Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
NEWS BRIEFING HILLARY FOR PRESIDENT PRODUCED BY BULLETIN NEWS WWW.BULLETINNEWS.COM/CLINTON TO: CLINTON CAMPAIGN DATE: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2007 6:30 AM EST TODAY’S EDITION Sen. Clinton’s Campaign Clinton, Obama Spar Over Health Care In Iowa ........................... 2 Clinton Intensifies Anti-Obama Rhetoric As Both Tout Electability ............................................................................. 3 Obama’s Responds To Clinton’s Jabs In Combative Style .......... 4 Clinton Addresses Border Enforcement In Iowa ........................... 4 Clinton Attends Pro-Child Sermon In Des Moines ........................ 4 Clinton To Announce Endorsement In South Carolina On Tuesday ................................................................................ 4 Bill Clinton To Stump For Wife In Quad-City Region On Tuesday ................................................................................ 4 In Arkansas, Bill Clinton Says Campaign Volunteers Crucial To Wife’s Bid .............................................................................. 4 Clinton May Benefit From Writers’ Strike ...................................... 5 Obama’s Improved Iowa Polling Said To Threaten Clinton’s Appeal ................................................................................... 5 Former ABC Anchor Endorses Clinton ......................................... 5 Romney Edges Giuliani In Poll Of Detroit-Area Business Leaders; Clinton Leads Democrats...................................... 6 Will: Clinton Would Benefit By Picking Bayh Or Strickland For Vice President....................................................................... 6 Clinton’s Ideological Leanings Analyzed ....................................... 6 Clinton’s Time At California Law Firm Seen As “Shocking” Revelation Of “Radical Ideology.” ........................................ 6 Clinton Praised For Condemning Punishment Of Saudi Rape Victim .................................................................................... 6 Columnist Says Media Coverage Of Clinton “The Most Riveting Show On TV.” ....................................................................... 6 Clinton Lambasted As Inept, Inexperienced ................................. 7 McConnell Raises Specter Of Clinton In Kentucky ....................... 7 Democratic Presidential Campaign News Obama Discusses Race Issues In Iowa........................................ 7 Obama Working To Forge Link To Civil Rights Era ...................... 7 Obama Donating PAC Funds To State, Local Supporters ........... 8 Obama Acknowledges Inhaling Marijuana.................................... 8 Western Iowa Obama Volunteer Profiled ...................................... 8 Obama’s Call For Negotiations With Iran Praised ........................ 8 Obama Said To Be Shifting To Reflect Middle Class Democrats 8 Obama Set To Attend Series Of Fundraisers In New York City On Thursday ......................................................................... 8 Edwards Campaign To Continue Pressuring Clinton On Troop Disposition ............................................................................ 9 Edwards Calls For Boost In LIHEAP Funds .................................. 9 Edwards Quizzed On Campaign Booklet ...................................... 9 Until Iraq War Resolved, Biden Says US Has “No Credibility” Abroad .................................................................................. 9 Richardson Says He Wanted Congress “To Find Ways We Can Get America To Retreat” From Iraq ..................................... 9 In Contrast To Other Democratic Hopefuls, Richardson Embraces Gun Owners’ Rights ............................................ 9 Candidates Spending More Time In New Hampshire................. 10 Iowa’s Early Caucus Date Creates Advertising Challenge For Candidates.......................................................................... 10 With Eye On “Tsunami Tuesday,” Candidates Jockey For Position ............................................................................... 10 Fund Says Early Michigan Primary Date Likely To Benefit Romney, Clinton ................................................................. 11 Media Said To Overplay Importance Of Early States ................. 11 Democratic Candidates Have Varying Definitions Of Class ....... 11 Small Business Owners Feel Ignored By Presidential Candidates.......................................................................... 11 Editorial Says Democrats’ Big Spending Plans Creates Opening For Republicans ................................................................. 11 ABC, Facebook To Collaborate On Political Coverage, Debate 12 ’08 Hopefuls Expected To Focus Heavily On Undecided Voters 12 Promising End To Iraq War May Be Perilous For Democratic Candidates.......................................................................... 12 Republican Presidential Campaign News Giuliani, Romney Clash On Healthcare, Economic Record ....... 12 While Giuliani Decries Earmarks, His Firm Helps Secure Them 14 Giuliani Said To Have A “Soft Spot” For “Bad Cops.” ................. 14 Thompson Proposes Voluntary Flat Tax Plan ............................ 14 Thompson Accuses Fox News Of Bias Against His Campaign . 15 Huckabee Accuses Saudis Of Funding Terrorism ...................... 16 Huckabee Stumps In South Carolina .......................................... 16 Huckabee Says Improved Poll Position Stems From Iowans’ Response To His Positions ................................................ 16 McCain Criticizes Clinton On Iraq War Ad .................................. 17 Rothenberg Says Media Overlooking Paul’s “Kooky” Views ...... 17 African-Americans Pastors, GOP Still Have Little Common Ground ................................................................................ 17 National News Holiday Shopping Strong Over Big Weekend, But Some See Troubling Signs ................................................................... 17 Loophole Allows Members Of Congress More Overseas Trips . 18 DHS Official Says Ignoring Illegal Workers Would Create “Silent Amnesty.”............................................................................ 19 Northern Hemisphere On Pace For Warmest Year On Record . 19 Pentagon Leaders Want To De-Emphasize Petraeus’ Views In Next Iraq Report ................................................................. 23 Standoff Over War Funding Continues ....................................... 23 International News Last Laughs: Bush Not Expected To Take Active Role In Mideast Talks ........ 19 Syria To Attend Annapolis Talks ................................................. 21 “Surge Of Violence” Reported In Baghdad ................................. 22 Late Night Political Humor ........................................................... 24 SEN. CLINTON’S CAMPAIGN On a “two-day swing through central and western Iowa this weekend, the New York Democrat stressed her own experience but went after Mr. Obama’s health care plan.” USA Today (11/26, 2A, Dilanian, 2.28M) reports Clinton and Obama “battled over whose plan for universal coverage was more workable.” Like Romney’s “Massachusetts plan, Clinton’s would require people to purchase health insurance. Obama criticized that approach during an Iowa campaign stop.” The Washington Post (11/26, A6, Kornblut, Murray, 723K) reports Clinton “stepped up attacks on her closest rival with fewer than six weeks until the first nominating contest. Just weeks ago, Clinton chastised her opponents for ‘mudslinging.’ But she unapologetically pursued her main challenger, Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.), over the weekend, standing by her decision to mock Obama’s foreign policy experience and attacking his health-care plan -- part of what her advisers described as a new phase of her campaign that will present voters with a ‘real choice.’” The Los Angeles Times (11/26, Roug, 881K) adds that Clinton’s criticisms of Obama’s health care plan “were sharper than what Clinton has previously said on the subject and appear to be part of a new offensive directed at one of her main competitors.” Meanwhile, “Edwards’ campaign, too, joined in the fray over healthcare with criticism of Obama. ‘Any candidate touting their healthcare plan must first meet one simple test: Does it cover everyone?’ said Eric Schultz, a spokesman for the Edwards campaign. ‘Sen. Obama’s plan falls woefully short by leaving 15 million Americans without care. In the midst of a healthcare crisis, anything short of universal is simply inadequate.’” Clinton’s Emphasis On Mandatory Coverage Seen As Leftward Shift. The Washington Post (11/25, Kornblut, 723K) reported on its ‘The Trail’ blog that Clinton has moved from advocating the “centrist nature” of her health care reform proposal to “a more traditionally liberal aspect of her plan: It would require all people to get health insurance, with a goal of achieving universal health care. The piece notes her criticism that Obama’s plan “leaves 15 million people out,” calling her comments “a direct response to remarks Obama made earlier in the day, promoting his health care plan as the one aimed at reducing costs.” Clinton, Obama Spar Over Health Care In Iowa. In separate events in Iowa Sunday, Sen. Hillary Clinton and Sen. Barack Obama traded broadsides against each other’s health care reform plans, generating significant coverage. The AP (11/26, Glover) reports that the two “intensified the bickering” over health care, noting that Clinton “said Obama’s proposal was ‘crafted for politics’ and the latest example of his shifting policy positions. Obama said much the same of her approach.” Moreover, Clinton told the AP, “The difference is my health care plan covers every American and Senator Obama’s plan will not.” Obama countered by criticizing Clinton’s call for mandatory coverage, saying, “The reason Americans don’t have health insurance isn’t because they don’t want it, it’s because they can’t afford it, which is why my plan doesn’t have a mandate and goes further in cutting costs than any other proposal offered in this race.” However, the AP adds, “Clinton disputed that, saying very similar cost savings are built into hers.” This article appears in at least 90 papers and websites, including the Washington Post, the Charlotte Observer, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Miami Herald, the Benton Crier, the New Orleans Times Picayune, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Albany Times Union, the Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier and the New Hampshire Union Leader. The New York Times (11/25, Healy, Zeleny, 1.18M) reported on its ‘The Caucus’ blog that Clinton “whacked Senator Barack Obama again – this time by name – over his health insurance plan and the estimates that it would not cover about 15 million Americans. ‘It’s been kind of confusing following his description of his own plan,’ Mrs. Clinton said. ‘If you go back and look, he said it was universal, he said it was sort of universal, he said it wasn’t universal, he said it covered everybody, he said he didn’t cover 15 million, he has a mandate for kids, now he’s against mandates. I think you’re going to have to ask him what his plan actually does.’” The Times notes that Clinton “refused, again, to answer how she would enforce” mandatory coverage. The Washington Times (11/26, Bellantoni, 87K) reports Clinton, “locked in a tight race in Iowa, is increasingly criticizing the Democrats who are hoping to defeat her in the Jan. 3 caucuses, especially Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois.” 2 Post, the Miami Herald, the Benton Crier, the New Orleans Times-Picayune, the Charlotte Observer, the Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier, the Chicago Tribune and Newsday. The Chicago Tribune (11/25, Pearson, 607K) reported on its ‘The Swamp’ blog that Clinton “declared herself ‘by far’ the most electable candidate for the White House among those in her party, citing a history of tempestuous dealings with Republican critics. The New York senator, who has made ‘experience’ a theme of her campaign in challenging the credentials of first-term Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, also said she doesn’t take the GOP criticism personally.” Time (11/21, Sullivan, 4.03M) reports, “The new message driving Barack Obama’s resurgent campaign these days is ‘electability plus.’ … Electability plus means not just getting elected but getting elected for the right reasons. It is a rebuttal of the argument that Hillary Clinton should win the Democratic nomination simply because of her perceived advantage against G.O.P. rivals. And it provides a rationale for why Obama is running now, why he didn’t wait four or eight years to launch a presidential campaign. It’s significant then that Obama’s message seems to be catching on among the notoriously pragmatic Iowans.” The Washington Times (11/25, Bellantoni, 87K) reported on its website that Clinton “often tells crowds of voters she is proud of the Democratic field of presidential candidates, saying it’s so nice that ‘you don’t have to be against anybody.’ But Mrs. Clinton, locked in a tight race in Iowa, is increasingly criticizing the Democrats who are hoping to defeat her in the Jan. 3 caucus, especially” Obama, noting that Clinton “went after [his] health care plan.” The Times notes some of the “digs” Clinton landed against Obama’s plan. In Iowa, Clinton, Obama Campaigns Said To Have Seemingly “Switched Identities.” The Politico (11/26, Allen, Brown) reports, “In a reversal of fortune, Sen. Barack Obama…is barnstorming Iowa with a front-runner’s swagger while Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton…scrambles like an underdog. In ways big and small over the weekend, the two campaigns exuded a sense of switched identities -- a dynamic driven by poll-driven perceptions that Clinton’s sense of inevitability is slipping and Obama is riding a bit of a wave amid the Midwestern seas of grain. The mood and stump styles of the two campaigns reflect this new reality: An ebullient Obama -- coatless, tieless, tireless -- conveys a sense that at least he thinks he could be on his way to being the next president. Clinton, mixing her traditional caution with a new toughness, is clearly set on knocking Obama off his game.” The Politico adds, “In another acknowledgment of the tight race, Clinton has abandoned any pretense of remaining above the fray and has engaged Obama nearly every day along the campaign trail.” The Politico cites, as an example of such, Clinton’s weekend criticism of Obama’s healthcare plan. Local TV Coverage. Clinton’s exchange with Obama over health care reform in Iowa generated significant local television coverage. For example, WGHP-TV Greensboro (11/25, 10:12 p.m.) broadcast that Obama’s plan expands health care, though it’s not universal like Clinton’s. Moreover, Obama says that his plan does more than any other to reduce the cost of health care coverage. WQAD-TV Davenport (11/25, 5:34 p.m.) broadcast that both are “courting voters” in Iowa, noting that Clinton says that Obama’s plan will leave 15 million uncovered. KFXA-TV Cedar Rapids (11/25, 9:01 p.m.) broadcast that Obama touted his plan as making health care affordable for all, but that Clinton “says it falls short, leaving millions without coverage.” WAGA-TV Atlanta (11/25, 10:09 p.m.) also reports on Clinton and Obama “battling” over health care reform, as does KDSM-TV Des Moines (11/25, 9:00 p.m.). Clinton Intensifies Anti-Obama Rhetoric As Both Tout Electability. The Washington Post (11/26, A6, Kornblut, Murray, 723K) reports that Sen. Hillary Clinton’s attacks on Sen. Barack Obama’s foreign policy qualifications and on his health care plan come with “her status as the front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination in jeopardy,” suggesting that though she has “chastised her opponents for ‘mudslinging,’ she is now “standing by her decision to mock Obama’s foreign policy experience and attacking his health-care plan.” Moreover, “Obama and Clinton are locked in a tight race in Iowa with former senator John Edwards (N.C.), and each is putting renewed focus on electability -- a factor that helped turn the state for Sen. John F. Kerry (Mass.) in the 2004 Democratic contest. Although most Democrats at the national level view Clinton as the most viable nominee, Iowans are more receptive to viewing Obama and Edwards that way. All of the campaigns concede electability is a top concern among