NOW & Code Pink Once Friends, Now Foes Over Hillary Clinton
March 28, 2007

Two women’s groups, traditionally friends and both advocates of ending U.S. military presence in Iraq, find themselves at odds over the endorsement of Hillary Clinton for president.
The National Organization for Women — arguably the Goliath of women’s groups at half a million members strong —endorsed Clinton’s White House run Wednesday, pitting them against the anti-war group Code Pink, which has long made Clinton a top target.
Hillary Clinton’s campaign may be rocked by ‘explosive’ biography
March 28, 2007
Hillary Clinton’s campaign to become the first woman in the Oval Office may be running into some rough waters in the coming months, due to a new biography.
The book, titled “Her Way: The Hopes and Ambitions of Hillary Clinton” has been co-authored by Don Van Natta and Jeff Gerth, the New York Times reporter who first wrote about Whitewater.
Gerth promises that the book will reveal ‘explosive stuff’ about the former US First Lady, and could also “force her to answer ethics charges in the Senate”, reports the New York Daily News.
Code Pink dogs Clinton
March 28, 2007
An anti-war group, Code Pink, is hounding Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) at almost every stop she makes on the campaign trail, hitting her again yesterday as she joined other candidates in seeking a union endorsement.
Standing in front of the Capitol Hill Hyatt Regency, the group made its presence known, inviting a sea of union members from the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers to “go back downstairs and kiss Hillary’s a–.â€
While the group of laborers, enjoying cigarettes between speakers at the Communications Workers of America (CWA) forum, looked on with bemused interest, the protesters sang songs and waved signs advising Clinton not to “buy Bush’s war.â€
Although they rarely show up at an event in large numbers, the pink-clad protesters do make their presence known with persistence and intensity.
Hillary on Track for Nomination
March 28, 2007
By Tony Blankley
With every passing week it becomes more likely that Hillary Clinton will be the Democratic Party nominee for president. This thought, alone, should provide the strongest possible motivation to the Bush administration and the Washington Republicans to get their acts together so that the eventual Republican nominee for president doesn’t start the general election campaign in too deep a hole.
The polls that show half the country saying they won’t vote for Hillary should be discounted. At the election, the choice will not be Hillary or not Hillary — it will be Hillary or someone else. And that is what the campaign is about.
I admit it is very early days in the nomination process, but Sen. Obama’s and former Sen. Edward’s campaigns are beginning to look just strong enough to induce the Hillary campaign to continually sharpen its skills (rather than succumb to the instinct to coast or sit on a lead). On the other hand, the candidacies of both Obama and Edwards may have fairly low ceilings, while the Hillary campaign has a solidity that should be able to grind on remorselessly to nomination.
Read Entire Article @ Real Clear Politics
Vilsack’s exit boosted Edwards - Not Hillary in Iowa, poll shows
March 27, 2007
A new poll of likely Iowa Democratic caucus-goers indicates John Edwards is the biggest beneficiary of Tom Vilsack’s exit from the 2008 Democratic presidential race.
The poll of 600 likely Democratic caucus-goers was taken March 19 to 22 by American Research Group, a Manchester, N.H., polling firm. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percent.
