Team Clinton: Penn Skedaddle ‘Disgusting’ — We’ll Deal With Him Later

"We’ll deal with him later." — Clinton co-chair Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, on Mark Penn.

"It’s disgusting for him to do this . . . that’s just disgusting." — Clinton supporter Hilary Rosen.

Mark Penn sleeps with the fishes. Metaphorically speaking only, of course.

On this evening’s Tucker, Hillary’s chief campaign strategist came in for some industrial-strength opprobrium from two prominent Clinton supporters for his attempt to flee what might be a sinking ship.

View video here.

Source: Newsbusters

Link-O-Rama

Hillary’s defeated; GOP sets its sights on Obama

Clinton begins to cast Obama as hopeless dreamer

Clinton faces daunting delegate deficit

Hil shouldn’t have acted like a queen

What Clinton’s Wisconsin Loss Means

Union group: Clinton may need to exit soon

Consultant spending saps Clinton campaign

Delusions of Grandeur

Superdelegate schmoozed by Chelsea backs Obama

Clinton’s Spin Machine: Spun Dry

Tonight’s Austin debate: What’s at stake?

Hillary 7.5+ Million in Debt

Anti-Hillary Sentiment On The Rise Among Leading Feminists

HILLARY ON THE ROCKS: FOOLISH THREATS

Obama campaign urges Clinton to concede

Clinton Says Democrats Must `Get Real’ About Election

Clinton faces daunting delegate deficit

Penn: Hillary Will Mount a Commander-In-Chief Offensive

Hillary… Don’t Feel The Reaper: “Hillary’s going broke”

Five mil in the red, senior staff working gratis, and another monster month of fundraising for the Messiah coming down the pike. Given his other advantages — likeability, oratorical, and a swell of support within the party establishment — I’m starting to think if she holds him off it’ll be an even more impressive comeback than Maverick’s was. How confident is he? He’s going after the Clenis now.

Dean-o’s already talking about a deal to avoid a convention battle. Whom to choose? The guy who raises $30 million a month? Or the gal who can’t pay her bills? If you’re the praying sort, you’d better pray for something like an 80% crossover by Republicans in those open primaries.

A reprise from last night, partly because I dig it and partly because it fits.

Source: Hot Air

Hillary Clinton link catch up!

I’ve been experiencing technical difficulties - trying to catch up!

She’s Not Martin Luther Clinton

Obama: Bill Clinton’s campaigning ‘troubling’

Campaigning for Wife, Bill Clinton Walks Fine Line

Clinton - Obama engaged in bitter debate

The Temper-Tantrum Kid

New poll: U.S. more ready for black prez than female one

The Bill and Hillary Show

For Clinton, Government as Economic Prod

Clinton fits feminists’ victim mould

Obama, Clinton divide blacks

Harlem Offers Mixed Reception for Hillary

Hillary hijacks a dream

Donations to Hillary Unethical

Obama Camp Charges Clinton Camp with "Supressing" Nevada vote

The Hillary Papers Get Ignored By The Media

Voting for Hillary – So Easy a Cavewoman Could Do It

Hillary’s Henchmen Neuter Chris Matthews

Leading Democrats To Bill Clinton: Pipe Down

Hillary Clinton: my teary moment won me New Hampshire

Hillary Clinton conceded today that a rare moment of public emotion in a New Hampshire coffee shop had helped bring her back from the political dead.

The usually stoic former first lady said that the incident, in which she became teary as she discussed what drove her to keep fighting for the presidency, had afforded her a "connection" with New Hampshire voters that had propelled her to a 3 point victory in the state’s primary over favourite Barack Obama.

“I had this incredible moment of connection with the voters of New Hampshire and they saw it and they heard it. And they gave me this incredible victory last night,” she said during an interview with CBS. Analysis of exit polls from New Hampshire showed that women voters, traditionally her most loyal supporters, flooded back after deserting her for Barack Obama in last week’s Iowa caucuses. Mr Obama narrowly edged Mrs Clinton for the female vote in Iowa primary last week but yesterday she enjoyed a clear 13-point lead.

The critical moment came when Clinton was asked by how she kept going every day - "how do you keep so upbeat and so wonderful?"

“It’s not easy, and I could not do it if I just didn’t passionately believe it was the right thing to do,” she said, her voice catching. “This is very personal for me. It’s not just political. It’s not just public.”

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Interesting: The Comeback That Never Was

I realize the media narrative will be all about Hillary’s incredible comeback in New Hampshire tonight. But there’s something worth checking out with the history of RCP polls. Yes, all of the well-known national pollsters had it terribly wrong. But look at the local results over the last week.

The results were there all along, it just didn’t generate any buzz.

        Obama  Hillary
Suffolk/WHDH
01/05 - 01/06 500 LV
  35  34
Concord Monitor
01/04 - 01/05 400 LV
  34  33
CNN/WMUR/UNH
01/04 - 01/05 359 LV
  33  33 
Suffolk/WHDH
01/04 - 01/05 500 LV
  33 35 
Reuters/CSpan/Zogby 01/03 - 01/05 844 LV
  30 31 
Mason-Dixon 01/02 - 01/04 600 LV
  33  31 
CNN/WMUR/UNH 01/02 - 01/04 600 LV
  30 34 

Source: Riehl World News

I think also - due to the media hype that Obama would stomp Hillary a lot of "Independents" (everyone in NH calls themselves Independents) decided since Obama was going to win - let’s vote for the Republican’s weakest candidate - John McCain the RINO

The United States Economy - Hillary and Media are trying to distort it’s power.