caucusgoers. Health plans and war policy aside, they want to back a winner.” The AP (11/25, Lorentzen) reports Clinton “maintained Sunday that she’s the best candidate to win against Republicans, saying she has more experience battling the GOP than any other candidate in the Democratic field.” Clinton said, “I believe that I have a very good argument that I know more about beating Republicans than anybody else running. They’ve been after me for 15 years, and much to their dismay, I’m still standing. I’m leading in all the polls, I’m beating them in state after state after state.” The AP adds Clinton has “been widely criticized by her Democratic rivals who claim she’s too polarizing, and can’t bring the party together to win the White House.” But she “says she has support from around the country, including ‘more Democratic support from the so-called red states than anybody else running.’” This article was published in at least 72 papers and websites, including the Los Angeles Times, the Washington 3 Clinton Attends Pro-Child Sermon In Des Moines. The AP (11/26) reports on Sen. Hillary Clinton’s Clinton’s Improved Standings Said To Invalidate Concept Of “Electability.” In an article in New York Magazine (11/25), Jason Zengerle writes about the concept of electability, noting the difficulty in predicting such markers, citing the perception, “oh, ten months ago” that “Hillary Clinton and Rudy Giuliani were pretty close to unelectable. Hillary’s case was the more obvious of the two. Although she was clearly the Democratic front-runner, political pros doubted whether such a polarizing politician, one who was viewed unfavorably by nearly half of all Americans surveyed, could convince Democratic primary voters that she gave their party the best shot to win back the White House. As the Washington Post editorialized on the occasion of her formal entry into the race, ‘The question about Hillary Clinton may be not so much whether a woman can win the presidency but whether this woman can.’” He continues to note that by November, when “voters considered who is the most electable: 47 percent of Iowa Democrats and 68 percent of New Hampshire Democrats named Clinton, and a plurality of Republicans in both states gave the nod to Giuliani. … Which just goes to show how squishy and even bankrupt ‘electability’ is as a political concept.” attendance of a service at Grace United Methodist Church in Des Moines, Sunday, before her “long day of campaigning.” The AP notes that “Former Iowa Attorney General Bonnie Campbell, the first woman to hold that job, invited the New York senator to the church. Clinton sat next to Campbell, her Iowa campaign co-chair, during the service. In her sermon, the Rev. Jill Flyr asked the congregation to ‘let the candidates know that they need to be strong advocates for children.’” The Washington Times (11/25, Bellantoni, 87K) reported on its politics blog that Clinton had “the traveling press corps in tow,” noting that she “sang and nodded in agreement during the service, and even stuck a contribution on the offering plate before heading out for a full day of campaigning through the Hawkeye State.” The Times continues to note the sermon’s message on the plight of children in the state, concluding, “Not everyone was excited to see politics in church. ‘I don’t know how we’re going to start service because everyone is out here,’ one worshiper complained loudly.” Clinton To Announce Endorsement In South Carolina On Tuesday. The Spartanburg Herald Obama’s Responds To Clinton’s Jabs In Combative Style. According to Newsweek (11/25, Journal (11/26, Spencer) reports, “Making her first visit to Spartanburg this campaign cycle,” Sen. Hillary Clinton “will be in town Tuesday morning to announce a new South Carolina endorsement. Her campaign has refused to say whom the endorsement would be coming from, or even hint at what sector that person was affiliated with -- political, religious, business or something else. … Spartanburg ‘is an area in the state that is very important to the campaign, and is relevant to the endorsement Tuesday,’ said Zac Wright, a spokesman for Clinton's campaign in South Carolina.” Wolffe, 3.12M), of late, the “oblique, exceedingly polite” Sen. Barack Obama “-- the candidate who dared not speak his rival’s name -- has vanished. The new Obama exchanges blows with Hillary Clinton--in his own voice, by name, in public. When Clinton said last week that the nation could not afford ‘on-the-job training for our next president’ on economic policy, Obama tartly responded, ‘My understanding is she wasn’t Treasury secretary in the Clinton administration.’ The next day, Clinton was harsher on foreign policy, contrasting her personal contact with world leaders to Obama’s ‘living in a foreign country at the age of 10.’ Obama quickly returned the put-down: ‘I was wondering which world leader told her that we needed to invade Iraq.’” Bill Clinton To Stump For Wife In Quad-City Region On Tuesday. The Quad-City Times (11/25) reported on its website that ex-President Bill Clinton will stump for his wife, Sen. Hillary Clinton, “on Tuesday in the Quad-City region. This will be his second trip to the area since July, when he and Sen. Clinton were in Davenport over the July 4th holiday. This time, the former president will campaign solo in a series of ‘Organizing for Change events.’ He'll be at the Muscatine Community YMCA…at 11:45 a.m., then travel to the Clinton County Fairgrounds, where he'll hold a 3:30 p.m. event. … Clinton will close out the day with a trip to Peosta.” Clinton Addresses Border Enforcement In Iowa. The Des Moines Register (11/25, Simons, 158K) reported on its website that Sen. Hillary Clinton, questioned by an audience member at a Perry, Iowa, campaign appearance, said “that immigration reform begins with border security.” The Register quotes her stressing the importance of “homeland security” and “tougher, more secure borders.” Clinton rejected the notion of deporting all illegal entrants, and “suggested instead that ‘everybody come out of the shadows,’ and those found to have committed crimes will be immediately deported. Those who haven’t, she said, should register and pay back taxes, fines and learn English before joining the line to legalization.” In Arkansas, Bill Clinton Says Campaign Volunteers Crucial To Wife’s Bid. The Pine Bluff Commercial (11/25, Gambrell) reported on its website that in North Little Rock, AR on Sunday, ex-President Bill Clinton 4 “stressed the importance of volunteerrs to his wife's presidential campaign…placing it higher than the role of campaign dollars and even the Iowa caucus. Clinton mentioned” Sen. Barack Obama “several times during a $500-a-person fundraiser in a posh North Little Rock neighborhood,” but “cautioned that dollars wouldn't guarantee his wife Hillary Clinton the White House or even a win in the Jan. 3 Iowa caucus. ‘I feel good about it, but Iowa is not an election, it is a caucus,’ Clinton said. ‘It depends on how many people show up.’ Clinton spoke to an estimated 450 contributors during the fundraiser, which was closed to reporters. However, much of his speech could be heard from the road outside of the private home hosting the event.” Clinton “thanked those who had traveled recently to Iowa to support his wife's campaign. … ‘If you went to Iowa, I want to thank you very much,’ Clinton said. ‘If you could go back, I would appreciate it.’” KARK-TV Little Rock (11/25, 5:09 p.m.) broadcast before the event that former President Bill Clinton “will be spending the evening at a North Little Rock home hosting a fundraiser for the presidential campaign of his wife, Sen. Hillary Clinton.” gaps between leaders were within the poll’s 4.5 percent margin of error, suggesting - as polls have shown for a while that there is a tight three-way race in the state. But as the two candidates moved among Iowa’s small towns this weekend, the race’s psychological dynamics appear to have been disrupted by the new snapshot of Obama atop the field, especially as Clinton reaffirms that strength and electability are central to her appeal.” The piece continues to detail the difficulty in trying to poll caucusgoers, or even to determine who will go to the caucus. Carville Says Clinton In Fight In Iowa. Speaking on NBC’s Meet the Press (11/25, 10:32 a.m.), Democratic strategist James Carville, who declared himself a “maxed out” donor to Hillary Clinton, said that Clinton’s lack of clear frontrunner status in Iowa suggests both that the race there is “tight” and that polls there are unreliable “this far out.” He characterizes Clinton as having a strong chance to win there, but “she’s in a fight.” Former ABC Anchor Endorses Clinton. The Washington Post (11/26, C1, Kurtz, 723K) reports that in a “move that has revived charges of liberal media bias, former ABC anchor Carole Simpson has endorsed Hillary Clinton.” Simpson, “now a journalism instructor at Emerson College, offered her resignation the day after announcing her support at an event featuring the New York senator, but it was turned down.” Simpson said, “I know I made a mistake. But I’d really like to see her win. After being a reporter for so many years, where you wish you could do more than you can, it would be nice to make a difference.” Malkin Says “Liberal Activist” Simpson’s Endorsement Of Clinton Hardly Shocking. In her syndicated column, which appears in the New York Post (11/26, 648K), Michelle Malkin provides details of Simpson’s recent endorsement of Clinton, then adds, “But Simpson showed her pro-Clinton, liberal bias while anchoring at ABC for years.” In “a piece for ABCNews.com after Hillary won her Senate seat in 2000,” Simpson wrote, “What an exhilarating moment it must have been for [Hillary] -- the first First Lady in history to be elected to public office. There, for all the naysayers to see, was the woman who had finally come into her own, free at last to be smart, outspoken, independent, and provocative, all qualities she had been forced as First Lady, to 'hide under a bushel.' Still she was voted one of America's most admired women. Just wait. You ain't seen nothin' yet.” Malkin adds, “The title of her love letter: ‘Long Live Hillary.’ … Few will be shocked by Professor Simpson's coming-out party -- or by the Clinton campaign's ready embrace of this self-important liberal activist who has masqueraded as a fair and objective journalist for more than two decades. The only real surprise is that Simpson and her Serious Professional Journalism colleagues bother to keep up the pretense of neutrality and perform their media ethics kabuki theater.” Clinton May Benefit From Writers’ Strike. ABC News (11/25, Wright) reported on its website, “Talks to end the Hollywood writers' strike will resume Monday. A settlement would be good news for the striking writers, actors, the studios and bored comics. And it also could bring a big sigh of relief from presidential candidates, who are regulars on the talk-show circuit.” ABC noted that Sen. Hillary Clinton “and other Democrats are making it clear they won't cross a picket line to answer Katie Couric's questions at the last debate before the Iowa caucuses on Jan. 3. Michele Obama pulled out of her plans to guest host ‘The View,’ and John and Elizabeth Edwards cancelled their upcoming appearance on the show, too. None of them want to be seen as presidential ‘scabs.’” ABNC added that “the writers' punch lines” for the late-night comedians often “come at the expense of the candidate who draws the most fire from opponents. Lately that's made Clinton an easy target, so she may actually be breathing a little easier during the strike. Perhaps that's why…John Edwards was recently out there on the picket lines with the writers.” Obama’s Improved Iowa Polling Said To Threaten Clinton’s Appeal. The Boston Globe (11/26, Issenberg, 404K) reports, “Last week began with the release of an Iowa poll - of negligible statistical relevance but much symbolic weight - showing Clinton for the first time behind Senator Barack Obama of Illinois. … The ABC News/Washington Post survey, perhaps the most discussed of the campaign, had Obama at 30 percent, Clinton at 26, and John Edwards, former North Carolina senator, at 22. The 5 Romney Edges Giuliani In Poll Of Detroit-Area Business Leaders; Clinton Leads Democrats. to relate Harmelink’s reaction to Clinton’s stump, painting him as relieved that she not part of “the fringes,” concluding, “He said there was no particular issue on which he strongly agreed or disagreed with Mrs. Clinton’s remarks here, but said that she sounded more sensible than ideological.” Crain’s Detroit Business (11/26, Halcom) reports that Mitt Romney “has a slight lead over” Rudy Giuliani “among local business leaders, with Sen. Hillary Clinton as their most likely Democratic rival according to a survey commissioned by Crain's Detroit Business and Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn. But if the general election comes down to the current national front-runners, it would be Giuliani over Clinton, 58 percent to 30 percent. Among 300 randomly chosen Crain's subscribers, Michigan native Romney enjoyed 36 percent support among those who were likely to back a Republican before the general election. That edges out Giuliani's 32 percent, and no other GOP candidate pulled more than 7 percent. Among those eyeing a Democrat, Clinton had 51 percent share of the support, followed distantly by Sen. Barack Obama and John Edwards with 19 percent apiece. Forty-four percent of those surveyed said they were leaning Republican, while 28 percent leaned Democratic.” Clinton’s Time At California Law Firm Seen As “Shocking” Revelation Of “Radical Ideology.” The New York Sun (11/26, Gerstein) runs a 4,600-word article about Sen. Hillary Clinton’s “clerkship in 1971 at one of America’s most radical law firms, Treuhaft, Walker and Burnstein,” noting that the “Oakland-based firm was renowned for taking clients others rejected as too controversial, including Communists, draft resisters, and members of the African-American militant group known as the Black Panthers. To this day, Mrs. Clinton’s decision to work at the unabashedly left-wing firm is surprising, even shocking, to some of her former colleagues there and to those supporting her bid for the presidency. To the former first lady’s enemies and political opponents, her summer at the Treuhaft firm is yet another indication that radical ideology lurks beneath the patina of moderation she has adopted in public life.” The article continues to relate the proceeds of a “comprehensive account” of Clinton’s “work for the Treuhaft firm, how she got there, and how acquaintances she made that summer surfaced from time to time as her political career unfolded.” Will: Clinton Would Benefit By Picking Bayh Or Strickland For Vice President. In his column for Newsweek (11/25, 3.12M) George Will writes, “It is neither pointless nor premature to wonder who each of the four most likely nominees -- Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney -- might choose to run with.” According to Will, Clinton may choose Sen. Evan Bayh, “the preternaturally cautious former two-term governor of Indiana. Winning that state’s 11 electoral votes -- it has not voted Democratic since 1964 -- would seriously complicate any Republican’s path to 270. If she wants to reach for a bigger electoral-vote prize without removing a Democrat from the Senate, there is Ted Strickland, the popular governor of the Center of the Universe Every Fourth Year, a.k.a. Ohio (20 electoral votes).” Will adds that Giuliani’s “biggest weakness is his personal history and his weakest region is the South. … He could select the…former governor of Arkansas Mike Huckabee, the Baptist minister who is as cuddly as Giuliani is abrasive.” Clinton Praised For Condemning Punishment Of Saudi Rape Victim. An editorial in the New York Sun (11/26) congratulates Sen. Hillary Clinton for calling for condemnation of a Saudi court’s having sentenced a rape victim to flogging and imprisonment, and for having blasted President Bush for refusing to “protest an internal Saudi decision.” The Sun continues that Clinton’s “statement is even more newsworthy because the House of Saud has long been a patron of the Clintons. As The New York Sun reported in 2004, the Saudi royal family and three Saudi businessmen, Abdullah Al-Dabbagh, Nasser Al-Rashid, and Walid Juffali, each donated $1 million or more to the Clinton presidential library in Little Rock, Ark. President Clinton also helped secure millions of dollars in Saudi funds for the University of Arkansas.” The piece continues to lament the Bush administration’s lack of pressure on the Saudis and to paint the issue as one with which Clinton can demonstrate her foreign policy acumen vis-à-vis the Middle East. Clinton’s Ideological Leanings Analyzed. The New York Times (11/25, Healy, 1.18M) reported on its ‘The Caucus’ blog, “It is a favorite question of voters: Hillary Rodham Clinton, a liberal or a moderate? And that was the question that Don Harmelink, a voter here, asked a Clinton campaign official before the senator’s event in Perry this afternoon. The campaign official was moving through the crowd, asking people if they were Hillary supporters already; Mr. Harmelink, who was sitting right behind me, said he was here to listen and then asked about Mrs. Clinton’s partisan inclinations. The campaign worker gave a long answer that basically straddled the political divide.” The article continues Columnist Says Media Coverage Of Clinton “The Most Riveting Show On TV.” In his column for MarketWatch (11/26), Jon Friedman writes that the best show on TV this year is “called ‘Hillary and the Media.’ Sen. Hillary Clinton's inexorable march to secure the Democratic Party's presidential nomination is the most riveting show on 6 TV. Her life has become a real-life version of ‘The Truman Show’ and ‘Edtv.’ … The media are simply doing with Clinton what we've done with celebrities throughout history: First, we build them up, and then we try to knock them down.” Friedman goes on to criticize Sen. John McCain’s handling of a question from a woman at a campaign event who asked of Clinton, “How do we beat the bitch?” Friedman says “McCain should have acted decisively and spoken just as bluntly,” but instead “kind of floundered and waffled.” Friedman adds, “The media are indeed ganging up on Clinton for the best reason of all: She is No. 1! … It makes me laugh to watch the media alternately kvell and crush Clinton for basically doing her job. Her job is to run for the presidency, get the nomination -- and win the election. She's doing it very well.” DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN NEWS Obama Discusses Race Issues In Iowa. The Chicago Tribune (11/26, McCormick, Pearson, 607K) reports Barack Obama “held a rare discussion of racial inequities on the Democratic presidential campaign trail in heavily white Iowa on Sunday while rival Hillary Clinton declared herself to be ‘by far’ the most electable Democrat in the race.” Obama, “speaking to a racially mixed audience of about 500 people at a local high school, conceded some progress had been made on racial issues -- but not enough.” Obama said, “On every measure, on income, on health care, on incarceration rates, on the criminal justice system, on housing, on life expectancy, on infant mortality, on almost every single indicator, there is still an enormous gap between black and white.” The Des Moines Register/Indianola Record-Herald (11/25, Ragsdale) reported on its website that Obama presented his “vision for urban America,” which “rang true” with listeners. The 500-plus crowd “cheered and applauded his talking points on health care, education and bringing change to Washington, D.C. … Obama told the crowd if he were elected president he wants to ‘fix the education system to give (urban youngsters) a fighting chance’ by investing in early childhood education, encouraging teachers by giving them higher pay and getting more people into higher education through a college tax credit. The job wouldn’t be complete, Obama said, unless mothers and fathers did their part.” The Washington Post (11/25, Murray, 723K) reported on its ‘The Trail’ blog that Obama was speaking at “a forum on urban issues at a Des Moines high school,” noting that the crowd was more diverse than is the norm in Iowa. Obama “said he would dispatch nurses or social workers visit ‘at-risk parents,’ to ‘meet with them and talk to them about you’ve got to read to your child...Here’s how you talk to your child. Don’t tell them to shut up. Let them ask questions, that’s what children do.’” Clinton Lambasted As Inept, Inexperienced. In his column in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (11/26), Ralph R. Reiland, an associate professor of economics at Robert Morris University, offers a detailed, three-pronged criticism of Sen. Hillary Clinton’s statement last January to New York’s RNN cable station, “I know what it takes to run the country.” His first criticism centers around the argument that the country does need anyone to “run” it, since market forces will do that better than any government agency could. His second point “is that there’s no evidence that she knows how to run anything,” and his final point is that her failure to midwife a national health care program under her husband’s administration is indicative of “her consistent record of mismanagement.” McConnell Raises Specter Of Clinton In Kentucky. In a ‘Political Notebook’ column in the Lexington (KY) Herald-Leader (11/26), Ryan Alessi writes about a speech that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell gave to the Kentucky GOP’s central committee, in which he made “a case against ‘the political left in this country’ and using Clinton as the face of it. ‘We’re excited about going into ‘08 and, as I indicated, running against Senator Clinton and the new Democratic majority,’ McConnell, who is up for reelection next year, told reporters after his remarks. ‘I think it gives us a lot to use in the campaign.’ At the top of that list is a claim that Clinton and Democrats aim to ‘raise your taxes,’ as McConnell said several times during his Nov. 10 remarks. It’s not the first time Clinton has been used to fire up conservatives in Kentucky. Her face appeared on GOP mailings against rural Democratic legislative candidates during recent elections.” Obama Working To Forge Link To Civil Rights Era. The Politico (11/26, Allen, Budoff Brown) reports, “Sen. Barack Obama cast himself Sunday as a natural and necessary heir to the civil rights greats, appealing to black worshippers to show the courage of their forerunners and back his candidacy for president. In an unannounced appearance that startled most in the African-American congregation, Obama cast his campaign in historic and even divine terms.” The article does not specifically identify the church (which the campaign refused to identify), but says that Obama’s characterization of the current state of the civil rights movement as being similar to that of Moses on the 7 Obama’s Call For Negotiations With Iran Praised. In a Wall Street Journal (11/26, A21, 2.06M) op- mountaintop outside the promised land was “one of the most compelling rationales Obama has articulated for a campaign that has been sidetracked by missteps and mudslinging but that now sees the possibility of upsetting Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton in the make-or-break Iowa caucuses on Jan. 3.” ed, Shelby Steele of Stanford University’s Hoover Institution says, “On its face, Mr. Obama’s idea” of negotiations with enemies such as Iran “seems little more than a far-left fantasy.” Obama’s idea “clearly makes no sense in a context of national survival. It would have been absurd for President Roosevelt to fly to Berlin and talk to Hitler. But Mr. Obama’s idea does make sense in the buildup to wars where survival is not at risk -- wars that are more a matter of urgent choice than of absolute necessity.” Were an American president “(or a secretary of state for the less daring) to land in Tehran, the risk to American prestige would be enormous,” but “moral authority would redound to us precisely for making ourselves vulnerable to this kind of exploitation.” Either “our high-risk diplomacy works or we have the license to fight to win. In the meantime, we give our allies around the world every reason to respect us. This is not an argument for Mr. Obama’s candidacy, only for his idea. It is a good one because it allows America the advantage of its own great character.” Obama Donating PAC Funds To State, Local Supporters. The Washington Post (11/26, A6, Solomon, 723K) reports when Obama “launched his presidential campaign in January, he stopped raising money for his Hopefund, the political action committee he used to raise millions for fellow Democrats in previous campaigns.” But in “recent months, Obama has handed out more than $180,000 from the nearly dormant PAC to local Democratic groups and candidates in the key early-voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, campaign reports show.” Some of “the recipients of Hopefund’s largess are state and local politicians who have recently endorsed Obama’s presidential bid. Obama’s PAC reported giving a $1,000 contribution, for instance, to New Hampshire state Sen. Jacalyn Cilley on July 25, six days before she announced she was endorsing Obama for president.” Obama Said To Be Shifting To Reflect Middle Class Democrats. In his Washington Post (11/26, A15, Obama Acknowledges Inhaling Marijuana. The 723K) column, Fred Hiatt says Obama “suggests that” Hillary Clinton is “guilty of triangulating, poll-testing and telling the American people what they want to hear instead of what they need to hear. Maybe so. But then it’s fair to ask: Is Obama telling the American people anything they don’t want to hear? More specifically, as he campaigns for votes in Iowa and New Hampshire, is he saying anything except what polls suggest Democrats there might want to hear?” To the “extent that Obama’s positions have shifted over the past several months, they’ve shifted uncannily to where middle-class Democratic voters happen to be.” New York Daily News (11/26, 729K) reports in a “Campaign Takeout” column, “Asked if he ever inhaled marijuana, Barack Obama said, ‘Yes,’ and added, ‘That was the point.’ Responding to a question at an Iowa forum Saturday that referred to former President Bill Clinton's famous assertion that he tried pot but did not inhale, CNN reported that Obama replied, ‘I never understood that line. The point was to inhale. That was the point.’ But the Illinois senator added, ‘It's not something I'm proud of. It was a mistake as a young man.’” Western Iowa Obama Volunteer Profiled. The New York Times (11/26, A1, Zeleny, 1.18M) runs a front-page profile of West Iowa Obama supporter Rory Steele, who “ drove 17 miles from his office in Council Bluffs that crisp October morning to see how the harvest was coming along. He had no stake in the crop yields or commodity prices, but another question weighed on his mind: Would the work be finished in time for” farmer Lyle McIntosh to “help drum up support for Senator Barack Obama?” For all “the uncertainties in presidential campaigns, Mr. Steele would not have guessed that a soggy, unusually long harvest would complicate his task of building an organization for Mr. Obama. Yet since arriving here in March, he had learned to think like a local, which in this part of Iowa means only gently pestering people about politics.” Steele, “a 29-year-old former marine who has worked as a truck driver in the Pacific Northwest and a crab fisherman in Alaska, is the face of the Obama campaign in western Iowa.” Obama Set To Attend Series Of Fundraisers In New York City On Thursday. The New York Sun (11/26, Rauh) reports that Sen. Barack Obama “is sweeping through New York City for a flurry of fundraising events on Thursday, one of which will be hosted by a Republicanturned-Democrat. … Obama will top off his fundraising frenzy with his first campaign visit to Harlem, where he will deliver a speech at the Apollo Theater.” Obama’s camp “is aiming to sell out the 1,500-seat landmark, where tickets are $50 each, and send a message that Mr. Obama is intent on running a competitive race” on Sen. Hillary Clinton’s home turf. Obama “is expected to appear at a total of five events on Thursday, beginning with a morning breakfast at Credit Suisse First Boston and then a second breakfast at the Upper West Side home of Susan Waterfall, where guests will pay $2,300 to attend. Until about two months ago Ms. Waterfall was a registered Republican who voted twice for President Bush 8 and donated $2,300 to Mayor Giuliani in March. She said she became a Democrat so she could vote for Mr. Obama in the primary.” “prepared with questions, others told the former North Carolina senator they were inspired by reading the booklet he has been distributing to voters in New Hampshire and Iowa.” In the booklet, Edwards “outlines his vision in four areas: standing up for working families, ending the war in Iraq, building a better future for children and ensuring opportunity for all. But one voter suggested a fifth category: balancing the federal budget.” Edwards Campaign To Continue Pressuring Clinton On Troop Disposition. The New York Daily News (11/25, Bazinet, 729K) reported on its ‘Mouth of the Potomac’ blog that John Edwards’s campaign “promises that the candidate will continue to press Sen. Hillary Clinton on how she would handle pulling troops out of Iraq. … Edwards ‘wants Hillary to talk about specifics. She says she has a plan to withdraw troops from Iraq, but offers no specifics of what that plan is,’ the campaign source said.” The piece cites an unnamed “top campaign insider.” Until Iraq War Resolved, Biden Says US Has “No Credibility” Abroad. The Des Moines Register (11/25, O’Brien, 158K) reported on its website that during a campaign stop in Council Bluffs, IA on Sunday, Sen. Joe Biden “told a crowd of about 80 area Democrats…that problems facing the United States abroad and at home cannot be addressed until the war in Iraq comes to an end. ‘Until we solve the situation in Iraq, we have no credibility to solve problems with more dangerous places in the world,’ said Biden, naming Iran and Pakistan among potential threats. ‘If you remove that boulder that is Iraq, the rest of the world is going to follow us again. Nobody wants to play with us anymore.’” Biden also “said the war’s $120 billion price tag limits progress at home in areas like health care, education and the environment. ‘Imagine what I can do as your president when I end this war,’ he said.” Edwards Calls For Boost In LIHEAP Funds. The New York Times (11/26, Bosman, 1.18M) reports Edwards “outlined a proposal yesterday in New Hampshire to lower the cost of heating oil, increase regulation of oil companies and promote energy efficiency.” Speaking at “a town hall-style campaign event in Meredith, N.H., Mr. Edwards said home heating oil in the state had risen sharply to about $3 a gallon, nearly triple the cost in 2000.” To “ease the financial burden for low-income families, Mr. Edwards, a Democrat from North Carolina, said Congress should tap into its heating and oil reserves and increase subsidies to the federal Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, which he said President Bush had unfairly scaled back. In February, Mr. Bush proposed an 18 percent cut in the program, which provides $2.2 billion this year to help people pay heating bills.” The AP (11/26, Ramer) reports that Edwards said that “he would double the budget of a program that helps people weatherize their homes to $500 million a year. Upgrading home furnaces, ducts, windows and insulation can cut energy bills by about 30 percent, he said, but the program reaches only about 100,000 of the 28 million homes that could be eligible. … He also proposes helping states and nonprofit groups administer low- or no-interest emergency loans to people struggling to pay their heating bills. His plan for longer-term relief from high home heating prices involves asking the Justice Department to investigate the massive mergers of oil companies in recent decades and modernizing antitrust laws to target oil and gas companies that take unilateral action to withhold supplies in order to raise prices.” The New York Post (11/26, Hurt, 648K) headlines its brief report, “EDWARDS BURNS OIL COMPANIES.” Richardson Says He Wanted Congress “To Find Ways We Can Get America To Retreat” From Iraq. The Des Moines Register (11/25, Jaco, 158K) reported on its website, “The United States’ accomplishments in Iraq are not significant enough to merit the loss of another human life,” Gov. Bill Richardson “told a crowd of about 100 people” in Indianola, IA on “Sunday. ‘This war is not worth one human life, an American human life, the thousands of Iraqis,’ Richardson said. ‘It should not be about body counts. It should be about, 'Is political progress being made?’ No.’ The comment sparked the loudest applause of Richardson’s hour-long talk, which also hit a high note when Richardson said Congress has been wimpy when it comes to finding withdrawal solutions. ‘I wanted [Congress] to end this war,’ Richardson said. ‘I wanted them to find ways we can get America to retreat.’” Richardson “called for the withdrawal of all American troops -- including residual peacekeeping forces -- from Iraq within one year. ‘I don’t think we can start a process of reconciliation, political compromise, regional stability -- until our troops are gone,’ Richardson said.” Edwards Quizzed On Campaign Booklet. The AP In Contrast To Other Democratic Hopefuls, Richardson Embraces Gun Owners’ Rights. (11/25, Ramer) reports voters “didn’t mind that Democratic presidential hopeful John Edwards was running a bit late Sunday -- it gave them time to scrutinize the 77-page policy booklet printed by his campaign.” Though “many attendees at the town hall meeting” in Rochester, New Hampshire, The Concord Monitor (11/26, Heckman) reports, “During his first term as New Mexico's governor, Bill Richardson backed legislation allowing residents to carry concealed weapons. 9 When it became law in 2003, Richardson applied for a permit himself.” Richardson’s “move was symbolic of a politician who has been largely supportive of gun owners' rights. It also separates Richardson from the other Democrats running for president, who tend to favor more stringent regulation of firearms. Richardson's track record in Congress and in Santa Fe has earned him accolades from the” NRA, “which endorsed his reelection as governor last year. In September, he was the only Democratic presidential candidate to address a convention organized by the NRA to promote Second Amendment rights.” While New Hampshire primary observers “say Richardson's support for firearms won't make or break his campaign,” his “gun-toting ways are part of the laid-back, swashbuckling persona that some suspect is fueling his rise in recent polls. ‘He does a really neat balancing act of the cowboy swagger of a Western state governor and somebody who's kind of a policy wonk,’ said Wayne Lesperance, associate professor of political science at New England College. ‘It does play well for him. It's part of why he's moving up.’” to an election as candidates seek to contrast themselves with their rivals. ‘Attack ads don't necessarily blend well with Santa Claus and holiday cheer,’ said Steve McMahon, a Democratic media strategist.” Drake University political scientist Dennis Goldford “predicted that campaigns would run positive ads promoting candidates until Christmas, then switch to a tougher tone in the week leading to the caucuses.” Obama, Huckabee Hoping Iowa Will Provide Crucial Momentum. In her column in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (11/26), Salena Zito discusses Sen. Barack Obama’s and Mike Huckabee’s efforts to win Iowa’s caucuses.” Zito says, “If Obama beats” John Edwards and Sen. Hillary Clinton “in Iowa, then Edwards is out and Clinton is on the ropes.” An Obama victory would make Clinton “more vulnerable than conventional wisdom dictates. Deep concern still exists in the Democrats' psyche about Clinton's ability to win nationally and her polarizing effect on voters.” But Obama “needs a better game plan in New Hampshire, where he has failed to soak up Clinton's eroding support.” Noting that Huckabee “has climbed to the near top of the GOP pile: in Iowa, Zito relates, “If Huckabee is the story coming out of Iowa, he needs to remember that not all previous Republican stories out of Iowa did all that well. Remember 1988? Bob Dole and Pat Robertson were first and second in Iowa while George H.W. Bush ran third. … If they win, Obama and Huckabee need to make the case that neither is an Iowa anomaly and that they can deliver the general election to their parties.” Candidates Spending More Time In New Hampshire. ABC World News (11/25, story 3, 3:00, Snow, 8.78M) reported, “If you really wanted to, you could spend all day going to campaign events because half a dozen candidates are going to be crisscrossing the Granite State, starting at sun up because frankly, there’s no time to waste. The turkey was barely cold and they were back out on the trail this holiday weekend.” Four of “the major candidates didn’t even take a full day off to say thanks. Joe Biden and Chris Dodd, lagging in the polls, stayed in Iowa, turning their Thanksgivings into campaign events.” But the “campaign has never come this early before.” Mark Halperin, ABC News political analyst: “It’s a real tricky calculation. How much do voters want to hear about politics while they’re putting up their Christmas tree? While they’re singing Christmas carols. Every campaign has to consider what’s too much.” With Eye On “Tsunami Tuesday,” Candidates Jockey For Position. The Chicago Tribune (11/26, McCormick, 607K) reports, “The date is being called ‘Tsunami Tuesday’ because so many delegates will be up for grabs on Feb. 5 when more than 20 states hold elections and caucuses on the biggest single day of balloting in presidential primary history. They include three of the nation's most populous states -- California, New York and Illinois -- and the huge stakes have galvanized early attention from candidates who can afford to compete in so many places.” The Tribune notes, for example, that Sen. Barack Obama has opened campaign offices “in such places as New York City, Phoenix, Atlanta,” Oakland, CA “and Boise, Idaho, part of a network of 14 offices” he’s “already opened in 11 of the states.” Sen. Hillary Clinton, “meanwhile, is the only other candidate on the Democratic side with the financial wherewithal to match Obama in bulking up to such an extent in so many states.” On the GOP side, Rudy Giuliani “is also working to build an extensive network in Feb. 5 states, creating a potential firewall, should he fail to meet expectations in the early-voting states. … Aides call it his ‘50-state strategy.’ As a result, Giuliani has been traveling to states that haven't seen presidential candidates much this season, if at all.” Iowa’s Early Caucus Date Creates Advertising Challenge For Candidates. The AP (11/25, Pitt) reported, “An earlier date for Iowa's caucuses probably means presidential candidates will run more television ads from mid-November through December, the height of the Christmas shopping season when retailers want to promote sales. Moving the caucuses up 11 days to Jan. 3 also will force candidates to pay top dollar for TV ads over the holidays and soften their messages to avoid violating the serenity of the season. The same equation applies in New Hampshire, whose first-in-the-nation primary will follow the Iowa caucuses five days later. … The schedule presents a conundrum for the presidential campaigns. Political advertising has a tendency to become more negative closer 10 Fund Says Early Michigan Primary Date Likely To Benefit Romney, Clinton. In his column at Obama said. Not necessarily, suggested Clinton.” Kevin A. Hassett, a “scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said Democrats’ attitude toward wealthy Americans could be a liability at the polls.” Hassett said, “If the Democrats are sort of willing to lambaste the wealthy and seize their money, then it means they have a fundamental disrespect for private property.” But “according to Gene Sperling, an unpaid adviser to Clinton: ‘It’s not about attacking anybody or class warfare. It’s about setting priorities in a fiscally responsible way. It’s about asking: Is the most recent tax cut for those making over $250,000 more important to the well-being of the country than universal health care?’” OpinionJournal.com (11/26), John Fund -- noting that Michigan is now set to hold its primaries on Jan. 15 – writes, “The winners are likely to be Mitt Romney and Hillary Clinton. Mr. Romney pushed hard for an early primary because he has a natural advantage in Michigan. He was born in Detroit, and elderly voters still fondly remember George Romney, his father, who served as governor in the 1960s. Mr. Romney is counting on winning Iowa on Jan. 3…and he plans to use his advantage as a former governor of next-door Massachusetts to win New Hampshire's Jan. 8 primary. Winning Michigan would then give Mr. Romney three straight victories before the critical Jan. 19 South Carolina primary.” Meanwhile, “Clinton is for now the only leading Democratic candidate to appear on Michigan's ballot. The other top-tier contenders withdrew, following the guidance of the Democratic National Committee, which is threatening to take away Michigan's delegates because it is scheduling a primary against the party's rules.” And “If she remains the only significant name on the ballot, Mrs. Clinton may pick up some momentum, a publicity bounce and some delegates to boot by exerting almost no effort.” Small Business Owners Feel Ignored By Presidential Candidates. The Washington Times (11/26, DeBose, 87K) reports small-business owners “say the 2008 presidential candidates from both the Republican and Democratic parties are ignoring their issues.” A poll “by American Management Services and Suffolk University shows that 66 percent cannot identify a single policy proposal targeted for the nation’s 23 million small-business owners.” George Cloutier, “chairman of AMS, which offers services to help small and midsize businesses improve profits,” said, “The reality is that none of the current candidates have small businesses on their radar; they throw it out like some kind of pabulum.” The Times adds the “national poll of 400 smallbusiness owners was conducted Oct. 17 to Oct. 30 and had a margin of error of five percentage points.” Media Said To Overplay Importance Of Early States. The Washington Post (11/26, C1, Kurtz, 723K) reports it is “an immutable law of political physics that those who prevail in Iowa will hurtle toward New Hampshire with bulked-up poll numbers, gathering blinding momentum on the path to nomination.” But the “chief reason for the Iowa effect is an explosion of media coverage that treats the winners as superstars and the also-rans as lamentable losers. Without that massive media boost, prevailing in Iowa would be seen for what it is: an important first victory that amounts to scoring a run in the top of the first inning.” Political reporter Jack Germond said, “It stinks. The voters ought to have time to make a considered decision, and the press ought to be a little less poll-driven, and we’re not.” The Post adds there are “more media outlets these days than ever before, with untold thousands of political Web sites, and newspapers and magazines constantly updating their blogs. So the slingshot effect of an Iowa victory could be even greater.” Editorial Says Democrats’ Big Spending Plans Creates Opening For Republicans. An editorial in the Las Vegas Review-Journal (11/26) relates, “Democrats are banking that voter disgust with the Iraq war will propel them into the White House next year. But with every one of their major candidates advocating massive tax increases -whether it's to pay for Barack Obama's Social Security plan or Hillary Clinton's socialized medicine scheme -- the door is wide open for Republicans to attract the many undecided voters who believe in fiscal restraint. … It appears that strategists for the top-tier Republican candidates understand this. For instance, over the weekend, Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani again traded barbs over the issue of spending, each accusing the other of being more profligate.” The ReviewJournal notes, “For decades, candidates who endorse spending restraint, low taxes and individual freedom have been winning elections against opponents who favor higher taxes, padding government programs and a more intrusive bureaucracy. But Democrats are apparently so confident that the election will turn on Iraq or hatred of the incumbent that they're willfully flouting this prescription -- even to the extent of the congressional Democratic leadership allowing the president to gain the upper hand in his vetoes of Democratic Candidates Have Varying Definitions Of Class. The Washington Post (11/26, A2, Achenbach, 723K) reports on the candidates’ definitions of class, “always an awkward topic in the United States,” which “made a rare cameo appearance at a recent candidates debate in Las Vegas.” Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton “sparred over tax policy and quickly got entangled in the question of whether someone making more than $97,000 a year is middle class or upper class. That’s upper class, 11 appropriation bills. It's an opening that Republican candidates should continue to exploit.” Democrats Urged To Acknowledge Improvements In Iraq. In his column in the Boston Globe (11/26, 404K), Jeff Jacoby asks whether the Democratic candidates are likely to “sit up and take notice” of “the heartening transformation underway in the Iraqi capital,” citing a Newsweek story by Rod Nordland about the decrease in violence in Baghdad. Jacoby notes that other “mainstream media” such as the Washington Post and the New York Times are acknowledging the improved conditions in Baghdad, asking, “shouldn’t leading Democrats think about doing the same? Perhaps this would be a good time for Hillary Clinton to express regret for telling Petraeus that his recent progress report on Iraq required ‘a willing suspension of disbelief’ - in effect, calling him a liar. … All of the Democratic presidential candidates have been running on a platform of abandoning Iraq. At the recent debate in Las Vegas, they refused to relax their embrace of defeat even when asked about the striking evidence of improvement. … But can Democrats be so invested in defeat that they would abandon even a war that may be winnable? With developments in Iraq looking so hopeful, this is no time to cling to a counsel of despair.” Democrats Said To Be In Danger Of Slipping Up On Improved Iraq Situation. In his column in the Financial Times (11/26), Clive Crook suggests that U.S. forces have made some progress in Iraq in recent months, constituting “more than a downward blip in the violence,” though he acknowledges that the improvements are “fragile.” He continues to explore what the changes in Iraq’s security mean for U.S. foreign policy, noting that the situation “poses a challenge for Democrats as the election approaches. Opposition to the war has been their chief theme. This still commands broad and strong support, of course, but the intensity could continue to fade. Republicans will seek opportunities to accuse Democrats of wanting the US to fail, or of wishing to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory – and those charges will acquire some force if the view that the surge has worked takes hold. For Democrats, even putting the recent fall in violence in its correct context poses a political risk, because it can be portrayed as failing to recognise the military’s efforts and achievements. If the Republican presidential contenders have any sense, they will tread very carefully here – while hoping that Democrats fall into the trap and helping them to if the opportunity presents itself.” ABC, Facebook To Collaborate On Political Coverage, Debate. The New York Times (11/26, Stelter, 1.18M) reports ABC News and Facebook.com have “formally established a partnership -- the site’s first with a news organization -- that allows Facebook members to electronically follow ABC reporters, view reports and video and participate in polls and debates, all within a new ‘U.S. Politics’ category.” And to “underscore their collaboration, the two organizations will announce today that they are jointly sponsoring Democratic and Republican presidential debates in New Hampshire on Jan. 5, three days before the primary election there.” The announcements “are another sign that news organizations are looking to capitalize on the potential power of Facebook, which began as a database of college friendships, and other social networking sites.” ’08 Hopefuls Expected To Focus Heavily On Undecided Voters. The New York Daily News (11/26, Saul, 729K) reports, “With the presidential campaign revving up for the post-Thanksgiving Day sprint to the Iowa caucuses on Jan. 3 and the New Hampshire primary on Jan. 8, the candidates will be focusing attention on the wild card in the race: uncommitted voters. … Polls reveal roughly half of Democratic and Republican voters in both Iowa and New Hampshire have yet to make their final choice for President. That leaves an enormous bloc of voters open to eleventhhour pitches in the final dizzying weeks of campaigning, experts say. ‘Voters wait till the very end to make up their minds,’ said Andrew Smith, director of the Survey Center at the University of New Hampshire. ‘Historically, in New Hampshire, 50% or more