MICHAEL O. ALLEN

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Obama greets supporters in Iowa Tuesday, more than four months after he won the primary season’s first contest there. (Photo Credit: Mike Roselli/CNN)
Posted: 06:34 AM ET
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Compiled by Mary Grace Lucas, CNN Washington Bureau

Obama Takes Delegate Majority
Sen. Barack Obama crossed another threshold last night in his march toward the Democratic presidential nomination, splitting a pair of primaries with Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and claiming a majority of the pledged delegates at stake in the long nomination battle.

WSJ: Clinton Keeps Up Fight
Heading into twin Democratic primaries Tuesday in Kentucky and Oregon — which the two candidates are expected to split — Sen. Hillary Clinton is vowing to stay in the race to the end, even as her staff and supporters show further signs of fraying. In an interview in Bowling Green, Ky., on Sunday where she was campaigning ahead of Tuesday’s vote, Sen. Clinton said, “I’m still here because I think I would be the best president.”

Youngest Kennedy Brother Enhanced Legacy, and Built His Own
For millions of Americans, the announcement that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy has brain cancer was at least the fourth chapter of a tragic epic that began on Nov. 22, 1963, with the assassination of John F. Kennedy. It continued through the death of his brother Robert in 1968, then of John Jr. in a plane crash in 1999. And yesterday it was the sudden reminder of the mortality of the last surviving son of Joseph P. Kennedy, the patriarch who created this family of strivers and doers.

LA Times: McCain, in Miami, promises to continue isolating Cuba
Sen. John McCain on Tuesday laid out his plans for strengthening democracy and U.S. influence in Latin America, vowing to extend free-trade pacts throughout the region and to continue isolating Cuba until the communist-ruled island frees political prisoners

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May 21, 2008
Posted: 08:15 AM ET
From

Sen. Barack Obama has picked up a majority of the pledged delegates, according to CNN calculations.

Sen. Barack Obama has picked up a majority of the pledged delegates, according to CNN calculations.

NEW YORK (CNN) – Hillary Clinton won a landslide victory in Kentucky Tuesday, but momentum — and a growing sense of inevitability — is now firmly on Barack Obama’s side.

He took Oregon last night, but it was his symbolic victory with pledged delegates that was the storyline.

The one-time long shot for the Democratic nomination has a majority of pledged delegates to the Democratic Convention and is now about 70 delegates shy of the finish line.

Filed under: Barack ObamaHillary Clinton

Posted: 07:38 AM ET
Sen. Barack Obama has not had the same success with older, white and blue-collar voters as Sen. Hillary Clinton.

Sen. Barack Obama has not had the same success with older, white and blue-collar voters as Sen. Hillary Clinton.

LOUISVILLE, Kentucky (CNN) – Tuesday may end up a big night for Barack Obama, giving him a majority of all possible pledged delegates in the Democratic race for the White House. But exit polling in Kentucky — where CNN is projecting rival Sen. Hillary Clinton will win by a wide margin — suggests that he still has big problems in states with a large majority of older, white and blue-collar voters.

Nearly half of Democratic voters in Kentucky polled Tuesday said they would either vote for Republican Sen. John McCain or not vote at all in November if Obama is the Democratic nominee. Among 1,278 people polled, 33 percent said they would pick McCain over Obama, and 16 percent said they would not vote at all.

By comparison, 76 percent said they would choose Clinton over McCain, with only 17 percent supporting the Republican and 6 percent not voting.

Full story

Filed under: Barack ObamaHillary Clinton

Posted: 06:36 AM ET

From

Clinton and Obama supporters both said Clinton attacked unfairly.

Clinton and Obama supporters both said Clinton attacked unfairly.

Alalam News Network
Why Is Hillary Still Running?
Houston Chronicle – 35 minutes ago
Well, 2 more primaries are now in the rear view mirror, and as the old saying goes, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Video: Obama Moves to Brink of Democratic Nomination AssociatedPressOf Victory for Sen. Obama Wall Street Journal
New York TimesInternational Herald TribuneWashington TimesHonolulu Star-Bulletin
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WBT
Money shocker! Hillary Clinton’s campaign debt soars to $31 million
Los Angeles Times – 2 hours ago
No wonder Sen. Hillary Clinton was so late filing her required campaign financial reports Tuesday night. Her political team didn’t want the shocking news in it to overshadow her lopsided thumping of Sen. Barack Obama in Kentucky.
Obama Raised $31 Million for Campaign in April (Update1) Bloomberg
In Iowa, Obama sets course to unify Dems Newsday
New York TimesCNNMSNBC
all 328 news articles »

The Southern Ledger
McCain Vows to Keep US Trade Embargo on Cuba
Wall Street Journal – 5 hours ago
John McCain told Cuban-Americans Tuesday that he would maintain the decades-old US trade embargo on Cuba if he is elected president, and he attacked Barack Obama for his willingness to meet with Cuba’s leader.
McCain, in Miami, promises to continue isolating Cuba Los Angeles Times
McCain In Miami Attacks Obama’s Stance On Cuba Local10.com
Kansas City StarNews Talk AM 580 WDBONew York TimesSarasota Herald-Tribune
all 436 news articles »

Voice of America
The TV Watch Clinton Fades Even in a Victory
New York Times – 8 hours ago
By ALESSANDRA STANLEY While Senator Barack Obama gingerly commended his rival’s “perseverance,” the shrinking candidacy of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton all but vanished from the television set on Tuesday, sidelined by bigger news.
Video: Obama calls Kennedy ‘Friend’ and ‘Champion’ AssociatedPressSenators voice sympathy Baltimore Sun
Boston GlobeVoice of AmericaGay WiredCBS News
all 36 news articles »

China Daily
Obama, Clinton campaigning in Fla. today
MiamiHerald.com – 42 minutes ago
AP Democratic presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton are campaigning in Florida after avoiding the state since last fall.
Clinton to stay in race for varied reasons United Press International
Obama, Hillary gingerly reach across divide as finish line nears Chicago Sun-Times
Washington PostThe Associated PressNewsBlazeCQPolitics.com
all 6,532 news articles »

New York Daily News
Clinton still eyeing prize but also guarding legacy
Houston Chronicle – 7 hours ago
By PATRICK HEALY Rebuffing associates who have suggested that she end her presidential candidacy, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton has made it clear to her camp in recent days that she will stay in the race until June because she believes she can still be
White On White New York Times
Obama’s organizing skills now face a bigger test Los Angeles Times
Kansas City StarWashington TimesNew York Daily NewsGallup Poll News
all 142 news articles »

China Post
Obama wins Oregon and takes step closer to winning nomination
Los Angeles Times – 6 hours ago
AP He captures a majority of pledged delegates to the Democratic convention even as he loses Kentucky by a wide margin to Clinton.
Clinton Wins Kentucky in Landslide Washington Post
Obama poised to reach milestone tonight USA Today
ABC NewsThe Associated PressNECNFree Market News Network
all 360 news articles »

The Southern Ledger
Ky., Ore. voters choose US Senate candidates
The Associated Press – 2 hours ago
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) – With the Democratic US Senate nomination secure, the speaker of the Oregon House is turning his attention to defeating the sole GOP senator on the West Coast this fall.
Schumer-backed Senate Candidate Prevails In Kentucky CBS News
Lunsford holds off push by Fischer Louisville Courier-Journal
Kentucky.comCarlsbad Current ArgusSouthern Political ReportFort Mills Times
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Telegraph.co.uk
Obama leads McCain in November match
Reuters – 1 hour ago
By John Whitesides, Political Correspondent WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Democrat Barack Obama has opened an 8-point national lead on Republican John McCain as the US presidential rivals turn their focus to a general election race, according to a
Chuck Hagel (R): Tough words for McCain Baltimore Sun
McCain’s Burden of Proof Huffington Post
New York TimesNew York SunCNNBoston Globe
all 3,240 news articles »

