Charlie Steiner on XM’s “The Beat” this morning:
“So, what you’re saying is that the Red Sox are Barack Obama and the Yankees are Hillary Clinton.”
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Charlie Steiner on XM’s “The Beat” this morning:
“So, what you’re saying is that the Red Sox are Barack Obama and the Yankees are Hillary Clinton.”
Tags: Baseball, clinton, obama, red sox, steiner, xm, yankees
From Joe Klein in Time: The Barack Blowout
If nothing else, a presidential campaign tests a candidate’s ability to think strategically and tactically and to manage a very complex organization. We have three plausible candidates remaining–Obama, Clinton and John McCain–and Obama has proved himself the best executive by far. Both the Clinton and the McCain campaigns have gone broke at crucial moments. So much for fiscal responsibility. McCain has been effective only when he runs as a guerrilla; in both 2000 and ‘08, he was hapless at building a coherent campaign apparatus. Clinton’s sins are different: arrogance and the inability to see past loyalty to hire the best people for the job and to fire those who prove inadequate. “If nothing else, we’ve learned that Obama probably has the ability to put together a smooth-running Administration,” said a Clinton super-delegate. “That’s pretty important.”
Despite what the Democratic opposition will say in the final throes of a campaign, Obama has already demonstrated his ability to organize, to lead with substance, and to motivate with both inspirational and aspirational rhetoric. The near-flawless nature of his campaign proves it.
(Via Portland Press Herald.)
Clinton began his speech talking about a shopping excursion to L.L. Bean’s flagship store in Freeport and reminiscing about a trip to the store 25 years ago when he persuaded his wife to drive there at 1:30 a.m. to “test” whether it was really open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Shortly after Clinton began talking about how his wife is prepared to handle Iraq and global warming, a lone heckler shouted, “End the war now.”
“Would you like to make this speech? Sir, this is not your event, this is for Hillary,” Clinton said as the crowd booed the heckler and then cheered Clinton’s retort.
When the protester added that “the war is still going on,” Clinton responded, “That is because George Bush is still fighting it.”
The man was escorted out of the building by a lone police officer and private security guards.
Man, when did we lose the right to speak freely at a public event? I hope these actions were at the direction of an overzealous security contingent (the Secret Service, mind you) and local cops, not the Clinton campaign.
Tags: clinton, free speech, maine
(Via The Huffington Post | Full News Feed.)
Obama has, at this point, won 11 states, of 22 in play. Worst-case scenario, he’s already won half. If he picks up Alaska, which I suspect he will, he wins the battle of the states.
California is looking like it might head SUSA’s way, so that’ll be good news for Hillary. But the rest of the night is bleak. She didn’t exceed expectations anywhere. She lost states she led big in just a few weeks ago. She’s hurting for money. The calendar up ahead is tailor made for Obama. The momentum is there.
(Via MacDailyNews – Where Mac News Comes First.)
Styles make fights — or so goes the boxing cliché. In 2008, they make presidential campaigns, too…
(Via Associated Press.)
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton had an emotional reunion Monday with a colleague from the early days of her legal career as a child advocate.
The moment came as she revisited her law school days while hosting a campaign event at the Yale Child Study Center where she first pursued her interest in child advocacy.
Penn Rhodeen, a New Haven public interest lawyer who worked with Clinton as a student, recalled her showing up on his doorstep wearing purple bellbottoms.
“It was so 1972,” he recalled, praising Clinton for her longtime interest in helping children.
“Here is the abiding truth we know – you have always been a champion for children. Welcome home, dear friend. We are so proud of you,” he said.
Clinton responded emotionally to Rhodeen’s praise, at one point wiping her eyes with her hand. But unlike her teary-eyed moment in Portsmouth, N.H., her voice never broke and she tried make light of her emotion.
Tags: clinton, Democrats, new hampshire
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