have said they've decided whom they're going to vote for in the last week of the election.’” Promising End To Iraq War May Be Perilous For Democratic Candidates. The Palm Beach Post (11/26, Dáte) reports that the logistical difficulties inherent in removing U.S. troops from Iraq could prove to be a major impediment to the early days of a potential Democratic presidency. “That, combined with the likelihood that President Bush will do little to start a withdrawal during his remaining 14 months in office spells a logistical headache for any new commander-in-chief who wants to end the war. ‘The next president could spend half of their first term in office dealing with the aftermath,’ said former U.S. Sen. Bob Graham, an early critic of Bush’s Iraq invasion. ‘He’s going to dump it on the next president, whether it’s a Republican or a Democrat.’” The Post continues to lay out the Democratic candidates’ positions on troop withdrawal. REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN NEWS Giuliani, Romney Clash On Healthcare, Economic Record. The AP (11/25, Babington) reports the “back-and-forth backbiting between” Rudy Giuliani and 12 Mitt Romney “spilled over into Sunday as Giuliani contended that the former Massachusetts governor has fumbled on health care and economic matters.” Asked by “a diner patron about Romney’s health care program while governor, Giuliani said Romney ‘made a mistake’ by mandating coverage for all Massachusetts residents.” Giuliani, on day two of a New Hampshire bus tour, said, “He sort of did Hillary’s plan in Massachusetts.” The AP adds after a “campaign event in Newport on Sunday, Romney told The Associated Press: ‘Let’s compare our records. Mayor Giuliani left a budget deficit of $3 billion -- a $3 billion budget gap that Mayor (Michael) Bloomberg called a financial crisis. I left a $2 billion rainy day fund and my last budget left a $500 million surplus.’” The Washington Post (11/26, A1, Balz, 723K) reports in a front-page story that Giuliani is “looking to spring a surprise against” Romney in New Hampshire, “the race for the Republican presidential nomination took a sharply negative turn here Sunday as the two candidates traded accusations about taxes, crime, immigration, abortion and ethical standards.” The “rhetorical volleys underscored the growing stakes here in New Hampshire, where Romney leads in the polls but Giuliani now believes he has a chance to derail the former Massachusetts governor’s campaign before it can build the kind of momentum that could make him unstoppable.” Giuliani “said in an interview Saturday that he intends to win here. ‘We think we can catch him and get ahead of him,’ he said of Romney.” The Post adds Romney “responded by tweaking” Giuliani, saying he “sounded increasingly worried about losing the nomination.” Romney “dramatically escalated the attacks Sunday with a salvo at Giuliani, who had earlier criticized him over a judicial appointee who had overruled a lower court and ordered the release of a convicted killer who has since been charged with another killing.” Romney “proceeded to link Giuliani to Clinton on abortion, gay rights and immigration, and ended with tough words for the former mayor’s support for former New York police commissioner Bernard B. Kerik to be secretary of homeland security.” USA Today (11/26, 2A, Dilanian, 2.28M) reports Giuliani accused Romney “of taking a page from Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton’s book.” Romney has “not highlighted his Massachusetts plan in his presidential campaign, and he often notes that the Democratic-controlled Legislature changed his original proposal.” The New York Times (11/26, Cooper, Luo, 1.18M) reports Giuliani “found himself under increasingly fierce attacks on Sunday from two of his rivals.” Romney said “the recent indictment of Bernard B. Kerik, who was Mr. Giuliani’s friend and former police commissioner, ‘certainly calls into question his judgment,’ and he likened Mr. Giuliani’s positions on social issues to those of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton.” And Fred D. Thompson “said in an interview on ‘Fox News Sunday’ that Mr. Giuliani has ‘not five minutes of experience’ with federal and national security issues.” The “criticism came as Mr. Giuliani spent the weekend on a bus tour in New Hampshire, talking up his record as mayor of New York at each stop.” The Chicago Tribune (11/26, Parsons, 607K) reports that Giuliani “said on Sunday that rival Mitt Romney was ‘not one of the outstanding governors’ and that he failed to lower taxes or do much else of note while he was in the Massachusetts executive office. In fact, Giuliani said, the only reason Romney is leading some polls in early voting states is because he has been spending a lot more money than the other candidates seeking the GOP nomination for president. Asked why he was breaking with his declared plan to keep things positive, Giuliani said that Romney and others started it. ‘It's because they criticized me,’ Giuliani said. ‘Notice I haven't criticized anyone who hasn't criticized me. Gov. Romney has been criticizing me for weeks and weeks and weeks.’” The Los Angeles Times (11/26, Finnegan, 881K) reports that Romney, meanwhile, “described himself as more dedicated than Giuliani to family values. ‘I believe it's important for the Republican Party to have a person who can distinguish himself on family values with Hillary Clinton,’ Romney said. The nominee, he said, should be ‘pro-life,’ ‘pro-family,’ ‘pro-traditional marriage,’ oppose illegal immigration and uphold high ethical standards. And by all those measures, he said, Giuliani falls short.” The New York Sun (11/26, Gittell) reports that Romney “also faulted his rival's relationship with Bernard Kerik, who served as New York City police commissioner until Mr. Giuliani's term as mayor ended in 2001 and has been indicted in federal court on corruption charges. ‘He put somebody in place as Commissioner who had a very questionable past and then recommended to … President of the United States this person be made the Secretary of Homeland Security,’ Mr. Romney said.” The New York Post (11/26, Campanile, 648K) reports that Romney, “pointing out that Giuliani was godfather to Kerik's kids, questioned Giuliani's judgment. He said it called to mind Bill Clinton's administration. ‘The ethical conduct in this case of Bernie Kerik reminds us very much of the administration Hillary Clinton was part of,’ Romney said.” The New York Daily News (11/26, Katz, 729K) reports that Giuliani “fired back that Romney was trying to distract attention ‘from his own mistake,’ citing reports that a convict released without bail by a Romney-appointed judge was arrested last week on charges of killing again. … ‘I think that [Romney's] whole appointment of a judge goes to a much bigger point: That Gov. Romney had a very poor record in dealing with murder and violent crime as governor,’ he said. ‘I think that's not just an isolated situation. We can always 13 find an isolated situation of a mistake. It's a long-term problem.’” In a story headlined, “GOPers duke it out to be less like hill,” the Boston Herald (11/26, Van Sack, 181K) reports that Romney and Giuliani “broke out their best Clinton comparisons yesterday while campaigning in separate parts of New Hampshire, kicking off a fight to the primary death that promises to underscore the former first lady’s front-runner status.” The Herald runs the quote of Giuliani saying of Romney’s Bay State healthcare plan, “He sort of did Hillary’s plan in Massachusetts,” then notes that Romney’s campaign “unleashed a tirade on Giuliani’s liberal dirty laundry in the form of a memo titled ‘New York State of Mind.’ The missive dredges up statements by Giuliani such as, ‘In New York City, I’m often seen as very conservative. I travel south and west, I’m seen as very liberal. I like that, actually.’ Giuliani made the statement to the New York Times [NYT] in an article about Giuliani and Clinton vying for a seat in the New York Senate in May 2000, a bid withdrawn by Giuliani due to a diagnosis of prostate cancer.” diatribe against Dinkins.” Dinkins, “years later, accused him of trying to stir up “white cops to riot.” Newsweek adds, Giuliani “has long had a soft spot for cops -- even, in some cases, for bad ones. … He was the man who appointed Bernard Kerik, now under indictment for various federal crimes, including tax evasion, to be his police commissioner, and later pushed him to become the nation’s secretary of Homeland Security.” Kerik “has written that when he was welcomed into Giuliani’s inner circle -- in a clearly staged ceremony, with a kiss on the cheek from each member -- he felt like a ‘made man.’” Newsweek notes Kerik’s “unfortunate Mafia analogy.” According to Newsweek, Giuliani “has insisted that he did not know about Kerik’s…alleged mob connections,” but “records reviewed by Newsweek suggest that the mayor may have been briefed on some of these problems just before Kerik was appointed commissioner.” Giuliani “has said he has no memory” of the briefing. Thompson Proposes Voluntary Flat Tax Plan. The Wall Street Journal (11/26, Schatz, 2.06M) reports Fred Thompson “became the second Republican presidential hopeful to jump on the flat-tax bandwagon, hoping to reach out to the party’s tax-cut wing to boost his campaign amid falling poll numbers.” Thompson’s “tax plan, announced yesterday, suggests he is finding it easier to build on Bush policies than to calculate the huge price tag of savings needed to bring the budget back into balance.” The “introduction of a voluntary flat tax is a cornerstone of Mr. Thompson’s proposal. Taxpayers could choose to pay a flat income tax, which would be charged at two rates: 10% for joint filers with income up to $100,000 (or $50,000 for individuals) and 25% on incomes above that.” But those “who opted for the flat-tax plan, however, wouldn’t be allowed to take tax credits or deductions including mortgage interest, and would continue to pay taxes on capital gains and dividends.” On Fox News Sunday (11/25, Wallace), Thompson said, “It’s maintaining the tax cuts that we had in 2001, 2003. It’s eliminating the death penalty. It’s reducing the corporate tax rate. … Another major [provision] is an adoption, basically, of the approach that the House Republican study group has that would give taxpayers an option of continuing to file the way they do now or filing under a flatter plan where you only have two rates, but no exemptions past the personal exemption and no deductions.” The AP (11/25) reports Thompson’s proposal “would allow filers to remain under the current, complex tax code or use the flat tax rates.” Asked whether “the plan would cut too deeply into federal revenues,” Thompson said “experts ‘always overestimate the losses to the government’ when taxes are cut.” Thompson “added that money would be saved by his Social Security reform plan. He proposed that workers younger than 58 receive smaller monthly Social While Giuliani Decries Earmarks, His Firm Helps Secure Them. Bloomberg (11/26, Salant) reports, “On the campaign trail, Rudy Giuliani rails against congressional spending set aside for lawmakers' pet projects. In Washington, his law firm fights to obtain them.” Giuliani “last month pledged to ‘get rid of’ so-called earmarks, which cost taxpayers about $13 billion this year, saying his party should promote ‘fiscal discipline.’ Just weeks later, Bracewell & Giuliani LLP won $3 million worth of projects for its clients in defense-spending legislation.” Bloomberg notes, “In all, Bracewell & Giuliani sought federal earmarks for 14 companies this year, 11 of which hired the firm after Giuliani joined in March 2005, Senate records show. … The defensespending legislation approved this month by Congress contained funding for three of those clients,” including “$1 million for Buffalo, New York-based Calspan Corp. for a program to help military pilots control their aircraft; $1.2 million for Charlotte, North Carolina-based United Protective Technologies LLC, for developing protective treatments for helicopter windshields; and $800,000 for Burlingame, California-based AtHoc Inc., for an Air Force emergencynotification system. The companies paid Houston-based Bracewell $140,000 during the first six months of 2007, Senate records show.” Giuliani Said To Have A “Soft Spot” For “Bad Cops.” Newsweek (11/25, Thomas, Smalley, 3.12M), in its cover story profile of Rudy Giuliani, describes Giuliani’s controversial participation in a 1992 NYPD protest of then NYC mayor David Dinkins. According to Newsweek, “video shows him wildly gesticulating and shouting a profanity-laced 14 Thompson Accuses Fox News Of Bias Against His Campaign. The Politico (11/25, Allen) reports Security checks than they are now promised. Individuals could contribute 2 percent of their paycheck to a personal retirement account, an amount that would be matched by the Social Security trust fund.” The Washington Post (11/26, A5, Birnbaum, Shear, 723K) reports Thompson “proposed yesterday extending President Bush’s tax cuts, due to expire in 2011, and revising the personal income tax system to stimulate economic growth.” But the “announcement of his economic plan on national television was overshadowed when he later accused Fox News of trying to ‘take down’ his presidential campaign.” Thompson “called for repealing the alternative minimum tax and lowering the corporate tax rate to no more than 27 percent, from the current 35 percent.” Thompson also “said that he would change the current income tax system to one that includes just two tax rates and strips away tax deductions and credits.” The Washington Times (11/26, Lengell, 87K) reports Thompson’s proposal “contains no other tax credits or deductions and would retain the 15 percent tax rate on capital gains and dividends. The plan, based on a proposal from the House Republican Study Committee, also would give taxpayers the option of remaining under the current tax code.” Bloomberg (11/26, Chipman) reports, “A two-and-halfpage ‘white paper,’ obtained by Bloomberg News, contains no details of how the lost revenue would be offset. Mark Esper, the Thompson campaign's domestic policy director, said the tax cuts would in part ‘pay for themselves’ and are a ‘stepping stone’ toward a broader tax overhaul. He said he couldn't yet provide details of revenue-raising plans. When asked on Fox about offsetting the loss of revenue, Thompson cited his proposal to overhaul Social Security, which he said would save the government $4.7 trillion. ‘The spending is going to have to be addressed on the basis of our entitlement difficulties,’ he said.” The New York Sun (11/26, Berman) reports that Thompson’s “tax proposals drew a mix of praise and skepticism from influential advocates of fiscal conservatism. The president of the Club for Growth, Pat Toomey, said in a statement that Mr. Thompson's support for an optional flat tax set him apart from other Republican hopefuls. He called the proposals ‘the kind of plan economic conservatives can rally around.’ The president of Americans for Tax Reform, Grover Norquist, said in an interview that Mr. Thompson's backing of the optional flat tax was ‘extremely helpful’ but that his plan was not achievable with Democrats holding majorities in Congress. ‘The bad news is it's an imaginary wish list of things you would do if [Republicans] had control of the House and the Senate and the presidency,’ Mr. Norquist said. He reiterated his call for Mr. Thompson to sign the group's pledge to oppose any tax increases as president. ‘What's missing is: What if you're on defense?’ he said.” Thompson “attacked Fox News on Sunday for what he called a ‘constant mantra’ that his floundering campaign for president is troubled, and he accused the network of skewing things against him.” Though he “certainly isn’t the first politician to make that accusation,” he was “the first highprofile Republican to do so.” The assertion was “arresting because Fox News was frequently Thompson’s forum of choice when he was contemplating a campaign and as he tried to find his footing after he announced.” He made the charge “on ‘Fox News Sunday,’ in a heated exchange with host Chris Wallace, who played clips of Fox commentators saying his campaign had been a disappointment.” Asked on Fox News Sunday (11/25, Wallace) to explain the perception that he has failed to gain traction in the polls thus far, former Sen. Fred Thompson replied, “This has been a constant mantra of Fox, to tell you the truth. And I saw the promo for this show, and it was kind of featuring the New Hampshire poll. … From day one, they said I got in too late, I couldn’t do it. … They’re entitled to their opinion. But that doesn’t seem to be shared by the cross-section of American people. If you look at the national polls, you’ll see that I’m running second and have been running second for a long time.” Thompson went to reproach host Chris Wallace for “highlight[ing] nothing but the negative in terms of these polls, and then put on your own guys, who have been predicting for four months, really, that I couldn’t do it, you know, kind of skews things a little bit. … You have the right to put in your one side, and put in the Fox side, and I have the right to respond to it. And thankfully, you’ve given me that opportunity.” The Washington Post (11/26, A5, Birnbaum, Shear, 723K) reports when “the camera returned to Thompson, he was visibly angry. ‘This has been a constant mantra of Fox, to tell you the truth,’ he said.” The Hill (11/26, Cusak) reports that Wallace “denied to Thompson that ‘Fox has been going after you’ and asked, ‘Do you know anybody who thinks you've run a great campaign, sir?’ Thompson responded, ‘It's not for me to come here and try to convince you that somebody else thinks I've run a great campaign.’ He added that National Review magazine has praised him for issuing detailed policy proposals on Social Security and immigration. Following the sharp exchange, a smiling Wallace said, ‘I'm glad I asked the question because I got a heck of an answer.’” Thompson Criticizes Giuliani’s Gun Control Record. On Fox News Sunday (11/25, Wallace), Thompson said, “Somebody asked me a question about gun control, and I said ‘Rudy was mayor of New York and apparently felt like gun control was a great idea back then.’ He says it was because he was representing New York. But I don’t 15 think…New York City has necessarily the same values as the rest of America.” Thompson Defends His Position On Abortion. On Fox News Sunday (11/25, Wallace), Thompson was asked how he, as a pro-life candidate, could support allowing individual states to keep abortion legal were Roe v. Wade overturned. Thompson responded, “Because of Roe vs. Wade, all states are restricted from passing rules that they otherwise would maybe like to pass with regard to this area. If you abolish Roe vs. Wade, you’re going to allow every state to pass reasonable rules that they might see fit to pass. When we had control of the House, had control of the Senate, had control of the presidency, there wasn’t a serious effort to put forth a constitutional amendment because people knew that it couldn’t pass. What I’ve been talking about is directing our energy toward something that was halfway practical, something that might, could get done.” the appropriate thing. So it’s not just about where we are now, it is where we have been and where we can be predicted to be if we’re elected president. People are looking for not just authenticity, but consistency.” Novak Says Huckabee A False Conservative. In his column in the Washington Post (11/26, A15, 723K), Robert Novak says Huckabee is “campaigning as a conservative, but serious Republicans know that he is a high-tax, protectionist advocate of big government and a strong hand in the Oval Office directing the lives of Americans. Until now, they did not bother to expose the former governor of Arkansas as a false conservative because he seemed an underfunded, unknown nuisance candidate. Now that he has pulled even with Mitt Romney for the Iowa caucuses and might make more progress, the beleaguered Republican Party has a frightening problem.” The “danger is a serious contender for the nomination who passes the litmus test of social conservatives on abortion, gay marriage and gun control but is far removed from the conservative-libertarian model of Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan.” Huckabee Accuses Saudis Of Funding Terrorism. The AP (11/25) reports that in remarks on CNN’s Late Edition, Mike Huckabee said “consumers are financing both sides in the war on terror because of the actions of U.S. ally Saudi Arabia.” Huckabee “made the comments following what he suggested was a muted response by the Bush administration to a Saudi court’s sentence of six months in jail and 200 lashes for a woman who was gang raped.” Huckabee said, “The United States has been far too involved in sort of looking the other way, not only at the atrocities of human rights and violation of women. … Every time we put our credit card in the gas pump, we’re paying so that the Saudis get rich -- filthy, obscenely rich, and that money then ends up going to funding madrassas [schools] that train the terrorists. America has allowed itself to become enslaved to Saudi oil. It’s absurd. It’s embarrassing.” Huckabee Highlights Apparent Romney Flip-Flops. Responding to Mitt Romney’s insinuation that he is a liberal, Huckabee, appearing on CNN’s Late Edition (11/25, Blitzer), said, “That would be such a surprise to all of the people in my state who attacked me all of the years I was lieutenant governor and governor for being too conservative. But I won because I was a conservative. … Mitt’s changed his position. He’s been all over the board. But my conservatism has been consistent. When he was pro-abortion, I was still pro-life and always have been. When he was for gun control, I was against it. When he was against the Bush tax cuts, I was for them. When he was against Ronald Reagan’s legacy and said he wasn’t a part of ‘that Bush-Reagan thing,’ I was a part of that Bush-Reagan thing. And when Mitt was saying that he was OK with same-sex relationships and would do more for same-sex couples than Teddy Kennedy, I was taking the completely different position that same-sex marriages are not Huckabee Stumps In South Carolina. The Greenville (SC) News (11/26, Hoover) reports that Mike Huckabee “returned to South Carolina this weekend, trying to ignite a surge like the one in first-voting Iowa that has vaulted him into a statistical tie for first place. Standing outside the home of state Sen. David Thomas” in Fountain Inn, SC, Huckabee “said his gains in Iowa were not solely attributable to core conservative principles ‘but to actually having a record for having done something’ in terms of balancing budgets and making government more efficient. ‘Things like that people appreciate,’” Huckabee “said, as the last of approximately 200 people filed into Thomas' brick home. … ‘They want government to be functional; they see it now as dysfunctional,’ Huckabee said. While Huckabee has surged in Iowa, where caucuses are set for Jan. 3, polling shows he remains mired in fifth place in New Hampshire, which votes on Jan. 8, and South Carolina, Jan. 19.” Huckabee Says Improved Poll Position Stems From Iowans’ Response To His Positions. Speaking on CNN’s Late Edition (11/25), Mike Huckabee attributed his recent surge in the polls, as indicated by the latest Washington Post/ABC News poll which shows him as running very close with Mitt Romney, to “the fact that people are paying attention to the message, and not what the national media might be saying about who the frontrunner is. The people of Iowa have been through this before. This isn’t their first rodeo.” He continued to tout his positions on the “fair tax, getting rid of the IRS and taking away the taxes and penalties on productivity” Huckabee continued to differ with President Bush on praising Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf’s commitment to democracy. 16 McCain Criticizes Clinton On Iraq War Ad. On the Arab League to help stop the killing in Darfur. Nor do they note that he said during his 1988 Libertarian bid for president that he would do away with the FBI and CIA, abolish the public schools, eliminate Social Security and all farm subsidies, and withdraw from NATO.” ABC’s This Week With George Stephanopoulos (11/25, 10:13 a.m.), Sen. John McCain was asked to respond to an released by Sen. Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire accusing the GOP of unleashing its “attack machine” on her because “they know that there’s one candidate with the strength and experience to get us out of Iraq.” McCain responded that he and Clinton have “fundamental disagreements” on withdrawal from Iraq, which he characterizes as “catastrophe for the United States of America.” McCain continued to demure on whether Clinton or Sen. Barack Obama would be the greater challenge for the Republicans, labeling them both as “formidable.” The Politico (11/25, Bresnahan) reports McCain, “fresh off his latest visit to Iraq, told This Week’s George Stephanopoulos that ‘significant progress’ is being made in reducing sectarian violence thanks to President Bush’s decision to send an additional 30,000 U.S. combat troops to the war zone.” McCain, who “is trying to ride the improved security situation in Iraq to an improved standing in the polls, took shots at several Democratic candidates, including Sen. Hillary Clinton (N.Y.) and former Sen. John Edwards (N.C.), for their suggestion that the United States should begin withdrawing its forces from Iraq soon.” McCain said, “Is that the same Sen. Clinton that said she had to suspend disbelief in order to acknowledge to that the strategy of the surge was succeeding? Clearly, it’s succeeding. You would have to suspend disbelief to believe that it’s not.” The Politico adds that on “the same ABC program, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson (D), who has advocated a complete U.S. withdrawal from Iraq, pointed out that dozens of Americans continue to be killed every month in Iraq, in spite of a lower overall level of violence.” African-Americans Pastors, GOP Still Have Little Common Ground. The Washington Post (11/26, A4, Williams, 723K) reports Pastor Harry R. Jackson Jr. of Hope Christian Church in Prince George’s County, “head of a group of socially conservative black pastors called the High Impact Leadership Coalition, in many ways personifies the possibilities that Republican strategists such as Karl Rove have seen in appealing to the social conservatism of many African American churchgoers. Blacks overwhelmingly identify themselves as Democrats and typically support Democratic candidates, but optimists in the GOP think one way to become a majority party is to peel off a sizable segment of black voters by finding common ground on social issues.” During the “last presidential election cycle, Jackson prayed for Bush and crisscrossed the country pressing conservative social issues. Now he’s pushing an issues agenda rather than ‘carrying the water for the Republican party,’ he said. ‘They are not reliable enough.’” NATIONAL NEWS Holiday Shopping Strong Over Big Weekend, But Some See Troubling Signs. Reports continue to come in on the financial results of the Thanksgiving weekend start of the holiday shopping season. Stories say results were mixed, with many buyers turning out but spending less, and with big discounts skewing the totals and suggesting this might not be an entirely strong year for retailers. Some stories also note that today is “Cyber Monday,” the day many consumers returning from the long holiday weekend will do a lot of online holiday shopping. NBC Nightly News (11/25, story 8, 1:40, Robach, 9.87M) reported, “The numbers are in, detailing how many of you flooded stores this weekend for the official start of the holiday shopping season, but the bigger number may be how much did these avid shoppers, many of whom are bargain hunters, spend?” CNBC’s Carl Quintanilla: “The malls were a little bit more crowded [as] 147 million shoppers went to the malls. That is about 4.8% more than last year, a pretty solid number, but the catch: The average consumer spent about $347. That is down from last year.” On its front page, USA Today (11/26, 1A, Fetterman, 2.28M) says consumers “bought smaller gifts and spent less per person than they did last year.” While the average amount spent, $347.44, was “down 3.5% from a year ago,” consumers “who earn under $50,000 a year spent even less: $263.73.” Still, the AP Rothenberg Says Media Overlooking Paul’s “Kooky” Views. In his Roll Call (11/26) column, Stuart Rothenberg says Rep. Ron Paul has “unintentionally exposed the over-hype that accompanies much of the talk about politics and the Internet. Paul has been doing well in postdebate call-ins and Internet ‘polls’ for months, and his Web site has been scoring more hits than a bong at a Grateful Dead concert. Recently, he received a wave of publicity because of a single day of fundraising, when some 35,000 contributors gave more than $4 million to the Congressman’s presidential bid.” But “big-sounding numbers can be deceiving, and politics is more about breadth of support than depth. Ultimately, elections are about winning votes, not Web visitors or even campaign dollars.” The “result is that many in the national media have treated Paul casually,” but “you hear very little about his kooky votes.” Hardly anyone is “bothering to talk about his votes against resolutions calling on the government of Vietnam to release political prisoners and on 17 (11/25, D’Innocenzio) reports Bill Martin of buyer tracking firm ShopperTrak said, “This was a really good start. ... There seemed to be a lot of pent-up demand.” The Washington Post (11/26, A9, Mui, 723K) says Phil Rist of research firm BigResearch agreed, saying, “The holiday season is off to a good start.” The Wall Street Journal (11/26, B1, Tan, McWilliams, Merrick, 2.06M) reports online sales “were especially strong” on Friday, “rising 22% to $531 million,” while “online sales for Nov. 1 through Friday totaled $9.36 billion, 17% more than last year.” The New York Times (11/26, C1, Barbaro, 1.18M) says the “discounting in brick-and-mortar stores will spill over onto the Web starting today. In a departure from tradition, dozens of Web retailers will offer free shipping, no matter how small the order, for Cyber Monday.” Research firm ComScore “predicted that online sales might surpass $700 million today, a record for a single day.” ABC World News (11/25, story 10, 2:50, Harris, 8.78M) closed its Sunday evening newscast with a feature on a “man who is on a crusade to get Americans to stop shopping.” Fears Of Recession Continue To Grow. The Wall Street Journal (11/26, A1, McKay, Evans, 2.06M) reports on its front page that “battered stock and bond markets are sending an increasingly ominous signal that a U.S. recession could be near.” But the markets “haven’t swayed Federal Reserve officials and most private economists from their view that the nation’s economy can escape a downturn and get back on a steadier course.” While the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up Friday, it is “8.4% below its all-time high, set in October.” USA Today (11/26, 2B, 2.28M) says a bear market -- a decline of at least 20 percent -- may be looming. USA Today (11/26, 1B, 2.28M) reports that the housing crisis is having a “domino effect” on the economy. As the “crisis seeps into farther-flung corners of the economy, more of us will find it harder -- and costlier -- to borrow money. The value of the funds in our retirement accounts could shrink. People with subpar credit will likely find it more difficult to qualify for auto and home-equity loans. Even consumers who make the cut may need higher credit scores and more documentation.” This will make consumers less likely to “buy cars, boats and other big-ticket items,” which could help “plunge the economy into a recession.” The Financial Times (11/26, Tett, Hughes) quotes Peter Sutherland of Goldman Sachs International saying, “The US economy is in a mess. … I think we are going to go through next year, certainly the first half of next year, with considerable traumas.” Summers Outlines Steps To Try To Ward Off Recession. In a Financial Times (11/26) op-ed, former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers writes, “The odds now favour a US recession that slows growth significantly on a global basis. Without stronger policy responses than have been observed to date, moreover, there is the risk that the adverse impacts will be felt for the rest of this decade and beyond.” Summers says “maintaining demand must be the over-arching macro-economic priority,” policymakers “need to articulate a clear strategy addressing the various pressures leading to contractions in credit,” and that “there needs to be a comprehensive approach taken to maintaining demand in the housing market to the maximum extent possible. … All of this may not be enough to avert a recession. But it is much more than is under way right now.” Krugman Says Unemployment Different Today Than In 1990s. In