PRESS TV
Mark McKinnon, true to vow, leaves McCain ad team rather than
Los Angeles Times – 7 hours ago
Mark McKinnon, the advertising wizard who helped shape George W. Bush’s two winning presidential bids and helped steer Arizona Sen. John McCain from political oblivion last summer to the Republican nomination, is bowing out of the current campaign.
McCain strategist keeps Obama vow, leaving campaign Reuters
Keeping Vow on Obama, McCain Adviser Resigns New York Times
The Associated PressWizbangWashington Post
all 95 news articles »

KATU
Democratic Party Favorite to Face Oregon’s Smith in Senate Race
CQPolitics.com – 2 hours ago
By Annie Johnson, CQ Staff Oregon’s House Speaker Jeff Merkley narrowly defeated political activist Steve Novick early Wednesday for the chance to unseat moderate incumbent Gordon H. Smith , the only Republican holding statewide office in Oregon.
Merkley takes lead in US Senate race Statesman Journal
Obama takes Oregon, Adams Portland’s next mayor PSU Daily Vanguard
PoliticoThe Oregonian – OregonLive.comNews-TimesOPB News
all 64 news articles »

Enews 2.0
Clinton’s persistence earns applause
BBC News – 8 hours ago
By Kevin Connolly There are only a handful of people left in the United States who believe that Hillary Clinton is going to win the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination.
Hillary Clinton is the best choice for president Bowling Green Daily News
Bill Clinton to be at Detroit fundraiser for wife DetNews.com
WCPOChicago TribuneWashington PostSeattle Times
all 97 news articles »

New York Daily News
Obama says he is “within reach” of a win
The Associated Press – 9 hours ago
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Barack Obama declared himself “within reach” of the Democratic nomination Tuesday and celebrated in the state where his win in the opening contest of the presidential primary season helped reshape the race.
In Iowa, Obama reaches toward victory Salon
Obama at Iowa rally says nomination within reach Mason City Globe Gazette
USA TodayCNN Political TickerGazette OnlineUnited Press International
all 146 news articles »

KEPR 19
Hurry up! Tuesday deadline to vote by mail!
Los Angeles Times – 10 hours ago
Your clueless friends and neighbors are waiting for November to vote, which means your ballot in the June 3 election will count for a heck of a lot more.
Clinton Wins Kentucky Washington Post
Early Voting Shows Modest Rise in Oregon and Kentucky New York Times
The Oregonian – OregonLive.comU.S. News & World ReportNew WestWillamette Week
all 223 news articles »

The Washington Independent
Obama, Clinton signal Florida boycott over
The Associated Press – 14 hours ago
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) – The boycott is over. Democratic presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton will both be in Florida on Wednesday after avoiding the state since last fall.
Mass. attorney general, a Democratic delegate, backs Clinton Boston Globe
A look at some local delegates Colorado Springs Gazette
Sky Hi Daily NewsHerald ZeitungSan Jose Mercury NewsKRNV
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News Talk AM 580 WDBO
Democrats focus now on Florida
News Talk AM 580 WDBO – 36 minutes ago
Barack Obama begins the process of “making up” with Florida’s voters. He’ll make 3 stops in Central Florida today.
Democratic Presidential Candidates Ready To Do War In Florida WFtv.com
Clinton, Obama Campaigning in Florida Wednesday MyFoxOrlando.com
Orlando SentinelWESH.comSun-Sentinel.comTIME
all 8 news articles »

TPM
Zimmer, Sabrin won’t ask Bush for campaign aid
Cherry Hill Courier Post – 5 hours ago
By TOM BALDWIN • Gannett State Bureau • May 21, 2008 EAST BRUNSWICK – They danced around the question Tuesday, but Richard A. Zimmer and Murray Sabrin, competing to be the Republican nominee for US Senate, agreed they won’t be asking for campaign help
Candidate says he’s just an “average Joe” Asbury Park Press
Lautenberg challenger vows energy, vigor The Express Times
New York TimesNewsdayPress of Atlantic CityPhiladelphia Inquirer
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PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung)
McCain Taps Bush’s Money-Raising Ability
U.S. News & World Report – 17 hours ago
President Bush is planning to ride to John McCain’s rescue, at least when it comes to collecting money. Bush will headline a fundraising event with McCain in Phoenix May 27 and is expected to do two more funders for McCain and other GOP candidates May
The Politics of Hunger New York Times
Republican candidates face tough elections Arizona Daily Star
Houston ChronicleDaily RepublicCBS NewsThe Associated Press
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Boston Globe
It’s About War and Peace, Not Simply Race and Gender
Huffington Post – 10 hours ago
The decisive issue in this election is about war and peace, between Barack Obama’s proposed diplomacy with Iran to end the war in Iraq, and the hawkish stance of his two rivals, Hillary Clinton and John McCain, who favor an escalating the tensions with
McCain criticizes Obama over Iran comments The Associated Press
Obama counters McCain on ‘appeasement’ Chicago Tribune
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New York Daily News
Looser gun laws opposed
Columbus Dispatch – 2 hours ago
By Jim Siegel A push by the National Rifle Association to loosen a number of state gun laws is drawing heavy criticism from prosecutors and a variety of law-enforcement groups who argue it will make them and the public less safe.
NRA fails members, smaller rival says Kentucky.com
Final arguments in challenge to Phila. gun laws Philadelphia Inquirer
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Elections

Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama D-Ill., acknowledges the crowd after he speaks at a rally Tuesday, May 20, 2008, in Des Moines, Iowa. Obama declared himself 'within reach' of the Democratic nomination and celebrated in the state where his win in the opening contest of the presidential primary season helped reshape the race.  (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

Obama inching ever closer to nomination

AP – 18 minutes agoWASHINGTON – Late in the game, Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton are courting voters in Florida, a state so far shut out of their Democratic presidential race, after trading wins in a pair of primaries that brought Obama within sight of his party’s nomination.

  • Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama D-Ill., takes the stage at a rally Tuesday, May 20, 2008, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

    Analysis: Time to focus on candidates’ legacies AP – 2 hours, 14 minutes agoWASHINGTON – The Democratic presidential race is all but over. Barring a cataclysmic change of events, Barack Obama will win enough pledged and superdelegates to win the party’s nomination. The only real issue is whether he and rival Hillary Rodham Clinton leave the race with their futures — and their party — intact.

  • Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks to supporters at a rally in Des Moines, Iowa, Tuesday, May 20, 2008.  (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

    Obama, McCain hold cash while Clinton sees debt AP – Wed May 21, 3:31 AM ETWASHINGTON – The money tells the tale. Democrat Barack Obama entered May sitting comfortably atop more than $37 million in the bank. Republican John McCain had nearly $22 million in hand. Hillary Rodham Clinton, once the Democrats’ presidential front-runner, was in the red.

  • US Democratic presidential hopeful Illinois Senator Barack Obama is introduced during a town hall meeting on May 19, 2008 in Billings, Montana. Republican White House hopeful John McCain Tuesday savaged Democratic rival Barack Obama's stance on Cuba, vowing himself to maintain the US trade embargo until democracy comes to the communist island.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Anne Sherwood)

    Obama plans general election team AP – Tue May 20, 10:00 PM ETWASHINGTON – Barack Obama is quietly planning to take over the Democratic National Committee and assemble a multistate team for the general election, the latest sign that he is putting rival Hillary Rodham Clinton and the nomination fight behind him.

  • Boehner, Cole to release election plan Politico – Wed May 21, 5:13 AM ETAfter a week of tension and recriminations following a special election loss in Mississippi, House Minority Leader John A. Boehner and NRCC Chairman Tom Cole will unveil a series of changes Wednesday aimed at quelling criticism and positioning their party for November’s elections.
  • Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama D-Ill., takes the stage at a rally Tuesday, May 20, 2008, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

    Obama says he is “within reach” of a win AP – Tue May 20, 11:29 PM ETDES MOINES, Iowa – Barack Obama declared himself “within reach” of the Democratic nomination Tuesday and celebrated in the state where his win in the opening contest of the presidential primary season helped reshape the race.

