before responding in even tones. The debate — the 20th for Democrats — was the final one before the March 4 contests in Ohio and Texas, states that the Clinton camp has labeled as must-win if she is to keep her campaign alive. Questions about which approach Mrs. Clinton would take to sway voters were quickly answered as she immediately confronted Mr. Obama, and she was relentless throughout the meeting. She insisted on responding to virtually every point that he made — often interrupting the debate moderators, Brian Williams and Tim Russert of NBC, as they tried to move on. At the same time, it was one of the most detailed and specific of all the debates, with both Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama giving long explanations of their records and views.

Obama's career, and criticism, driven by oratory - The Boston Globe

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/02/27/obamas_career_and_criticis...
The 2008 presidential campaign has witnessed the rise of a whole arsenal of new political weapons, including Internet fund-raising and sophisticated microtargeting of voters. For Senator Barack Obama, however, the most powerful weapon has been one of the oldest.

Clinton attacks on all fronts - The Boston Globe

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/02/27/clinton_attacks_on_all_fro...
Seeking a much-needed jolt of momentum, Senator Hillary Clinton used the 20th and perhaps final Democratic debate last night to attack Senator Barack Obama tenaciously on a range of domestic and foreign policy issues, seizing on Obama's healthcare plan, Iraq war votes, and campaign tactics to try to get him off his game. Clinton, who by most accounts faces must-win votes Tuesday in Ohio and Texas, signaled from the debate's opening moments that she would take a more aggressive tack than she did when they debated last week, confronting Obama on what she said were misleading fliers his campaign had sent voters distorting her positions on healthcare and trade. "We should have a good debate that uses accurate information, not false, misleading, and discredited information, especially on something as important as whether or not we will achieve quality,affordable healthcare for everyone," Clinton said. Obama responded that it was Clinton, by contending that his healthcare plan would leave out 15 million Americans, who was spreading falsehoods. "Senator Clinton repeatedly claims that I don't stand for universal healthcare. And, you know, for Senator Clinton to say that I think is simply not accurate," he said.

IRS Investigating Obama's Church | The Trail | washingtonpost.com

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/02/26/irs_investigating_obamas_chu...
The United Church of Christ, Sen. Barack Obama's spiritual home, is in hot water with the Internal Revenue Service over a speech Obama gave to its national convention last June. The IRS has notified the UCC that it has opened an investigation into Obama's address at the UCC's 2007 General Synod in Hartford, Conn., the UCC said yesterday. According to a copy of an IRS letter that the church received Monday, the IRS is launching the inquiry "because reasonable belief exists that the United Church of Christ has engaged in political activities that could jeopardize its tax-exempt status." Under federal law, churches are barred from becoming directly or indirectly involved in campaigns of political candidates.