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Sunday, October 22, 2006
U.S. military announces 3 more troop deaths in Iraq
BAGHDAD (CNN) -- The U.S. military announced the deaths of three U.S. military personnel killed this weekend, bringing the military's death toll for the month to 81 -- the highest this year.

A Multi-National Division - Baghdad Soldier died at approximately 1 p.m. Sunday after his patrol struck a roadside bomb in eastern Baghdad, the U.S. military said.

A Task Force Lightning Soldier died Saturday and three others were wounded in enemy action in Iraq's Salaheddin Province, according to a U.S. military release Sunday. The soldier was assigned to the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division. The U.S. military Sunday also announced a U.S. Marine, assigned to Regimental Combat Team 5, died Saturday "of injuries sustained from enemy action" in Anbar, the vast Sunni-dominated province west of Baghdad, the U.S. military said.

Three other Marines died Saturday in Anbar as a result of combat, but it is not clear if all four were killed in the same fighting. The highest monthly death toll this year had been in April, when 76 troops were killed.
Specter: Don't count Santorum out
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Despite consistent polling that shows Sen. Rick Santorum losing to his Democratic challenger, Sen. Arlen Specter warned Sunday that people should not write off his fellow Pennsylvania Republican from winning another term.

"Well, Wolf, when you say Senator Santorum is in a fight for his life, I tell you that I've been in the fight for my life lots of times in many ways, and so far, I've won every time," Specter said in an interview on CNN's 'Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer.' "Don't count Rick Santorum out."

Santorum is being challenged by Democratic nominee Bob Casey, Jr.

On the same program, Sen. Jack Reed, D-Rhode Island, predicted that Sen. Lincoln Chafee, R-Rhode Island, would lose re-election to Democratic nominee Sheldon Whitehouse. Democrats are counting on winning Rhode Island and Pennsylvania as they try to take back control of the Senate.


-- CNN Political Editor Mark Preston
Dole and Schumer bet on elections
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- North Carolina Sen. Elizabeth Dole and New York Sen. Chuck Schumer Sunday wagered a dinner on the outcome of the midterm elections with each professing momentum heading into November.

"We're going to keep the majority in the United States Senate," Dole said in an appearance alongside Schumer on CBS's Face the Nation. "And Chuck, I'll put a wager on that."

Schumer boasted that Democrats "are right on the edge of taking back the Senate.

"It's not a done deal," he said. "It's hardly a certainty, but we are feeling very, very good."

So good, it appears, Schumer readily accepted the bet. Schumer is the chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, while Dole heads the National Republican Senatorial Committee.


-- CNN Political Editor Mark Preston
Kerry: Obama is a "very powerful communicator"
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sen. John Kerry, D-Massachusetts, Sunday heaped praise on a potential rival for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination, calling freshman Illinois Sen. Barack Obama "a very interesting and very powerful communicator with a great deal of skill."

But Kerry brushed aside questions about possibly running against Obama by saying it "is a free country" and noting that the Illinois senator will have to decide if he is "ready to run," during an interview on ABC's "This Week."

Obama delivered the keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston where Kerry was nominated to be his party's presidential nominee. "I think my confidence in him has been obviously ratified," Kerry said. "I like what he's doing."

-- CNN Political Editor Mark Preston
Kerry defends himself on donations
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sen. John Kerry, D-Massachusetts, defended himself from critics Sunday who suggest he needs to donate his campaign war chest to help Democrats retake control of Congress, noting that he is responsible for $11 million in contributions to candidates this election cycle.

"I've been campaigning with candidates and for candidates," Kerry said in an interview on ABC's 'This Week.' "I've been raising money for candidates and have given money to candidates. I've raised and given over $11 million to candidates, $3.5 million to my Senate colleagues alone, $2.5 million, I think, to the House candidates (and) millions of dollars to party members and others."

The Massachusetts senator added, "And it costs money to do that. We have to -- we're spending down. Unlike some folks who are out there raising money for themselves, out of cycle, I have not been doing that."

Kerry came under attack last week when an anonymous website, heyjohn.org, sought to pressure the 2004 presidential nominee into parting with his money.

-- CNN Political Editor Mark Preston
Senate: campaign cash
Who has the financial edge in the nation's hotly contested Senate races?