  • Democratic presidential candidate Senator Hillary Clinton addresses her supporters during her Kentucky Presidential primary night rally in Louisville, Kentucky May 20, 2008. (Frankie Steele/Reuters)

    Clinton calls victory in Kentucky a vote of confidence AP – Tue May 20, 11:24 PM ETLOUISVILLE, Ky. – Hillary Rodham Clinton cast her victory in Kentucky as an overwhelming vote of confidence Tuesday and said she’s still running for president not to demonstrate that she’s tough but to ensure that Democrats retake the White House.

  • Democratic presidential hopeful New York Senator Hillary Clinton arrives for a campaign stop at Lynn's Paradise Cafe and gift shop, in Louisville, Kentucky. Hillary Clinton scored a consolation win in Tuesday's Kentucky primary, but Barack Obama remained on course to surpass a milestone toward the Democrats' White House nomination.(AFP/Robyn Beck)

    Obama reaches delegate milestone AP – Wed May 21, 12:49 AM ETWASHINGTON – Sen. Barack Obama reached a majority of the pledged delegates at stake in the primaries and caucuses Tuesday, a symbolic milestone in his march toward the Democratic nomination for president.

  • Voters place their votes at the St. Matthews Fire Station during the Kentucky Primary elections in Louisville, Kentucky, May 20, 2008. (John Sommers II/Reuters)

    Exit poll: Whites help Clinton in KY, not OR AP – Wed May 21, 12:32 AM ETWASHINGTON – White voters played a decisive role in Hillary Rodham Clinton’s lopsided victory Tuesday in Kentucky’s Democratic presidential primary. Barack Obama got the victory in more liberal Oregon, where race and the hard-edged rivalry between the two embattled candidates were muted.

  • In this Feb. 6, 2008, file photo, Mark McKinnon, chief media adviser for Republican presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., right, listens to McCain at a press conference Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2008 in Phoenix, Ariz. McKinnon is leaving Republican John McCain's presidential campaign because he doesn't want to work against Democrat Barack Obama. He wrote in a campaign memo last year that if Obama won the Democratic nomination, he would not actively campaign against him. With the results of Tuesday night's, May 20, 2008, primaries in Kentucky and Oregon, Obama claimed he had a majority of convention delegates. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

    McCain media consultant departs AP – Tue May 20, 9:56 PM ETMIAMI – A top adviser is leaving Republican John McCain’s presidential campaign because he doesn’t want to work against Democrat Barack Obama.

  • Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama gets some advice on what to order from a young patron during a stop at the Prince Puckler's ice cream shop in Eugene, Oregon May 17, 2008. (Richard Clement/Reuters)

    Obama moves closer to presidential nomination Reuters – 36 minutes agoWASHINGTON (Reuters) – Barack Obama passed a major milestone to move within reach of the Democratic presidential nomination on Tuesday but rival Hillary Clinton refused to surrender.

  • U.S Senate candidate Jeff Merkley celebrates after winning the primary election against Steve Novick in Portland, Ore Tuesday May 20, 2008 At his side is wife Mary Sorteberg. (AP Photo/Steve Slocum)

    Ky., Ore. voters choose US Senate candidates AP – 2 hours, 33 minutes agoPORTLAND, Ore. – With the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination secure, the speaker of the Oregon House is turning his attention to defeating the sole GOP senator on the West Coast this fall.

  • Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., center, greets customers at Cafe Versailles on Tuesday, May 20, 2008, in Miami. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

    Today on the presidential campaign trail AP – Wed May 21, 4:37 AM ETObama inching ever closer to nomination despite another big loss to Clinton … Obama and McCain build cash reserves while Clinton carries debt … Analysis: Democratic race all but over, time to focus on candidates’ legacies

  • The punditry disconnect continues on primary night AP – Wed May 21, 2:07 AM ETNEW YORK – Television’s news networks brought all of their punditry and electronic firepower to the Democratic presidential primary coverage on Tuesday, but left viewers yearning for the simplest of things.
  • Democratic presidential candidate and Senator Hillary Clinton plays with Haiden Weaver, 7 months, as her mother Heather Weaver looks on during a campaign stop at Lynn's Paradise cafe in Louisville, Kentucky, May 20, 2008. (John Sommers II/Reuters)

    Results from KY, OR Dem primary polls AP – Wed May 21, 12:43 AM ETResults from an exit poll conducted for The Associated Press and television networks in Kentucky’s Democratic presidential primary Tuesday, and data from a telephone poll during the past week in Oregon’s vote-by-mail primary:

  • Details of April presidential fundraising AP – Tue May 20, 11:16 PM ETFundraising figures for April as released by the presidential candidates.
  • Former President Bill Clinton and Chelsea Clinton listen to Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton during her Kentucky Presidential Primary night rally in Louisville, Kentucky, May 20, 2008. (John Sommers/Reuters)

    Obama Raised $31 Million for Campaign in April Bloomberg – Tue May 20, 10:42 PM ETMay 20 (Bloomberg) — Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama raised $31 million last month for his primary election campaign, Federal Election Commission records show, putting him on the verge of becoming the biggest fundraiser in U.S. history.

  • US Democratic presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) speaks at his Oregon and Kentucky primary election night rally in Des Moines, Iowa, May 20, 2008. (Jeff Haynes/Reuters)

    Excerpts of Obama’s speech in Iowa AP – Tue May 20, 10:27 PM ETExcerpts of Barack Obama’s prepared remarks on Tuesday in Des Moines, Iowa, before the polls closed in Oregon’s Democratic presidential primary, as provided by his campaign:

  • Mark McKinnon watches a Bush for President campaign rally from the wings in Milwaukee in this October 23, 2000 file photo. (Jeff Mitchell/Reuters)

    McCain strategist keeps Obama vow, leaving campaign Reuters – Tue May 20, 10:16 PM ETFORT LAUDERDALE, Florida (Reuters) – A senior adviser to Republican presidential candidate John McCain said on Tuesday that he was stepping down to keep a commitment he made not to campaign against Democrat Barack Obama.

  • Excerpts of Clinton’s speech Tuesday in Ky. AP – Tue May 20, 9:15 PM ETExcerpts of Hillary Rodham Clinton’s speech Tuesday in Louisville, Ky., after winning the state’s Democratic presidential primary, as provided by CQ Transcriptions:
  • Democratic presidential candidate and US Senator Barack Obama, (D-IL), speaks in Billings, Montana May 19, 2008. (Rick Wilking/Reuters)

    Obama raised $31 million in April: campaign Reuters – Tue May 20, 9:04 PM ETWASHINGTON (Reuters) – Democratic presidential front-runner Barack Obama raised more than $31 million dollars in campaign donations in April, his campaign reported on Tuesday.

  • Calif. special interest groups skirt fundraising law AP – Tue May 20, 6:58 PM ETSACRAMENTO – Corporations, labor unions, Indian tribes and other special interests have sharply increased their campaign spending in California by skirting voter-approved contribution limits and plowing their money into independent expenditures.
  • McCain taps Walker to run mid-Atlantic campaign AP – Tue May 20, 6:52 PM ETCOLUMBIA, S.C. – Republican presidential hopeful John McCain has tapped Trey Walker to manage his campaign’s mid-Atlantic region.
  • In this April 18, 2008, file photo, Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., addresses supporters at a rally in Philadelphia.  Obama is well known for his ability to draw a large crowd. The Illinois senator has already seen plenty of eye-popping crowds, including 35,000 who crammed into Independence Park in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

    Large crowds and Obama trademark AP – Tue May 20, 6:42 PM ETNEW YORK – Barack Obama is well-known for his ability to draw a large crowd. But 75,000 in Portland, Ore.?

  • Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., center, is surrounded by family members, left to right, son Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., stepson Curran Raclin, son Teddy Kennedy Jr., daughter Kara Kennedy and his wife Vicki in a family room at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Tuesday afternoon, May 20, 2008. Kennedy has been diagnosed with a brain tumor. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

    Unlike brothers, Ted Kennedy grew old in public AP – Tue May 20, 6:30 PM ETWASHINGTON – Unlike his brothers, Edward M. Kennedy has grown old in public, his victories, defeats and human contradictions played out across the decades in the public glare.

  • U.S. presidential candidate Senator John McCain arrives at a town hall meeting with Cuban Americans and and members of the Latin American community in Miami, Florida May 20, 2008. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)

    In Miami, McCain attacks Obama on Cuba Reuters – Tue May 20, 6:18 PM ETMIAMI (Reuters) – Republican presidential candidate John McCain criticized Democratic front-runner Barack Obama on Tuesday for saying he was willing to meet with Cuban President Raul Castro and accused him of wanting to weaken the U.S. embargo against Cuba.

  • Democratic party leaders in Florida said Wednesday they expect to resolve soon a dispute over the state's vote in the nominating contest between White House hopefuls Barack Obama(L) and Hillary Clinton(R).(AFP/Getty Images/File)

    Obama, Clinton signal Florida boycott over AP – Tue May 20, 6:16 PM ETTALLAHASSEE, Fla. – The boycott is over.

  • Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., makes a fist as he acknowledges remark about winning Florida in the presidential race Tuesday, May 20, 2008, in Miami. McCain spoke about the Columbia Free Trade agreement and Cuban Independence Day. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

    McCain hammers Obama on national security AP – Tue May 20, 5:54 PM ETMIAMI – Republican John McCain, speaking to a raucous crowd on Cuba’s independence day, hammered Democrat Barack Obama for saying he would meet with President Raul Castro and called Obama a “tool of organized labor” for opposing a Latin American trade deal.

  • US Judge: Wait your turn for Clinton phone records AP – Tue May 20, 5:45 PM ETWASHINGTON – A federal judge refused to rush the release of Hillary Rodham Clinton’s phone records from her days as first lady and, in doing so Tuesday, offered a conservative watchdog group a manners lesson straight from the playground.
  • This undated handout image provided by the National Archives and Ancestry.com shows the World War I draft card of Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama's great grandfather Rolla Payne. (AP Photo/National Archives-Ancestry.com)

    Records shed light on candidates’ ancestors AP – Tue May 20, 5:38 PM ETWASHINGTON – They were a sailor, a bookkeeper and a factory worker, men of humble roots and distant times whose kin would run for president in 2008.

Object lessons in Republican political ads

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Willie Horton, his life & times

William R. Horton (born August 12, 1951 in Chesterfield, South Carolina) is a convicted felon who was the subject of a Massachusetts weekend furlough program that released him while serving a life sentence for murder, without the possibility of parole, during which furloughs he committed armed robbery and rape. A political advertisement during the 1988 U.S. Presidential race was critical of the Democratic nominee and Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis for his support of the program.

The Willie Horton incident, as it has come to be known, has overshadowed the man himself. There has been no recorded statement from him since his incarceration. However, in June 2007 a personal ad was placed online for Willie Horton.

Continue reading his wikipedia page here:

Willie Horton Ad

Willie Horton political ad 1988

Election night, 1988

>

Doctors: Kennedy has brain tumor

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(CNN)U.S. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy has a malignant brain tumor, doctors treating him at Massachusetts General Hospital said Tuesday.

Sen. Edward Kennedy suffered a seizure Saturday in Hyannisport, Massachusetts.

Kennedy was hospitalized Saturday morning after suffering a seizure at his family’s compound at Hyannisport, Massachusetts.

“Preliminary results from a biopsy of the brain identified the cause of the seizure as a malignant glioma in the left parietal lobe,” according to a statement from the doctors treating the senator.

“The usual course of treatment includes combinations of various forms of radiation and chemotherapy,” they said.

“Decisions regarding the best course of treatment for Senator Kennedy will be determined after further testing and analysis,” the doctors continued.

“Senator Kennedy will remain at Massachusetts General Hospital for the next couple of days according to routine protocol. He remains in good spirits and full of energy.”

Maybe We Can't

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The black case for Obama-skepticism

by Cinque Henderson, The New Republic, Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Ninety percent of black Democrats support Barack Obama. So that might leave an observer wondering: What the hell is up with that other 10 percent? Are they stupid? Do they hate their own race? Do they not understand the historical import of the moment?

I can shed some insight on this demographic anomaly. In gatherings of black people, I’m invariably the only one for the Dragon Lady. I’ll do my best to explain how those of us in the ever-shrinking minority of a minority came to our position.

But, before going any further, let me fully disclose my predispositions. I disliked Obama almost instantly. I never believed the central premises of his autobiography or his campaign. He is fueled by precisely the same brand of personal ambition as Bill Clinton. But, where Clinton is damned as “Slick Willie,” Obama is hailed as a post-racial Messiah. Do I believe that Obama had this whole yes-we-can deal planned from age 16? No, I would respond. He began plotting it at age 22. This predisposition, of course, doesn’t help me in making the case against Obama, especially not with black people. But, believe me, there’s a strong case to be made that he isn’t such a virtuous mediator of race. And it’s this skepticism about Obama’s racial posturing that has led us, the 10 percent, into dissent.

Let’s begin with the locus classicus of Obama love, Andrew Sullivan’s encomium in The Atlantic. He writes:

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Race in Oregon

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A friend sent me an e-mail yesterday that I’m only seeing just now. She said:

[A]s you’ll be reading this on primary day tomorrow, I wonder why so little coverage of Obama’s big lead in Oregon — considering it is a much whiter state that W. Virginia or some of the other states Hillary has done well in. Oregon has less than a 2% black population, but Obama is leading big. Could it be some white people actually will vote for him? Even working class ones from small states?

Good question. I don’t pretend to know the answer. I know a lot has been said about Appalachia and the poor whites of Scots-Irish stock who just won’t cotton to voting for a black candidate.

In the general election, when the debate is properly joined, I would like to see Sen. Barack Obama test this out. I want to see him persuade these voters that he’s a much better alternative to what the Republicans are offering.

In an interesting article in The New Republic, John B. Judis examined how race is used in elections and how it is likely to play in this election. History guarantees that Republicans will appeal to race in every way possible during the election. The lesson, he said, is for Obama not to become his own walking Willie Horton advertisement.

In The Big Race: Obama and the psychology of the color barrier, John B. Judis, a senior editor at The New Republic who has authored several interesting pieces on the contests between Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton, argues that Obama’s success in the general election may depend on what terms the debate is framed. Obama could hit electoral jackpot if he is able to change the subject to the Iraq war and the moribund state of the American economy, Judis wrote. He continues near the end:

Some of these have to do with abilities. A 1995 study found that voters believe black politicians “lack competence on major issues.” Other stereotypes relate to ideology.

Several studies have shown that if subjects compare a black and white candidate with roughly equal political positions, they will nevertheless see the black candidate as more liberal. Obama is already vulnerable to charges of inexperience, and, after Wright surfaced, he fell prey to an ideological stereotype as well. Whereas he benefited in the initial primaries and caucuses from being seen as middleof-the-road or even conservative, his strongest support has recently come from more liberal voters. In Pennsylvania, he defeated Clinton among voters who classified themselves as “very liberal” by 55 to 45 percent, but he lost “somewhat conservative” voters by 53 to 47 percent and moderates by 60 to 40 percent. In a national Pew poll, Obama’s support among “very liberal” voters jumped seven points between January and May, while his support among “moderates” dropped by two points. Since Obama’s actual policies are, on the whole, no more liberal than Clinton’s (his health care plan, for instance, is inarguably more conservative), these trends strongly suggest that some voters are stereotyping him because of his race.

