‘Times Magazine’ to Get Behind McCain Campaign Narratives
Coming this Sunday, an in-depth story on the McCain campaign that some are calling the first 'postmortem.'
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Coming this Sunday, an in-depth story on the McCain campaign that some are calling the first 'postmortem.'
Today, Slate's Dahlia Lithwick and author Ayelet Waldman discuss Michelle Bachmann's anti-Obama blunder, the discouraging fight against incipient voter suppression, and George W. Bush's one enduring, “raging success.”
Despite the fact that there were empty seats, ‘Time’ columnist and ‘Primary Colors’ author Joe Klein has not been able to get a seat on the McCain campaign plane.
McCain may give up on Colorado and try to pick off Obama's old primary bugaboo, Pennsylvania, and its lush bounty of 21 electoral votes.
Today, 'New York' writer Jennifer Senior and Slate editor Dahlia Lithwick discuss Sarah Palin's 'Saturday Night Live' appearance, how McCain and his campaign relate to women, and the trap of becoming a 'mean girl.'
With only fifteen days left until the election, the McCain team realized that they already threw the kitchen sink, but forgot to use the best part — the hose.
Also, sales of $150 face creams are up, and Man Junk keeps scrotums clean and odor-free.
The political commentariat seems to agree on two things right now: (1) Endorsements never matter, and (2) Colin Powell's endorsement does matter, somewhat.
This week: The local sporting press turns its attention to the presidential race.
While it's interesting to see Mr. Plumber transformed into an ephemeral celebrity, does he have any real relevance to the election? Yes!
On 'Letterman' and at last night's Alfred E. Smith dinner, the candidates get some laughs — and not the nasty, 'I hate you' type of laughs they earned during the debates.
Joe the Plumber is getting the full celebrity treatment.
Who would play which candidate in a movie of the 2008 election?
McCain ditches Straight Talk Air on the tarmac in Philly and hops aboard a chartered helicopter so he can make it to the Ed Sullivan Theater on time.
Craig Unger, author of 'The Fall of the House of Bush,' and 'New York' writer Jennifer Senior discuss who won the debate (according to a novel measure), a potential missed opportunity for Obama on the economy, and what kind of president Obama might make — and whether anyone even knows him well enough to say.
You might be able to argue that McCain won more specific points, but his cranky tone and incessant smirks practically handed the debate to Obama.
Obama may have already skimmed as many voters as he’s likely to get from the undecideds.
Unless Joe the Plumber becomes a national rallying cry (please, God, no), there was nothing McCain did that fundamentally altered the course of his campaign.
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