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When The Going Gets Weird

Barry Nolan's story is one you might not be familiar with, but he is a long-serving journalist who was recently fired by Comcast for publicly protesting a planned Emmy Award honor that was winging its way to one Bill O'Reilly.

Six Days Out

As the Democratic Primary comes to a conclusion, the new media focus will inevitably shift entirely to superdelegates. Just over 200 of them have yet to endorse a candidate as of this morning. If you are interested in keeping up with the superdelegates (or maybe collecting them and trading them with your friends), you may find this well-tended list quite useful.

The Leaderless GOP Senate Caucus

Politico has an interesting piece up about how some recent votes in the Senate show that no one is running the store on the GOP side. We learned today that Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has his own problems to worry about back home in Kentucky, so he isn't likely to be much of a guiding influence before November. As much as I've hollered about the schism at the top of the national Republican Party, I didn't expect it to be so overt, so obvious, so soon.

A Goal-Oriented Existence

The Houston Chronicle kicks around the idea that Attorney General Greg Abbott's $7.3 million campaign account gives him plenty of electoral options, and signals the potential for some serious ambition. I wouldn't be surprised if Abbott is either right in the middle of the Dewhurst / Hutchison / Perry grudge match for the gubernatorial nomination or keeping to himself and waiting to move up after taking on someone significantly weakened by that same unavoidable primary fight.

Franken Creeping Up

Air America fans will be pleased to see this other Rasmussen poll on the Minnesota Senate race, which shows SNL alum Al Franken pulling even with incumbent Senator Norm Coleman. Franken had recently been taking a hit in polling after some unpleasantness over taxes, but this upswing shows his recovery may be on the hoof.

My Old Gaffer

It is often the case during presidential election years that news outlets will collect the various gaffes, colloquial mistakes, and regrettable sayings from the campaign trail and serve them up buffet-style. The Politico has this year's collection (Primary Edition!) ready to go for your enjoyment.

American Axle Strike Over

On Thursday, it was announced that General Motors and UAW employees at parts supplier American Axle have reached an agreement which should bring the ongiong work stoppage at American Axle facilities to an end. The strike cost GM some $2 billion due to parts shortages at other plants and lasted quite a while, but now employees are headed back to work.

Libertarian Candidate: Bob Barr

You may remember that former Democratic senator and presidential candidate Mike Gravel had decided to seek the nomination of the Libertarian Party. Their national convention just wrapped up yesterday, and former Georgia Republican Congressman Bob Barr was nominated as the Libertarian Party candidate, prompting Gravel to say that his political career is now over.

Not Politics, But Cool Anyways

Did you know we just landed another spaceship on Mars? Photos from 422 million miles away are fun and educational.

Pending (Electoral) Doom

Chuck Todd is an astute political analyst that works for MSNBC, and we're all big fans. For your Friday reading pleasure (or chagrin), you could do worse than to check out his projection that the losing party in the race for the presidency is headed for some serious internal turmoil.

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