If Obama wins the Democratic nomination, he should be able to inherit the white women who backed Hillary Clinton. As political psychologists have shown, these voters should be largely amenable to his candidacy. He should also continue to enjoy an advantage among white professionals. But Obama is likely to continue having trouble with white working-class voters in the Midwest–voters who tend to score high on racial resentment and implicit association tests and who, arguably, decided the 2004 election with their votes in Ohio. Obama will also have trouble with Latinos and Asians, groups that score high on both indexes, and that can be important in states like California. It’s not hard to quantify Obama’s problem: If 9 to 12 percent of Democratic primary voters in swing states have been reluctant to support him because he is black, one can assume that, in the general election, 15 to 20 percent of Democrats or Democratic-leaning Independents may not support him for the same reason.

Can Obama surmount these obstacles? If the strong version of Mendelberg’s thesis is correct, then the very fact that Obama is African American will undercut any appeals to racial fears or resentments. And, if elections were held in the manner of the Iowa caucus, where voters publicly debate their positions and where Obama won substantial white workingclass support, then Mendelberg’s stronger thesis might well prove true. But elections are held in the privacy of a voting booth, where a voter can give voice to fears and resentments without danger of being heard. Obama may be able to sway some white voters to his side by drawing attention to race, but probably not enough to fully compensate for the disadvantage he faces.

If addressing racial resentments directly is not the answer, what is? As Mendelberg also suggests, it’s changing the subject–doing what the Republicans of the 1870s and the Democrats of the 1990s did. This year, that means diverting voters’ attention from the politics of race to the plight of the economy and the continuing quagmire in Iraq.

In the end, the lesson of political psychology for Democrats is not to avoid nominating black candidates. It is simply to understand that America’s racial history continues to influence the calculations of voters–sometimes near the forefronts of their minds, sometimes in the deep recesses of their unconscious. For liberals, acknowledging these obstacles is the first step to blunting them. If Obama can focus the election on the economy and Iraq, he could very well win in spite of the angry words of Reverend Wright and 200 years of both old- fashioned racism and newfangled racial resentment. If he can’t, he is likely to suffer the same fate as Michael Dukakis–and this time it won’t take a Willie Horton commercial.

I have been vacillating between being optimistic and not so far this year. I will settle for Obama coming out alive, his family and integrity intact, whether he wins the election or not.

in politics . . .

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Obama seeks delegate majority in Ore., Ky. primaries

AP – 23 minutes agoAP – Barack Obama will reach for a symbolic tipping point in the Oregon and Kentucky primaries Tuesday — a majority of pledged delegates offered in the Democratic presidential contest. Buffett supporting Obama

Posted: 08:35 PM ET
From

Buffett is supporting Obama.

Buffett is supporting Obama.

(CNN) — Warren Buffett, a longtime friend of both Hillary and Bill Clinton, told CNN Monday Barack Obama would be his choice for the next President of the United States. Speaking with CNN’s Becky Anderson, the billionaire investor said he would gladly vote for either candidate, but said it is clear the senator from Illinois will be the party’s nominee. “So it would be Barack Obama, — [he] would be my preference,” Buffett said. Buffett had refused to take sides in the prolonged Democratic presidential race. The Nebraska Democrat hosted million dollar fundraisers for both last summer, and had previously held back on endorsing one over the other. Though he reportedly said at the Clinton fundraiser that the New York senator is “the person to run the country.” Buffett also has offered Clinton informal advice on the economy, and the two led a question-and-answer session about the economy with voters at a San Francisco campaign event in December. Buffett, the world’s richest man according to Forbes Magazine, runs Omaha-based Berkshire Hathaway Inc. The company’s assets total more than $260 billion.

Filed under: Barack ObamaHillary Clinton

Posted: 08:30 PM ET
From

CNN=Politics Daily is The Best Political Podcast from the Best Political Team.

CNN=Politics Daily is The Best Political Podcast from the Best Political Team.

(CNN)—Barack Obama has his eyes on the general election on the eve of the next set of Democratic primaries in Kentucky and Oregon, while Hillary Clinton tells voters the race is “nowhere near over.” In the latest installment of CNN=Politics Daily , Suzanne Malveaux reports on the ongoing foreign policy dispute between Obama and John McCain —a preview of what we may see this fall. Meanwhile, Clinton’s counting on a big win in Kentucky Tuesday and bracing for a loss in Oregon, but she also took the time to remind Obama that he hasn’t locked up the nomination yet. Senior Political Correspondent Candy Crowley reports from the campaign trail in Kentucky. The presumptive GOP nominee aimed fire at Obama Monday, in an attempt to draw attention away from the fact that five of the Arizona senator’s aides have left his campaign due to new self imposed policies against campaign staffers with ties to lobbyist groups and special interests. CNN’s Dana Bash has the details. Finally: Internet Reporter Abbi Tatton takes you online to the latest Democratic National Committee attack aimed at highlighting McCain’s weaknesses. Click here to subscribe to CNN=Politics Daily.

Filed under: Barack ObamaHillary ClintonJohn McCain

Posted: 05:02 PM ET
ALT TEXT Barack Obama held a rally in Crow Agency, Montana at the Crow Indian Reservation. Obama was given the name of “Awe Kooda bilaxpak Kuuxshish” which means “One who helps people throughout the land.” Obama was adopted by a Crow couple named Black Eagle. He joked that he very much liked the idea of “Barack Black Eagle.” (Photo Credit: Mike Roselli/CNN)

Filed under: Barack Obama

Posted: 04:45 PM ET
From

Hillary Clinton campaigns in Kentucky Monday ahead of the states primary.

Hillary Clinton campaigns in Kentucky Monday ahead of the states primary.
PRESTONSBURG, Kentucky (CNN) – Hillary Clinton defended her reasoning for staying in the presidential race Monday afternoon by pointing out that Karl Rove’s analysis shows her to be the strongest candidate against John McCain in November.
“There has been a lot of analysis about which of us is stronger to win against Sen. McCain, and I believe I am the stronger candidate,” said Clinton, repeating a line from her stump speech. Then she veered from her usual argument. “Just today I found some curious support for that position when one of the TV networks released an analysis done by – of all people – Karl Rove, saying that I was the stronger candidate,” said Clinton. “Somebody go a hold of his analysis and there it is.” Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Hillary Clinton

Posted: 04:35 PM ET
From

An estimated 75,000 people came out to support Barack Obama Sunday in Oregon.

An estimated 75,000 people came out to support Barack Obama Sunday in Oregon.

(CNN) – Amid reports that the Democratic Party’s leaders and largest fundraisers are beginning to take steps to try to bring their party together after a long, hard-fought primary campaign, the latest Gallup daily tracking poll suggests Democratic voters are beginning to coalesce around Sen. Barack Obama. Obama holds a 16-point lead over Sen. Hillary Clinton in Gallup’s latest daily tracking poll released Monday. He has the support of 55 percent of Democratic and Democratic-leaning voters while Clinton’s support is at 39 percent. Previously, Obama’s largest lead over Clinton was 11 percentage points, in daily tracking polls conducted in mid-May and mid-April, according to Gallup. Prior to John Edwards’s exit from the Democratic nomination race, Clinton held a 20-point lead over Obama in mid-January. The results are based on a survey of 1,261 Democratic and Democratic-leaning voters using combined data from May 16-18, 2008. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points. Kentucky and Oregon hold their Democratic primaries Tuesday. Obama is favored in Oregon’s contest and Clinton in Kentucky’s, according to CNN’s latest poll of polls in each state.

Filed under: Barack ObamaHillary ClintonPolls

Posted: 04:00 PM ET
From

Obama has been focusing lately on campaigning in general election states.

Obama has been focusing lately on campaigning in general election states.

