
Rush Limbaugh-heeding Republicans did influence the outcome of Tuesday’s Ohio and Texas votes.
All eyes turn to Pennsylvania, where Hillary Clinton leads Barack Obama 52%-37% percent. Wyoming, which holds its contest on Saturday, gets little mention.
It’s good for a candidate to have good news to share when things aren’t exactly going their way and they’ve started blaming the media. $55 million dollars worth of good news. What could possibly kill that monumental buzz?
Clinton surrogate Howard Wolfson likens Barry O to Ken Starr.
Not immune to going overboard themselves, Obama foreign policy adviser Samantha Power brands Hillary a monster. Question: Does Power mean a Where the Wild Things Are type monster, or the kind that eats the still-beating hearts of newborn children?
Karl Rove opines on the long, hard slog that awaits America. I hate to say this, but Rove has… a… point… *shudders*
Remember: It has only been eight weeks since Iowans voted in the first contest of the season, though it seems like a geological age has passed. There are now seven weeks until Pennsylvania, nine weeks until North Carolina and Indiana, and 10 weeks until West Virginia. Imagine how many twists and turns are possible.
The Clintons continue to evade requests to release their tax returns.
Wait, so it was the Clinton camp – not Obama’s – who was reassuring Canada that their rhetoric about NAFTA was mostly empty? And this is only coming to light after the Ohio Primary?
And then there’s THIS can of worms.
Hillary tears Obama down at the cost of building John McCain up.
“I think it’s imperative that each of us be able to demonstrate we can cross the commander-in-chief threshold,” the New York senator told reporters crowded into an infant’s bedroom-sized hotel conference room in Washington.“I believe that I’ve done that. Certainly, Sen. McCain has done that and you’ll have to ask Sen. Obama with respect to his candidacy,” she said.
George W. Bush’s enthusiastic endorsement will probably nullify any brownie points Hilldawg gave to Old Man McCain, though.
SurveyUSA projects a loss for McCain regardless of the Democrat he faces in November. By their estimate, Obama would have a wider margin of victory and turn more states blue. Some states that would go to Democrats under Clinton would go to McCain instead, however, and vice versa.