It’s All About Hillary

By Howard Kurtz 

Just back from Iowa, and I’ve got a theory about why Hillary Clinton has been having a difficult time.

It’s because she is the issue.

No politician wants to be the issue and have the debate swirl around them and their foibles. And Hillary is working overtime to make Barack Obama the issue with the whole change-requires-experience argument. But I don’t see the pundits, bloggers, radio people and cable hosts sitting around debating Obama’s qualifications. They’re chattering about Hillary, as they have for 15 years. Even talking about her looks, thanks to Drudge.

Clinton’s team, as I reported yesterday, believes the press is holding their woman to a much higher standard than Obama, and some journalists agree.

For most of the year, as HRC’s election was depicted as pretty much a done deal, a number of conservative commentators seemed to be making their peace with the prospect. Hillary was more hawkish than her Democratic rivals, more experienced, and had run a surprisingly good campaign, they said. She was, in short, a grownup.

But now that she’s hit a rough patch, some of the old anti-Hillary vehemence is surfacing. Take these two reports in National Review, starting with Jonah Goldberg:

"The most enjoyable aspect of watching the HMS Hillary take on water is the prospect that Bill — and his cult of personality — will go down with the ship, too. Bill Clinton has been stumping for his wife on the Iowa hustings, framing the election as a referendum on his tenure as president. Last month in Muscatine (during the same speech in which he falsely claimed to have opposed the Iraq war from the beginning), he told the assembled Democrats that HMS Hillary could transport America ‘back to the future.’ . . .

"Hillary’s entire campaign has been grounded in her experience in the Clinton administration of the 1990s, even though that experience mostly involves designing a failed health-care plan and unsuccessfully hectoring her husband to move to the left. Still, as New York Times editorial writer Adam Cohen noted in a column last week, it was her decision to make the choice between her and Barack Obama a ‘referendum on a decade.’ So if Hillary Clinton loses the race for the nomination — heck, even if she just loses the Iowa caucuses — I hope to see this headline somewhere, perhaps in the New York Post: ‘America to Clinton(s): We’re Just Not That Into You.’ "

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Who is Jerry Zeifman?

Jerry Zeifman was born in 1925 in Mineola, New York. During World War he enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and eventually served as a communications officer on USS Missouri BB63. He later received an A.B. from Harvard, a JD degree from the New York University School of Law.  and became an author and editor of legal publications for Prentice Hall, Inc.

In 196I he was recruited by the House Judiciary Committee  to serve as counsel to its Special Subcommittee on State Taxation of Interstate Commerce.  Until 1972 he also served as chief counsel to its Subcommittee on Civil Rights. 

Starting in 1973 he served as the Chief Counsel to the full Judiciary Committee during its Nixon impeachment proceedings and the confirmations of Gerald Ford and Nelson Rockefeller to serve as Vice Presidents. 

In 1975 he became a Professor of Law at the University of Santa Clara in California. During that period he also served as a counsel to the local office of Rep. Don Edwards (D CA) as well as a consultant to Governor Jay Hammond of Alaska.In 1980 he retired from academia and returned to Washington to do public interest work on behalf of the National Senior Citizens Law Center and a number of AFL-CIO unions. Starting in 1995 he became the author of books on politics and law.

Present Career As Author                       

Books:    Without Honor: The Crimes of Camelot and the Impeachment of President Nixon (1995);  Hillary’s Pursuit of Power (2006)

Articles:  Wall Street Journal; Washington Times; Insight Magazine; NewsMax; National Ledger; World Net Daily; New York Post.

TV and radio interviews:  1995 to present.

Other Biographical Materials

Some of his personal papers are currently available at The George Washington University, The Gelman Library, Special Collections and University Archives; 2130 H. St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20052  Phone: 202-994-7549  Email: speccoll@gwu.edu

The material dates from 1960-77. The collection contains his personal diary and correspondence, as well as his work-related papers. The collection deals primarily with issues related to the Watergate scandal, the resignation of Spiro Agnew, the impeachment of President Nixon, the confirmation of Gerald Ford to be President, the confirmation of Nelson Rockefeller to be Vice President, the efforts of Gerald Ford (as majority leader) to impeach Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglass, and prior efforts to impeach seven other federal judges.   The materials also contain information about the employment on the Judiciary Committee of a number of people who later rose to national prominence, including Hillary Rodham Clinton and Massachusetts governor William Weld.

Hillary Launches Spanish Language Ads

Hillary Clinton is airing Spanish-language advertisements with Mariachi music in the early primary states of Iowa and New Hampshire.

A Spanish-speaking narrator talks for most of the spot, but portions that feature Clinton and her former president husband are in English with Spanish subtitles.

“I want to be sure that everyone has guaranteed health care coverage, it should not be a matter of privilege, it should be a matter of right,” Clinton says.

At one point a narrator says in Spanish “like Bill Clinton, she will support economic policies that will create millions of jobs.” Later, there is a shot of Mr. Clinton speaking. He says Hillary “will never forget the priorities of middle class and working class Americans.”

The spot discusses Hispanics who don’t have health insurance and those who could lose their homes when subprime mortgage rates reset at higher rates. It does not address immigration reform, border security or disputes related to Clinton’s support for driver’s licenses for illegal aliens.

Amanda Carpenter The Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy’s Dossier on Hillary Clinton
Source: Townhall