WASHINGTON DC (CNN)– He’s not declaring victory in the Democratic primaries, but if you listen to Barack Obama, you get a clear sense he’s more than ready for a fall fight with John McCain. “Everybody is surprised that I am standing here. Lets face it, nobody thought a 46 year old black guy named Barack Obama was going to be the Democratic nominee. The reason this has worked is because of you. You decided you wanted to take your government back and that is what we are going to be fighting for all the way through November,” the Senator from Illinois told the crowd at a rally in Oregon Sunday. An interesting choice of words from a candidate who lately has been careful to not proclaim victory in his long and bitter battle with Senator Hillary Clinton (D-New York) for the Democratic Presidential nomination. But there’s more. “Senator Clinton and I have had a terrific contest and she has been a formidable candidate,” Obama said Sunday while being questioned by reporters. The slip into the past tense is telling. Obama’s choice of where he holds primary night campaign rallies is also a sign that he’s looking ahead to the general election. Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Barack ObamaHillary ClintonJohn McCain

Posted: 03:50 PM ET
From

Clinton said Monday the Democratic race is not over.

Clinton said Monday the Democratic race is not over.

MAYSVILLE, Kentucky (CNN) — Hillary Clinton took a hard line on the state of the Democratic race Monday morning, telling supporters that it is “nowhere near over.” “I’m going to make [my case] until we have a nominee,” she told a crowd at a high school gym, “but we’re not going to have one today and we’re not going to have one tomorrow and we’re not going to have one the next day. “This is nowhere near over, none of us is going to have the number of delegates we’re going to need to get to the nomination,” she argued. A campaign spokesman clarified, explaining that short of a deluge of superdelegates, Clinton believes neither candidate will have the necessary 2,210 delegates by the last primary on June 3, the number she says is needed because she argues Michigan’s and Florida’s delegates must be counted. The Democratic National Committee has set the number of delegates needed at 2,026 after stripping those states of their delegates for moving up their primaries. Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Barack ObamaHillary Clinton

Posted: 03:25 PM ET
From

Spouses of all three remaining presidential candidates have been on the hot seat this campaign season.

Spouses of all three remaining presidential candidates have been on the hot seat this campaign season.

WASHINGTON (CNN) — Barack Obama came out swinging Monday – not only in defending his national security stance on Iran but also in defending his wife, Michelle. At issue: GOP ads in Tennessee railing against Michelle Obama’s comment a few months back that “for the first time in my adult lifetime, I’m really proud of my country.” The senator told ABC “these folks should lay off my wife.” He said his critics can say whatever they want when it comes to his track record. “If they think that they’re going to try to make Michelle an issue in this campaign, they should be careful because that I find unacceptable, the notion that you start attacking my wife or family.” He praised Michelle as “the most honest, the best person I know” and “one of the most caring people I know. She loves this country. And for them to try to distort or to play snippets of her remarks in ways that are unflattering to her, I think, is just low class.” Spouses of candidates have been targeted in this campaign. Bill Clinton’s comments and record have been widely scrutinized. Cindy McCain’s wealth and her refusal to release her income tax and other financial records have been examined. Four years ago, John Kerry’s wife, Teresa, was criticized for various comments. Back in 1992, Hillary Clinton became an issue when she said she was not going to sit around and simply “bake cookies.” There are many other historic examples of wives of presidential candidates coming under attack. But is it right? It’s certainly understandable that presidential candidates don’t want their spouses to be attacked. But when someone wants to be president, is almost everything fair game?

Filed under: Barack ObamaHillary ClintonJohn McCainWolf Blitzer

Posted: 03:20 PM ET
From

 Hillary Clinton has said she's trying 'to break the highest and hardest glass ceiling'.

Hillary Clinton has said she’s trying ‘to break the highest and hardest glass ceiling’.

Hillary Clinton says she’s running for president “to break the highest and hardest glass ceiling” in the United States. But every day, it looks less and less likely that she’ll succeed. The New York Times reports today about what Clinton’s all-but-certain defeat will mean for women. Clinton set records for a campaign by a woman, raising more than $170 million, often getting better debate reviews than her male competitors, rallying older women and getting white men to vote for her. There are even those who believe Clinton was able to use sexism on the trail to her advantage, by bringing in more votes and donations after instances where many believed she was being unfairly picked on because she is a woman. There is no question she has done exceedingly well only to finish second behind Barack Obama. To read more and contribute to the Cafferty File discussion click here

Filed under: Cafferty File

Posted: 02:33 PM ET
From

 Ferraro is a supporter of Clinton's presidential campaign.

Ferraro is a supporter of Clinton’s presidential campaign.

(CNN) — Geraldine Ferraro, the outspoken former Democratic vice presidential candidate and a supporter of Hillary Clinton’s White House bid, told the New York Times she may not vote for Barack Obama should he be the party’s nominee. Ferraro, a former member of Clinton’s finance committee who resigned that post earlier this year after making comments many viewed as racially offensive, also said she thinks the Illinois senator has been “terribly sexist” over the course of the presidential campaign. The comments appear to underscore the potential difficulty Obama may have courting some women voters in the fall — many of whom have said they feel a solidarity with the New York senator over the barriers Clinton faces in her bid to become the first female president. Ferraro has not shied away from discussing the impact of race and gender throughout the Democratic presidential campaign. In March, the former congresswoman told a California newspaper the chief reason Obama’s candidacy was successful was because he was black. “If Obama was a white man, he would not be in this position,” she told The Daily Breeze. “And if he was a woman, he would not be in this position. He happens to be very lucky to be who he is. And the country is caught up in the concept.” Ferraro also said Clinton had been the victim of a “sexist media.” Obama later called those comments “ridiculous,” and Clinton said she disagreed with them. Ferraro maintained her comments were not racist, but ultimately resigned from the Clinton campaign after they caused an uproar. “The Obama campaign is attacking me to hurt you. I won’t let that happen,” she wrote in her resignation letter to Clinton, adding, “I am who I am and I will continue to speak up.”

Filed under: Barack ObamaGeraldine FerraroHillary Clinton

Posted: 01:00 PM ET
From

Sen. Byrd endorsed Obama's presidential bid Monday.

Sen. Byrd endorsed Obama’s presidential bid Monday.

(CNN) — Sen. Robert Byrd, the longest-serving senator in American history, announced Monday he is endorsing Barack Obama’s White House bid. Byrd, 90, has served as West Virginia’s senator for nearly fifty years, and is one of the chamber’s most vocal critics on the war in Iraq. “After a great deal of thought, consideration and prayer over the situation in Iraq, I have decided that, as a superdelegate to the Democratic National Convention, I will cast my vote for Senator Barack Obama for President,” Byrd said in a statement released by his office. “Both Senators Clinton and Obama are extraordinary individuals, whose integrity, honor, love for this country and strong belief in our Constitution I deeply respect.” “I believe that Barack Obama is a shining young statesman, who possesses the personal temperament and courage necessary to extricate our country from this costly misadventure in Iraq, and to lead our nation at this challenging time in history,” Byrd also said. “Barack Obama is a noble-hearted patriot and humble Christian, and he has my full faith and support.” The endorsement is not without symbolism. Byrd was a leader of the local chapter of the Ku Klux Klan as a young man and was, along with several southern Democrats, an opponent of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. He has since denounced his previous views on racial segregation. West Virginia’s other senator, Jay Rockefeller, endorsed Obama earlier this year. Hillary Clinton carried the state by 41 points last week.

Filed under: Barack ObamaRobert Byrd

Posted: 12:45 PM ET
From

McCain took a shot at Obama Monday.

McCain took a shot at Obama Monday.