his New York Times (11/26, A23, 1.18M) column, Paul Krugman writes, “The response of those who support the Bush administration’s economic policies is to complain about the unfairness of it all. They rattle off statistics that supposedly show how wonderful the economy really is. Many of these statistics are misleading or irrelevant, but it’s true that the official unemployment rate is fairly low by historical standards. So why are people so unhappy? … The unemployment rate in 1998 was only slightly lower than the unemployment rate today. But for working Americans, everything else was different. Wages were rising, yet inflation was low, so the purchasing power of workers’ take-home pay was steadily improving. So, too, were job benefits, including the availability of health insurance. And homeownership was rising steadily.” OPEC Members May Check Rise In Oil Prices With Output Boost. The Wall Street Journal (11/26, C5, Nguyen, Swartz, 2.06M) reports, “As oil prices continue to flirt with record territory, traders are contending with a potential price damper: increased output from” OPEC members. The Journal adds, “Two reports late last week showed that OPEC is expected to boost oil production -- according to one source of data, by as much as 720,000 barrels a day in the four weeks to Dec. 8 -- as Saudi Arabia steps up deliveries to the U.S. Swelling OPEC exports could cool oil prices, which touched a record nominal high of $99.29 a barrel last week on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Light, sweet crude for January delivery settled up 89 cents at $98.18 a barrel, a record for a front-month contract.” Loophole Allows Members Of Congress More Overseas Trips. According to Roll Call (11/26, Van Dongen), “Trips to foreign locales such as Saudi Arabia and Canada may be on the rise despite the implementation of new gift and travel rules that prohibit most travel covered by private funding sources. That’s because a little-known loophole still allows lawmakers and staffers to accept travel underwritten directly by foreign countries through the Mutual Educational and Cultural Exchange Act,” which is “run by” the State Department’s Office of Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs “managed by Karen Hughes, a longtime adviser to President Bush who recently announced her plans to leave the administration for a second time. … The trips, which 18 outside experts said may now be increasing because of new travel rules, are extremely difficult to track and follow. And they are so low-profile that many government watchdog groups did not know anything about them.” that suck less power. The right combination of saving energy and investing in new forms will pay dividends for the world.” Nations Said To Be Far From United On Climate Change. Washington Post (11/26, A15, 723K) columnist Sebastian Mallaby writes, “The good news on climate change is that the world wants to do something.” But “fine sentiments” won’t “matter unless a critical mass of countries unites around a real policy. And unity is miles away.” It is “great that the world wants to act on global warming, and it’s remarkable how fast the mood has changed. But we are a long way from clarity and honesty. As deadlocked trade diplomacy tells us, it’s one thing for the nations of the world to declare that they want action. Brokering the compromises that make action possible is altogether harder.” DHS Official Says Ignoring Illegal Workers Would Create “Silent Amnesty.” DHS Assistant Secretary for Policy Stewart Baker, in a letter to the Wall Street Journal (11/26, 2.06M) writes that Nom Nassif was “commendably candid” in complaining in a Nov. 20 op-ed that plans to crackdown on the employment of workers with mismatched Social Security numbers would “force employers to obey the law and to resolve the mismatches for illegal workers.” Baker continues that while DHS agrees with Nassif “that there is a shortage of legal workers for agriculture,” the solution for this is comprehensive immigration reform, not a situation in which DHS allows “businesses to close their eyes to the legality of their work force. That would amount to a silent amnesty. This sort of connivance with illegal work is exactly what has bred deep public cynicism about whether government really intends to enforce the law. The answer is that we will continue to enforce the law as it is, even as we try to make changes to the law that will enhance legal pathways for agricultural workers.” INTERNATIONAL NEWS Bush Not Expected To Take Active Role In Mideast Talks. While President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice are preparing to host Mideast talks in Annapolis this week, the Los Angeles Times (11/26, A1, Richter, 881K) says on its front page that the President does not plan to take an “activist” role. Under the headline “Bush To Stay On Sidelines Of Mideast Talks,” the Times reports Bush’s national security advisor “said Sunday that the president would not adopt a more activist role…even though many observers believe the United States must step up its direct involvement if the effort is to succeed.” Speaking to reporters Sunday night, Stephen J. Hadley “said Bush believed Washington’s role should be to aid and encourage Israelis and Palestinians, not ‘lean on one side or another and jam a settlement through.’” History, he said, “has suggested that those efforts to jam have not worked.” However, while the President’s position “is likely to reassure Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who is politically weak at home and fearful that tough concessions could bring about his government’s collapse,” it will “almost surely disappoint the delegation headed by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, which has been hoping American pressure could force Israeli concessions.” In addition, Bush’s less involved role “is likely to displease many of the Arab and European governments attending the conference that have been urging a more active role.” In an analysis, the AP (11/25, Loven) says that “two key questions” about this week’s meetings “are how much Bush himself will become involved and how much good he could do during the final year in the White House after a hands-off history.” Though “past presidents staked much on the Middle East,” Bush, “for a host of reasons…has behaved differently. There was his inclination to discard all things Clinton, coupled with the recognition that past intensive efforts…had not paid off. The Sept. 11 attacks and the Iraq war drew the bulk of the Northern Hemisphere On Pace For Warmest Year On Record. On its front page, USA Today (11/26, 1A, Rice, 2.28M) reports, “The Northern Hemisphere is the warmest this year since record-keeping started 127 years ago, according to the National Climatic Data Center. Temperatures for January through October averaged 1.3 degrees above the norm. If the trend continues, the year could break the record for the warmest set in 2005. ... The Southern Hemisphere is its ninth-warmest since recordkeeping began, the center said. Worldwide, this is the thirdwarmest year through October.” Energy Efficiency Seen As Key To Curbing Carbon Emissions. In its sole editorial this morning, the Los Angeles Times (11/26, 881K) writes, “Energy efficiency is the fastest, safest and cheapest method currently available for cutting carbon emissions. ... To make really hefty efficiency gains, the U.S. must follow California’s lead in restructuring incentives for utilities, and regulatory agencies should do much more to encourage important innovations such as cogeneration plants.” The Times adds, “Fighting global warming doesn’t have to derail the economy, or even slow it much. Some of the costs of the expensive fixes, such as developing renewable power, capturing carbon from coalburning plants and refining better bio-fuels, can be offset by the savings from efficiency measures such as better insulation, tougher fuel economy standards and appliances 19 White House’s attention.” Along similar lines, the Washington Post (11/26, A13, Abramowitz, 723K) writes under the headline “For Bush, It’s Not About Being There” that “the opening of Tuesday’s Middle East conference in Annapolis, seven years into the Bush administration, is a reminder of how little the traditional concept of brokering an Arab-Israeli settlement through an ongoing ‘peace process’ has figured into…Bush’s foreign policy. Another is Bush’s near-absence from the Middle East during his presidency. He has traveled to the region four times, but two of those visits were one-day trips to Iraq, and one was for a meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.” USA Today (11/26, 8A, Jackson, 2.28M) this morning also publishes “a look at Bush’s comments on the region in advance of US efforts this week to jump-start talks toward a Palestinian state.” Annapolis Talks Seen As Chance For Bush, Rice To Cement Legacy. A number of news articles this morning examine the role the Annapolis talks, and a potential Mideast peace deal, would play in cementing both President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice’s legacy. McClatchy (11/26, Strobel), for example, reports under the headline “Can Rice Save Her Legacy With ‘Hail Mary’ Pass?” that Rice “became secretary of state almost three years ago with strong support from President Bush, glamorous reviews in the news media and high hopes from America’s diplomats. Since then, Pakistani strongman Pervez Musharraf has ignored her pleas and imposed emergency rule, throwing a key counterterrorism ally into turmoil. In Russia, the country Rice prides herself on knowing best, she and Bush appear to have badly misread President Vladimir Putin, who’s restored autocratic rule and his country’s rivalry with America. Her drive for Middle East democracy has stalled in Lebanon and elsewhere, and other big issues, including the environment and relations with East Asia, have been relegated to the back burner.” Now, Rice “is hoping to rewrite her legacy in the next 14 months, beginning with what amounts to a Hail Mary pass” at this week’s talks in Annapolis. McClatchy notes that “more than any other Bush administration initiative, the conference to advance Israeli-Palestinian peace is Rice’s, with Bush mostly supporting from the sidelines.” On its front page, the New York Times (11/26, A1, Bumiller, 1.18M) reports under the headline “Rice’s Turnabout On Mideast Peace Talks” that “nearly seven tumultuous years” after Bush took office, Rice “has led the Bush administration to a startling turnaround and is now thrusting the United States as forcefully as Mr. Clinton once did into the role of mediator between the Israelis and Palestinians.” For Rice, the Annapolis meeting “reflects her evolution from passive participant to activist diplomat who has been willing to break with [Vice President Dick] Cheney and other conservatives skeptical of an American diplomatic role in the Middle East.” According to aids, Rice’s “thinking on the Middle East changed for several reasons,” including “increasing pressure to get involved in the peace negotiations from European and Arab leaders whose support she needs for the campaign of diplomatic and economic pressures on Iran.” In addition, Rice “is determined to fashion a legacy in the Middle East that extends beyond the war in Iraq.” The Baltimore Sun (11/25, Little, 252K), similarly, said that “while the Bush administration has worked to suppress expectations for the Middle East peace conference Tuesday in Annapolis, observers say the professional and political stakes for Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice are much harder to minimize.” Though “an outcome resembling success could restore some of the former Stanford professor’s diplomatic credibility, they say, and perhaps add a line to her career’s postscript that doesn’t contain the word ‘Iraq,’” something “less than success could extinguish whatever progress she has fostered as the president’s top diplomat in the past three years, and perhaps worsen relations with a part of the world considered vital to American security and foreign policy.” Under the headline “Talks On Mideast Peace Come Full Circle,” the Financial Times (11/26, Khalaf) says the talks, “For some observers…carries echoes of Camp David, where former US President Bill Clinton brought together the late Palestinian President Yassir Arafat and the Israeli prime minister at the time, Ehud Barak, to agree on a final settlement.” But “Annapolis, in fact, is a far more humble peace-making effort than Camp David. Its objective is not to close a deal, but to resume political negotiations on the key issues separating the two sides.” Rice Using Close Relationship With Bush To “Prod” Him “Toward Diplomacy.” A New York Times (11/26, A10, Bumiller, 1.18M) article published today, adapted from “Condoleezza Rice: An American Life” (a book to be published next month), examines Bush and Rice’s “unusually tight bond,” which “has helped her as secretary of state in his second term to prod the president toward diplomacy with Iran and North Korea. But administration officials have long said that her devotion to Mr. Bush made her unwilling to challenge the president when needed during his first term, when she served as a less than confident national security adviser.” And “in recent months, Ms. Rice has gone so often to Mr. Bush to push him on diplomacy with Iran and North Korea that he has started to needle her that she expects him to talk to people like [Iranian President] Mahmoud Ahmadinejad…or Kim Jong-il, the North Korean leader whom Mr. Bush has said he loathes.” Kristol Says Rice “Obsessed” With Israel-Palestine Settlement. The Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol, appearing on Fox News Sunday (11/25, Wallace), said Rice would be “welladvised to keep the expectations down. And I think she would be well-advised, frankly, to remember that she’s secretary of state of the United States, and we have a lot of things to accomplish in the Middle East. Syria has to be 20 prevented from killing Lebanese politicians and destabilizing Lebanon. Saudi Arabia could do much more to help in Iraq, where we’re succeeding, but the Saudis still haven’t opened an embassy and still haven’t cut off the flow of the jihadists. … And I’m just worried that she’s been so focused personally on this. Pakistan’s kind of an important place. She’s delegated that to the deputy secretary of state. Iran’s nuclear program -- that’s been delegated to Nick Burns, the numberthree person in the State Department. … So I just hope she’s not so obsessed with this hope for a legacy of an IsraelPalestinian settlement that she’s ignoring an awful lot of other important diplomacy that has to happen in the Middle East.” Huckabee Skeptical Of Two-State Solution. Mike Huckabee was asked on CNN’s Late Edition (11/25, Blitzer) if he believes it is a good idea for the Bush administration “to try to jump start the Israeli-Palestinian peace process,” Huckabee answered, “I don’t think it’s ever a bad idea to try to get parties to discuss the ramifications of a world that continues to spiral out of control.” Asked if he thinks Israel should “give up the West Bank,” Huckabee responded, “No, I don’t think so. I have been to Israel nine times. … It would be very problematic for Israel to give up the West Bank, from their own standpoint of security. The same thing with the Golan Heights -- giving up the Golan Heights makes most of Galilee a sitting target. And it would be a very problematic concern for Israeli security.” Pressed as to whether he agrees with President Bush in Supporting a “two-state solution,” Huckabee said, “I would want to see where that side-by-side exists…because if you do something that puts the Israelis in a position of ultimate vulnerability, that may not be a healthy solution.” Romney Has Low Expectations For Talks. The AP (11/26, Frothingham) reports that in Keene, NH on Sunday, Mitt Romney said that “he does not expect much to come from this week's Middle East peace talks in Annapolis, Md. ‘I always like people to talk to each other and I'm hopeful, but I'm not terribly optimistic about it,’ Romney…said in answer to an audience question. Romney said progress at Annapolis was unlikely because Palestinians are fighting each other and have not shown they have the ability to form a stable and secure government. ‘It's very difficult to establish peace when you don't have somebody across the table who has responsibility and can manage their side of the table,’ he said. ‘My expectations are modest because of [the Palestinians'] inability to really follow the road map.’ Romney went on to say that the wider challenge is to control ‘jihadist extremism’ around the world, from the Philippines to Nigeria.” Zinni Says Implementation Of Any Agreement Will Prove Difficult. Former CENTCOM chief Anthony Zinni, on CBS’s Face the Nation (11/25, Schieffer), said, “We could get an agreement, but the implementation is going to be extremely difficult and has to be orchestrated. … Recruiting for extremists could go up if the sense of despair took hold and yet another failed attempt at this.” Zinni added that process will likely continue “into the next administration. And I think this administration ought to be satisfied that that would be a success if they have a process that continues on and is progressing into the next administration.” More Commentary. New York Times (11/26, 1.18M) columnist Roger Cohen writes, “President Bush is on the exit track. It’s time to rectify the fundamental error he made in allowing war-on-terror rhetoric to discredit the Palestinian national movement.” Now that Bush is “overcoming his Clinton angst” and “has summoned the parties to Annapolis” where “what’s present in abundance is desperation. Bush must use it.” The Palestinians, he says, “are desperate because they are at a dead end,” while “Israeli desperation is quieter. The economy has blossomed, but not the Israeli soul.” Still, Cohen says Bush “faces Palestinian weakness and compromised Israeli strength. He must offset weakness by standing with the Palestinians on core demands. He must insist on Israeli sacrifice -- territorial and ideological -- in the name of US-guaranteed security. ‘Without peace,’ Bush should tell the Israelis, ‘the Arab birth rate and the jihadist tide will eventually wash over you.’” Syria To Attend Annapolis Talks. As President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice prepare for the Annapolis Mideast talks, Syria announced on Sunday that it will attend the meeting. ABC World News (11/25, story 4, 2:00, Harris, 8.78M) hailed the announced from Damascus as “a victory in and of itself, before the meeting even starts.” ABC (Karl) added, “It’s a big deal, a clean sweep: Representatives from every major nation in the Arab world coming to this meeting. And many of those nations don’t have diplomatic relations with Israel. But there are limits…the Saudis, even as they said they were sending their foreign minister, made it clear he will not shake hands with the Israelis.” Asked about the chances for “any real results out of this meeting,” ABC’s Jonathan Karl said: “We’ve probably already seen the biggest result, which is that the meeting is even happening. Secretary Rice has been saying that this is a launching pad, the beginning of negotiations, but they have set a broad and very ambitious long-term goal here for the Bush administration: the creation of a Palestinian state by the end of this presidency.” The New York Times (11/26, A11, Erlanger, 1.18M) also calls the announcement “a victory for the Bush administration.” Miri Eisin, spokeswoman for Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel, “said, ‘The Saudi and Syrian presence is very important and is an American success.’ While the Syrians are not sending the foreign minister -- a diplomatic distinction that has meaning -- Ms. Eisin said that from Israel’s point of view, the rank of the representative was much less important than the Syrian presence.” The Washington Post (11/26, A10, Wilson, 723K), meanwhile, says the move “amounts to a diplomatic 21 compromise by the Syrians, who had demanded that the return of the Golan Heights from Israel be placed on the meeting’s agenda in return for their participation. It is unclear how that issue will be addressed at the one-day conference Tuesday, so Syrian officials decided to send a delegation led by Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad to express its reservations.” White House officials “reacted coolly to the news of Syria’s acceptance and sought to play down any hope that the status of the Golan Heights would be a focus of the discussions.” Meanwhile, NBC Nightly News (11/25, story 3, 0:40, Robach, 9.87M) reported, “The White House is already downplaying expectations of any breakthroughs.” Noting President Bush’s meeting today with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, AP (11/25, Gearan) reports says “their three-way handshake is expected to be the conference’s symbolic high point.” As preparations get underway in the US for the talks, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators were meeting with Secretary Rice “and her deputy for the Mideast region, still trying to write a framework for talks that their US hosts had hoped would be complete by now.” But in an interview with the AP, Rice’s spokesman “said the last-minute work is not surprising.” State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said, “‘We’re confident there will be a document and we’ll get to Annapolis in good shape on that,’ but bargaining may well continue behind the scenes during the session Tuesday.” The Los Angeles Times (11/26, Haydar, Boudreaux, 881K) and Washington Times (11/26, Mitnick, 87K) also report the development. Iran Seen Overshadowing Conference. The Christian Science Monitor (11/26, LaFranchi, 58K) reports, “When the Bush administration holds a meeting this week to formally relaunch the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, one uninvited guest will be looming large over everyone’s shoulder: Iran.” The “incredibly shrinking 24-hour gathering” is “in no small measure a result of the rise of Iran and its brand of radical Islam in the Middle East.” Still, “The idea that a convergence created by a fear of Iran could compel the parties to make unprecedented concessions has ‘elements of truth,’ says Dennis Ross, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and former peace-process coordinator for the Clinton administration. But that vision, he says, fails to grasp another reality: that Iran’s rise is seen by many in the region through the ‘prism’ of the Sunni-Shiite divide.” Security Increased Ahead Of Meeting. The Washington Times (11/26, Wagner, 87K) reports police in Washington, DC “say they will use rolling street closures today to protect and help move diplomats attending the first day of the Middle East peace talks.” In Annapolis, the Federal Aviation Administration “is keeping commercial and private flights away 2 nautical miles horizontally and 4,000 feet vertically” from the Naval Academy. In addition, Coast Guard officials “will likely impose restrictions on traveling near the mouth” of the Severn River. The Washington Post (11/26, B1, Vogel, McVaffrey, 723K) reports “symbolism was a major reason that Annapolis, the 300-year-old city on the Severn River, was chosen as the setting for the conference.” Secretary Rice “wanted something that was unmistakably American, that had a strong historic provenance,” Besanceney said in an interview. “Certainly, Annapolis fit those criteria very well,” he added. More Commentary. Princeton professor and author Bernard Lewis writes in a Wall Street Journal (11/26, 2.06M) op-ed that though “there are signs of change in some Arab circles, of a willingness to accept Israel and even to see the possibility of a positive Israeli contribution to the public life of the region. But such opinions are only furtively expressed. Sometimes, those who dare to express them are jailed or worse. These opinions have as yet little or no impact on the leadership.” Lewis cautions that “if the issue is not the size of Israel, but its existence, negotiations are foredoomed. And in light of the past record, it is clear that is and will remain the issue, until the Arab leadership either achieves or renounces its purpose -- to destroy Israel. Both seem equally unlikely for the time being.” “Surge Of Violence” Reported In Baghdad. NBC Nightly News (11/25, story 4, 0:40, Robach, 9.87M) reported, “A surge of violence has shattered the recent relative calm in Baghdad. At least three bombings left ten people dead and wounded three dozen. US forces also report detaining two dozen gunmen in operations targeting Al Qaeda militants around the country.” The AP (11/25) says “a recent uptick in violence in Iraq continued Sunday as a parked car bomb exploded in a crowded area near a medical complex, killing at least nine people and wounding more than 30.” Allawi Claims Maliki Is Thwarting Progress In Anbar. Former Iraqi prime minister Ayad Allawi, on CNN’s Late Edition (11/25, Blitzer), said, “I think we’re still lacking on the political side. … I would like to mention, that the so-called ‘awakening’ in the various provinces and various parts of Iraq is not part and parcel of the government. It’s independent groups in various provinces who are cooperating with the American forces and with the multinational forces, and that’s why we see a reverse pattern in Anbar and Mosul and Diyala and Kut. And maybe we’ll see this in Karbala.” Allawi claimed the Iraqi government “declared some time ago that they are against the so-called awakening in Anbar. And I think unless we integrate what is happening in Anbar into the system, into the government, into the political process, then we’ll end up in having various militias running the various provinces throughout the country, unfortunately. That’s why we need to see an integration of this process. I explained this to Ryan Crocker, the U.S. ambassador to Baghdad a few 22 weeks in Baghdad over dinner at my house, and said that unless these people are integrated, the government would remain outside this process and the result will be in producing more militias and warlords.” Graham Calls Surge “Most Successful Counterinsurgency Military Operation In History.” Sen. Lindsey Graham, appearing on Fox News Sunday (11/25, Wallace), said the surge is “working amazingly well, beyond my expectations. I think history will judge the surge as probably the most successful counterinsurgency military operation in history. Violence is down. Economic activity is up. It’s not just about more troops. It’s how the troops are used. So hats off to General Petraeus and all under his command. You’re making military history and a phenomenal success. I was amazed, really.” Democrats Point To Lack Of Corresponding Political Progress. Sen. Carl Levin, appearing on Fox News Sunday (11/25, Wallace), said “the surge’s purpose was to give the Iraqi political leaders the breathing space to work out a political settlement, and that purpose has not been achieved. They’re just as far apart as ever. … It was the Maliki government themselves that a year ago adopted the so-called benchmarks that they would have revenue sharing by a year ago, that they would have provincial elections by about a year ago. They failed to meet their own benchmarks. And just to continue to say that if they don’t do something by a certain date that then we’ll take some action to put pressure on them is the mark of a lack of pressure.” New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, appearing on ABC’s This Week (11/25, Stephanopoulos), said progress “should not be measured by casualty counts, body counts. I mean, just in the last day, two more devastating bombings, a pet market in Baghdad a day ago, a bombing. What we need…is political progress. There’s been no political progress. … I believe that no American death is worthy of saying body counts have gone down. Forty died in October. Sixty-five percent of the Iraqi people in a recent poll say it’s OK to shoot at an American soldier.” According to Richardson, “The best way to achieve a political solution in Iraq is to withdraw our forces. Our troops have become targets.” On its website, the Des Moines Register (11/26, 158K) notes Richardson also said, “I wanted [Congress] to end this war. … I wanted them to find ways we can get America to retreat.” Pentagon Leaders Want To De-Emphasize Petraeus’ Views In Next Iraq Report. The Los Angeles Times (11/26, A1, Barnes, 881K) reports in a frontpage story, “Top military leaders at the Pentagon want to avoid a repeat of the last public assessment of the Iraq war -with its relentless focus on the opinion of a single commander -- when the Bush administration makes its next crucial decision about the size of the U.S. force.” Concerned about “the war’s effect on public trust in the military, the leading officials said they hoped the next major assessment early next year would not place as much emphasis on the views of Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top American commander in Iraq, who in September spent dozens of hours in testimony before Congress and in televised interviews.” Defense officials “believe his testimony succeeded in muting a congressional debate and in giving them breathing room for their counter-insurgency strategy, but at a potentially high cost. In addition to the burden on Petraeus, some officials believe, an incessant spotlight on one general risks politicizing the military and undermining the public’s faith that military leaders will give honest assessments of the war’s progress.” McCain Describes “Significant Progress” In Iraq. Sen. John McCain, appearing on ABC’s This Week (11/25, Stephanopoulos), said that after visiting Iraq he is certain that “the progress has been accelerated since we inaugurated the new strategy, which I fought for four years. We have seen significant progress.” However, McCain allowed that the Maliki government “still is not functioning effectively nearly as much as we want it to. We still have an Iraqi police that has Shiite militia. … Al Qaida is not going to quit easy” and “they continue to get supplies and equipment through Iran, and they continue to get suicide bombers through Syria.” According to McCain, “The latest IED that took place was clearly an Iranian- manufactured. … I think that there’s still suicide bombers that are landing in the airport in Damascus and being transported across the border as suicide bombers.” Later on ABC’s This Week (11/25, Stephanopoulos), McCain called attention to his “opposition to the failed strategy that former Secretary Rumsfeld was employing, and advocacy of the one that’s succeeding now. I was severely criticized by Republicans for advocating the strategy that’s succeeding now and being against Secretary Rumsfeld’s strategy. … And none of the other people who are running for the Republican nomination said one word against that strategy or for the strategy that’s working. It’s got to do with experience.” Standoff Over War Funding Continues. Under the headline “Deals Elusive In Iraq Debate,” Roll Call (11/26, Dennis) reports, “Democrats continue to talk tough against handing President Bush a ‘blank check’ to keep the war going in Iraq, while trading blame with the White House over who is at fault for a looming cash crunch at the Pentagon.” Seeking to appeal “to their anti-war base,” Democrats “say they will hang firm for now against additional war funding that doesn’t include a goal for withdrawing troops by Christmas 2008. But they have continued to provide money through the back door that will keep the war going for months, and they promise that in the end the troops will get whatever they need.” House Appropriations Chairman David Obey “sought to turn the 23 tables last week on the White House, arguing that Republicans -- not Democrats -- are blocking funding for the war. … Obey reiterated that he has no intention of bringing up a bill funding the Iraq War that does not also include a goal for getting troops out of Iraq by Christmas 2008.” But “Obey acknowledged that House leaders could provide the funding without his consent, and Republicans could bring up the funding as well if they have the votes.” In addition, “Democrats already have funded the war for months through other channels. The recently adopted Defense appropriations bill allows the president to redirect money from regular base accounts to the war. Democrats also have approved nearly $17 billion in additional funding for mine-resistant vehicles for Iraq in the past two months.” LAST LAUGHS: Late Night Political Humor. The late night shows were in reruns on Friday due to the writers strike. Copyright 2007 by the Bulletin News Network, Inc. Reproduction without permission prohibited. Editorial content is drawn from thousands of newspapers, national magazines, national and local television programs, and radio broadcasts. The Hillary For President News Briefing is published five days a week by BulletinNews, which creates custom news briefings for government and corporate leaders. We can be found on the Web at BulletinNews.com, or called at (703) 749-0040. 24