MARYLAND

Ben Cardin (D)
Total Contributions: $6,449,422.54
Cash on Hand: $1,590,022.47

Michael Steele (R)
Total Contributions: $5,988,880.26
Cash on Hand: $2,058,425.29

--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai
Bush confident GOP will keep control of House and Senate
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Bush says Republicans will keep control of the House and Senate as long as candidates stick to the issues of national security and the economy.

Bush said in a taped interview with ABC's "This Week" that his immigration proposals that stalled under G-O-P objections are still in play, and that they'll be discussed again in connection with national security plans. He says while many Democratic candidates are slamming him in their ads this year, he's "not on the ballot."
Greenfield: Fear a popular theme in political ads
NEW YORK (CNN) -- If President Roosevelt were around today, he might amend that famous line from his first inaugural address.

Apparently, the only thing we have to fear is ... political campaign ads that play on fear. The latest example now playing on a cable network near you, and soon to be on the political talk show circuit, is a Republican ad as stark as a midnight winter landscape on the Great Plains.

Full story
Lawmakers to Bush: Push Iraq on Militias
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republicans and Democrats urged the White House on Sunday to step up the pressure on Iraq's prime minister to crush the militias that are inciting sectarian violence and undermining a fragile democracy.

Full story
Lugar, Dems urge U.S.-N. Korean talks
Lugar, Dems Urge U.S.-N. Korean Talks

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee joined Democrats on Sunday in calling for direct talks with North Korea aimed at easing a nuclear standoff.

Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., said direct talks, which the North long has coveted and which the Bush administration refuses, are "inevitable if this is to be resolved diplomatically."

Full story
Senate: campaign cash
Who has the financial edge in the nation's hotly contested Senate races?
MISSOURI        

Claire McCaskill (D)
Total Contributions: $6,857,826.26
Cash on Hand: $246,724.30

Jim Talent (MO-R)
Total Contributions: $11,161,485.04
Cash on Hand: $4,204,741.07

--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai

Kinky Friedman a 'Lone Ranger' on Trail
HOUSTON (AP) - Richard Kinky Friedman is standing, sans cowboy boots, in his suite at the Hilton as a third day of election stumping ends, remote control in hand and Fox News on the tube.

His campaign manager, heavy-lidded as the clock nears midnight, is doing his sleep-deprived best to reassure Texas' most unlikely gubernatorial candidate that he might just win.

"We could still lose," Dean Barkley tells The Kinkster. "But we're not gonna."

Full story
Sen. Obama says he's weighing 2008 run
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen. Barack Obama acknowledged Sunday he was considering a run for president in 2008, backing off previous statements that he would not do so.

Full story

Obama made similar comments last week to CNN's Larry King

Transcript of King's interview with Obama
Senate: campaign cash
Who has the financial edge in the nation's hotly contested Senate races?

MONTANA

Tester (D)
Total Contributions: $3,652,388.06
Cash on Hand: $570,957.16

Burns (R)
Total Contributions: $7,744,297.98
Cash on Hand: $1,705,251.87



--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai

79 soldiers killed this month in Iraq
BAGHDAD (CNN) -- The U.S. military announced Sunday the death of another
U.S. Marine in Iraq, bringing the military's monthly death toll to 79, the
highest this year.

The Marine, assigned to Regimental Combat Team 5, died Saturday "of
injuries sustained from enemy action" in Anbar, the vast Sunni-dominated
province west of Baghdad, the U.S. military said.

Three other Marines died Saturday in Anbar as a result of combat, but it
is not clear if all four were killed in the same fighting. The highest monthly death toll this year had been in April, when 76 troops were killed.
Senate: campaign cash
Who has the financial edge in the nation's hotly contested Senate races?
PENNSYLVANIA

Bob Casey, Jr. (D)
Total Contributions: $14,673,437.89
Cash on Hand: $3,708,569.44

Rick Santorum (R)
Total Contributions: $23,137,510.90
Cash on Hand: $3,634,276.64


--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai

Rival Blasts Clinton on White House Hope
NEW YORK (AP) -- U.S. Senate candidate John Spencer said his rival Hillary Rodham Clinton would make a "tremendous" candidate for president, but that he was the one more interested in representing the state of New York.

"I'm the only one standing here that wants to be a United States senator for the next six years for the people of New York," said Spencer, a Republican, during a second debate between the two candidates held Sunday morning.

Full story
Senate: campaign cash
Who has the financial edge in the nation's hotly contested Senate races?