(CNN) — Campaigning in Barack Obama’s hometown of Chicago on Monday, John McCain sought to impugn the Illinois senator’s judgment on national security by slamming Obama’s statement that Iran poses a less serious threat to the United States than the Soviet Union did. “Sen. Obama claimed that the threat Iran poses to our security is ‘tiny’ compared to the threat once posed by the former Soviet Union,” McCain said at the beginning of his speech to the National Restaurant Association. “Obviously, Iran isn’t a superpower and doesn’t possess the military power the Soviet Union had. But that does not mean that the threat posed by Iran is insignificant.” McCain was referring to Obama’s comments on Sunday in Pendleton, Oregon, in which Obama asserted that his administration’s foreign policy would allow for negotiations with hostile nations. (Related: McCain slams Obama for downplaying threat from Iran ) “Strong countries and strong Presidents talk to their adversaries,” Obama remarked. “That’s what Kennedy did with Khrushchev. That’s what Reagan did with Gorbachev. That’s what Nixon did with Mao. I mean, think about it: Iran, Cuba, Venezuela — these countries are tiny compared to the Soviet Union.” “They don’t pose a serious threat to us the way the Soviet Union posed a threat to us,” he said. “And yet we were willing to talk to the Soviet Union at the time when they were saying ‘we’re going to wipe you off the planet.’ ” McCain, who regularly assails Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on the stump, suggested in Chicago that Obama doesn’t understand the “basic realities of international relations” and that engaging Ahmadinejad diplomatically would only embolden him. Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Uncategorized

Posted: 11:50 AM ET
From ,

The DNC launched an anti-McCain Web site Monday.

The DNC launched an anti-McCain Web site Monday.

(CNN) — The Democratic National Committee launched a new Web site Monday promising to be an online clearinghouse for opposition research on John McCain. “McCainPedia” compiles DNC research on the presumptive Republican nominee under topics like “Economy,” “Ethics” and “Security” and targets McCain’s “empty rhetoric” on Iraq as well as his role in the Keating Five scandal of the early 1990s. Users are also invited to access DNC video from both YouTube and FlipperTV, the Democratic Party’s archive of campaign tracking video. In launching the site, the DNC claims that anyone can research and share the material. Unlike Wikipedia, on which the site is modeled, edits can be made only by DNC staff — not members of the public. “This allows us to fully validate all of the information that appears, ensuring accuracy and reliability,” the “About” section of the site says. Instead, the site is “run by the DNC’s Research, Communications, and Internet teams.” Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: John McCain

Posted: 11:45 AM ET
 Sen. John McCain will call Sen. Barack Obama's call for a renegotiation of NAFTA 'bad judgment.'

Sen. John McCain will call Sen. Barack Obama’s call for a renegotiation of NAFTA ‘bad judgment.’

(CNN) — Sen. John McCain is again expected to question Sen. Barack Obama’s judgment on Monday, this time on the Democratic front-runner’s trade policies. The presumptive Republican presidential nominee did not wait for the Democratic presidential race to officially end before attacking Obama, who is likely to capture the Democratic nomination over rival Sen. Hillary Clinton. In a speech in Chicago, Illinois, McCain will label Obama’s call for a renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and Canada “bad judgment and a bit inconsistent,” according to the prepared text of the speech. Full story

Filed under: Barack ObamaJohn McCain Elections

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Clinton fights on, Obama returns to Iowa CNN – 3 hours ago Sen. Barack Obama campaigned in Montana Monday while Sen. Hillary Clinton addressed voters in Kentucky. Sen. Hillary Clinton will spend Tuesday night in Kentucky to celebrate what’s expected to be a big win in that state’s primary. Obama seeks to extend poll lead BBC News Barack Obama expects big day in Oregon and Kentucky primaries Los Angeles Times Boston GlobeNewsdayReutersSeattle Times all 2,397 news articles »
PRESS TV
Memo To Michelle Obama: Toughen Up Sweetie Houston Chronicle – 52 minutes ago In an interview with Good Morning America, during which Barack Obama called the so-called attacks on his wife Michelle “low class” and “detestable” and warned the Republicans to “lay off my wife” he seems to ignore a basic reality of politics–when Obama: ‘Lay off my wife’ Chicago Sun-Times Tennessee Senator Takes On His Own Party New York Times New York Daily NewsABC NewsReutersNECN all 118 news articles »
Spiegel Online
McCain Opens Virginia Headquarters Washington Post – 7 hours ago By Tim Craig Arizona Sen. John McCain’s presidential campaign opened its Virginia headquarters yesterday in Pentagon City, sending a signal that Republicans plan to fight hard to keep the state from turning blue this year. Gilmore shuns Bush in race for Senate Washington Times Bush and McCain’s Awkward Embrace TIME Detroit Free PressBillings GazetteThe MissoulianPolitico all 769 news articles »
Seattle Post Intelligencer
Obama leads field in unsolicited campaign songs San Jose Mercury News – 5 hours ago By Nekesa Mumbi Moody AP Barack Obama is closing in on the Democratic nomination for president, but he clinched the race for the best campaign soundtrack long ago – no superdelegates needed. McCain Visiting Miami’s Cuban Independence Day Party Central Florida News 13| Big Money on Barack Obama as Hillary Clinton’s Donors Defect U.S. News & World Report Washington PostMason City Globe GazetteThe Associated PressSeattle Times all 1,077 news articles »
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Barack rips McCain, basks in mammoth crowd Chicago Sun-Times – 2 hours ago GRESHAM, Ore. — Democrat Barack Obama told seniors Sunday that Republican John McCain would threaten the Social Security that they depend on because he supports privatizing it. Clinton, Obama expected to split today’s votes San Francisco Chronicle Obama makes case for diplomacy, loud and clear Boston Globe Seattle TimesWashington PostThe Associated PressNew York Times all 1,453 news articles »
Telegraph.co.uk
McCain Finds a Thorny Path in Ethics Effort New York Times – 9 hours ago By BARRY MEIER and KATE ZERNIKE Sorting out the lobbying entanglements of his campaign advisers is proving to be a messy business for Senator John McCain. Lobbying Policies Washington Post Texan’s lobbying success becomes liability for McCain Houston Chronicle The Associated PressDetroit Free PressLos Angeles TimesMSNBC all 842 news articles »
PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung)
Sen. Robert Byrd, one-time KKK member, backs Barack Obama Los Angeles Times – 11 hours ago Sen. Robert Byrd’s endorsement today of Barack Obama was both oddly timed and illustrative of the state of the Democratic presidential race. US senator and former Klansman endorses Obama Monsters and Critics.com Obama gets a boost in the Mountain State Kansas City Star abc7news.comThe Associated PressWashington PostCBS News all 232 news articles »
The Southern Ledger
Tally one more superdelegate for Obama Seattle Post Intelligencer – 6 hours ago By GREGORY ROBERTS Barack Obama picked up the support of another Democratic superdelegate from Washington on Monday when state party Chairman Dwight Pelz announced his endorsement. State’s Democratic superdelegates lean to Obama Anchorage Daily News (subscription) Iowa Democratic Party chief backs Obama DesMoinesRegister.com Molokai TimesBennington BannerRadio IowaThe Olympian all 890 news articles »
Salon
Breaking News: Hillary Clinton now thinks Karl Rove’s a political Los Angeles Times – 10 hours ago Until very recently — like suddenly this afternoon — Karl Rove was to most Democrats the Great Satan, the political mastermind of two outrageously stunning Republican presidential victories by a Texas goofball governor and, before that, Clinton’s Favorite Political Pundit Is…Karl Rove? CBS News Karl Rove’s sly deal with Fox Salon FOXNewsWall Street Journal BlogsNewsMax.comABC News all 8 news articles »
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Canoe.ca
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Malaysia Star
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Large crowds at rallies an Obama trademark The Associated Press – 4 hours ago NEW YORK (AP) – Barack Obama is well known for his ability to draw large crowds, but 75000 in Portland, Ore.? The mass of people who converged by foot and by boat on a Willamette River park on Sunday was the largest rally to date for the Democratic A Shift in Voters, but Oregon Still Embraces the Unconventional New York Times Barack Obama steps up attacks on John McCain Los Angeles Times Arkansas OnlineChicago TribuneWashington PostNew York Daily News all 178 news articles »
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Final arguments in challenge to Phila. gun laws Philadelphia Inquirer – 1 hour ago By Jeff Shields Final arguments are slated for this afternoon in the National Rifle Association’s court challenge to five new city gun laws. Video: Huckabee: NRA Obama Remark ‘inappropriate’ AssociatedPressKnown for his wit, Mike Huckabee shows none in NRA “joke” Los Angeles Times Houston ChronicleLouisville Courier-Journal411mania.comFOXNews all 184 news articles »
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As Time Runs Short, Clinton Claims Lead in Popular Vote New York Times – 8 hours ago By PATRICK HEALY Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton is entering the Kentucky and Oregon primaries on Tuesday with one of the most pugnacious political messages of her campaign: That she is ahead in the national popular vote when all votes are counted, Democrats return to Florida Boston Globe Bill Clinton campaigns across Kentucky Chicago Tribune Miami Poetry ReviewThe Newark AdvocateWashington PostLos Angeles Times all 1,250 news articles »

