How Much Butter Can Be in a Croissant?
12 hours ago
Why would their voting strength matter when it is clear who the nominee will be?If the nomination process is ever going to change, it has to start changing at the convention in Denver. Read More......
Because, as Senator Carl Levin, Democrat of Michigan, said at the time, party conventions do more than pick a nominee; they also begin to establish the framework for the primary calendar in the next presidential election. And Michigan, for one, has been trying for years to topple Iowa and New Hampshire from their first-in-the-nation voting perches. Having full votes at the convention will give Michigan more power to pursue that agenda.
At the same time, Mr. Obama’s “request” to restore full voting strength to Florida and Michigan is likely to cause heartburn for party officials, who have struggled to maintain some authority over the primary calendar.
By granting Mr. Obama’s request, the party will essentially be giving a green light to other states to ignore the calendar next time because there will be no consequences.
Oil giants Chevron Corp. and Total SA wrapped up a string of gargantuan, record-breaking earnings reports Friday, a stretch in which six of the major international oil companies topped $50 billion in combined profit for the first time.Read More......
While the profits of unparalleled size have brought withering criticism from Washington and disgust from consumers across the country, very few were surprised. Crude prices during the second quarter were nearly double what they were a year ago.
[T]hese kinds of discrepancies feed distrust on the part of readers, especially conservative ones, who already complain that The Post is all for Obama.In case you haven't noticed, conservatives have complained that the media is biased for thirty years now. It's what they do. It's called playing-the-refs, and the Post, like most of the media, has fallen for it far too much. The Post could go the route of FOX News, and only publish good stuff about McCain and bad stuff about Obama, and the right-wing would still not be satisfied. As Atrios has often said, and I paraphrase: The left wants the media to do their (the media's) job, the right wants the media to do its (the right's) job. Read More......
Cuomo outlined his intentions in a letter to Citigroup's general counsel dated Friday, saying that charges were imminent.Read More......
In the letter, the New York Attorney General's office alleged that the nation's largest bank "has repeatedly and persistently committed fraud by material misrepresentations and omissions" in the underwriting, distribution and sale of auction rate securities, touting them as safe, cash-equivalent investments.
Cuomo's office claimed that the sale of these securities had "a severe detrimental impact" on tens of thousands of Citigroup customers.
The AG also claimed that Citigroup "destroyed recordings of telephone conversations" related to the marketing and sale of auction-rate securities.
ABC's "This Week" — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and former Gov. Tom Ridge, R-Pa.; David Gergen, former White House adviser.Read More......
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CBS' "Face the Nation" — Former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin; Carly Fiorina, adviser to John McCain's campaign.
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NBC's "Meet the Press" — Sens. John Kerry, D-Mass., and Joe Lieberman, I-Conn.
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CNN's "Late Edition" — Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo.; former Rep. Rob Portman, R-Ohio; Kenneth Blackwell, former Ohio secretary of state; Ron Kirk, former Dallas mayor; Maj. Gen. Mark Hertling, the commander of U.S. forces in northern Iraq; Tzipi Livni, Israeli foreign minister; James K. Glassman, undersecretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs; Laura Tyson, adviser to Barack Obama; Nancy Pfotenhauer, adviser to McCain.
"Fox News Sunday" _ Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and former Sen. Tom Daschle, D-S.D.; Ashley Judd, actress.
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