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Hoisted by his own petard

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My friend Lucy Wilson (not her real name), in a e-mail, wrote that she found the bit where Lieberman whispered into McCain’s ear and then McCain saying, “uh I mean the Iranians are training the extremists, not Al Qaeda” particularly funny. “Are you serious? That was a comedy routine.”

A story to go with the pictures

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Obama rallies tens of thousands at Portland waterfront, Posted by The Oregonian May 19, 2008 06:15AM

Tens of thousands jammed Gov. Tom McCall Waterfront Park in Portland today to watch Barack Obama wrap up a busy weekend in Oregon and a historic campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination.

The Portland Fire Bureau estimated the crowd at 72,000. About 60,000 squeezed inside the gates and 12,000 watched from outside.

It was a record crowd for an Oregon political event. In 2004, an estimated 50,000 turned out to see Democrat John Kerry, who brought along movie idol Leonardo DiCaprio and rocker Jon Bon Jovi.
Obama was the biggest star at Sunday’s gathering -though a popular Portland band, The Decemberists, provided the warm-up act. With blue skies and temperatures in the 80s, thousands waited in lines that snaked through downtown Portland streets.

“We just wanted to see him,” said Norman Yoshida, 64, of Portland. “We need somebody who can be inspirational, and he inspires.”

The event capped a weekend of Oregon campaigning for Obama and Democrat Hillary Clinton. After so many states moved their primaries ahead on the calendar, political strategists assumed the Democratic presidential nominee would be decided well ahead of Oregon’s May 20 primary.

But Oregon is still very much in play.

Neither candidate can gain enough delegates with the primaries in Oregon and Kentucky on Tuesday to clinch the nomination. But Obama hopes Oregon will give him the majority of the pledged delegates. Meanwhile, Clinton, who is behind in Oregon and ahead in Kentucky, could use a strong showing to prove she’s the best candidate to face Republican John McCain in November.

Clinton left Oregon for Kentucky after a televised town hall meeting Friday, but former President Bill Clinton and daughter Chelsea stayed behind Saturday and today to crisscross the state talking to voters.

Sporting a blue “Hillary 2008” baseball cap, the former president told more than 1,000 people at Salem’s sun-drenched Riverfront Park to ignore the growing news media consensus that Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois has all but wrapped up the nomination.
“Don’t you let anyone tell you she can’t win,” Clinton said. “You can still make your voices heard.”

Obama started and ended his day speaking to smaller crowds in Gresham and Pendleton.

This morning, he met with seniors at the Huntington Terrace assisted-living center. Obama, who needs to boost his chances with senior voters, promised to protect the Social Security system by expanding the payroll tax so that it applies to people with incomes above $102,000 a year. “We have an obligation to secure the future of one of the most successful programs in history,” he said.

Tonight, Obama held another town hall at the Pendleton Convention Center in easter Oregon. About 3,000 people attended.

But the big party was in Portland.

Obama’s first words to the cheering crowd: “Wow.” “Wow.” And “Wow.”
“This is spectacular,” he said.

Obama’s wife, Michelle, and two daughters joined him on the stage. The candidate spoke for about 40 minutes, drawing some of the loudest applause when he promised to end the Iraq war and when he said other cities need to follow the lead Portland has taken on mass transit and alternative energy.

The Obama campaign supplied plastic beach balls that were batted around the crowd. Rock music blared, a few people danced and volunteers handed out cups of water.
Some in the crowd said they’d already voted for Clinton.
“I actually didn’t vote for Obama,” said Tita Compere, 25, who spent 10 hours Saturday volunteering for Hillary Clinton’s campaign. But Compere was impressed by the crowd’s diversity, something she felt was lacking in Clinton’s televised Friday night event. “It was just 40-year-old white women,” she said.

Some in the crowd were still undecided.

This will be the first time Elizabeth Dorman, 18, gets to vote. As she stood in line with her mother, Robin, 48, she said she likes both Clinton and Obama. “I’m still wavering,” she said.

Several people talked about the historical significance of this year’s campaigns. Before the candidate took the stage, many turned their digital cameras to record the huge crowd.

Politically, the afternoon on Portland’s Waterfront Park needed to accomplish two things for Obama, said Jim Moore, a political science professor at Pacific University.
Sunday’s event needed to remind his enthusiastic young supporters not to forget to turn in their ballots. And it must position Obama against McCain in a state that might be a battleground state in November, Moore said.

Obama mentioned Clinton a few times Sunday. But he spent most of his time talking about McCain. He said a McCain presidency would mean a third term for George W. Bush.
“If you vote for me, then I promise we won’t just win Oregon, we’ll win this nomination and the election in November,” he said.

Devin McClain, 23, flew up from San Diego to volunteer for the campaign and see the speech. She said the campaign meant a lot to her personally because like Obama, her father is black and her mother is white. “I thought it was amazing,” she said afterwards. “Actually, I started crying.”

In wrapping up the case for his wife, Bill Clinton did not criticize Obama. Instead, he directed his sharpest comments at the news media, citing what he said were recent studies that concluded that the Democratic primary campaign had been the subject of “the most biased, one-sided media coverage in the history of American politics,” and Democratic Party officials for their handling of the disputed primaries in Florida and Michigan.

Hillary Clinton won both the Florida and Michigan primaries, although neither she nor Obama campaigned in those states and Obama’s name did not appear on the Michigan ballot. Because both states broke Democratic Party rules by moving their primaries forward, the party has threatened to void their delegates.

In Salem, Clinton received a rousing introduction from Gov. Ted Kulongoski, who has remained a staunchly loyal Hillary Clinton superdelegate, one of the delegates not bound by state voting results.

Kulongoski called the New York senator “the most competent person. . .the smartest person. . .the person most qualified from day one” to be the next president.

Bill Clinton outlined his wife’s detailed plans on the economy, energy and health care, and made a special appeal to young people, who have been a bulwark of Obama’s support. He said many of them could expect a long life span, and that Hillary Clinton would increase funding for research into health issues affecting the elderly.

Clinton and his daughter began their day at Woodlawn Elementary School in Northeast Portland, promoting the work of the I Have A Dream Foundation, which encourages low-income children to graduate from high school and go to college. Dressed in blue jeans, a black T-shirt and running shoes, the former president spent several minutes on his hands and knees planting tomato seedlings in the school’s community garden while providing a running discourse on the best planting methods to a group of youngsters.

Before traveling to Salem, the Clintons stopped for lunch at Mother’s Bistro in downtown Portland, where downtown streets were clogged with people heading for Gov. Tom McCall Waterfront Park and a massive rally featuring Obama.

The Clintons ended the day at another rally in Ashland, the last major Clinton campaign event before ballot counting begins.

— Michelle Cole; michellecole@news.oregonian.com

— The Oregonian’s Ashbel S. Green, Dave Hogan, Noelle Crombie and Whitney Malkin contributed to this posting.

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