NEW YORK

Hillary Rodham Clinton (D)
Total Contributions: $47,701,189.28
Cash on Hand: $15,756,426.16

John Spencer (R)
Total Contributions: $4,705,620.51
Cash on Hand: $474,065.74




--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai
Democrats: More Seats Coming Into Play
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Democrats hold solid leads for four of the six Republican seats they need to capture the Senate and about 10 of 15 required to win the House, according to officials in both parties. Numerous additional races remain highly competitive.

Full story
Senate: campaign cash
Who has the financial edge in the nation's hotly contested Senate races?
NEW JERSEY
Bob Menendez (D)
Total Contributions: $10,084,511.99
Cash on Hand: $5,511,207.20
Tom Kean, Jr (R)
Total Contributions: $4,041,596.19
Cash on Hand: $3,173,401.94


--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai
Lamont Gives $2M to Flagging Campaign
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -- Democratic candidate Ned Lamont, trailing Sen. Joe Lieberman by a double-digit margin, dropped another $2 million into his Senate bid in Connecticut on Saturday.

The wealthy cable television executive has tapped his personal fortune for $12.7 million to fund his campaign.

Full story
Senate: campaign cash
Who has the financial edge in the nation's hotly contested Senate races?

OHIO
Sherrod Brown (D)
Total Contributions: $8,600,000
Cash on Hand: $1,200,000
Mike DeWine (R)
Total Contributions: $13,775,031
Cash on Hand: $4,503,735


--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai
Democrat, Republican Decry GOP TV Ad
(AP) -- Both major-party candidates for a congressional seat are decrying an ad sponsored by a national Republican committee that accuses the Democrat of billing taxpayers for a call to a phone-sex line.

The ad, which began airing Friday, shows Michael Arcuri leering at the silhouette of a dancing woman who says, "Hi, sexy. You've reached the live, one-on-one fantasy line."

Full story
Senate: campaign cash
Who has the financial edge in the nation's hotly contested Senate races?

TENNESSEE
Harold Ford, Jr. (D)
Total Contributions: $8,467,659.71
Cash on Hand: $771,674.81
Bob Corker (R)
Total Contributions: $10,508,053.94
Cash on Hand: $497,583.64


--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai
Scalia Rips Judges on Abortion, Suicide
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Deeply controversial issues like abortion and suicide rights have nothing to do with the Constitution, and unelected judges too often choose to find new rights at the expense of the democratic process, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia said Saturday.

Full story
THIS WEEK AT WAR --Airs Sunday 1:00-2:00 p.m. ET
Topics: War in Iraq; Insurgent Sniper Video; North Korea Threat; Nuclear Iran

Guest: Arwa Damon, CNN Baghdad-based correspondent
Guest: Maj. Gen. Donald Shepperd, U.S. Air Force (Ret.); CNN military analyst
Guest: Barbara Starr, Pentagon correspondent
Guest: Jamie McIntyre, CNN senior Pentagon correspondent
Guest: Joseph Cirincione, Center for American Progress
Guest: Vali Nasr, Council on Foreign Relations
Guest: Richard Roth, CNN senior UN correspondent
Guest: Ray Takeyh, Council on Foreign Relations

Anchor: John Roberts
LATE EDITION WITH WOLF BLITZER--Airs LIVE Sunday 11:00AM-1:00 PM
Topics: Election 2006; Party Politics
Guest: Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN), Senate Majority Leader

Topics: War in Iraq; North Korea Threat; Nuclear Iran; 2006 Elections
Guest: Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI), Armed Services Committee
Guest: Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), Chairman, Judiciary Committee

Topics: War in Iraq; Delicate Diplomacy: North Korea, Iran
Guest: Alexander Haig, former Secretary of State
Guest: Zbigniew Brzezinski, former National Security Adviser

Topics: Election 2006; Party Politics
Guest: Mike Allen, TIME Magazine
Guest: Norm Ornstein, American Enterprise Institute; author, "The Broken Back on Track"
Guest: Andrea Koppel, CNN congressional correspondent

Anchor: Wolf Blitzer
The CNN Political Ticker AM, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2006
For the latest, breaking political news, check for updates throughout the day on the CNN Political Ticker http://www.cnn.com/ticker All politics, all the time.

A majority of Americans believe government is broken

From Mark Preston
CNN Political Editor

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- With the midterm elections just two weeks off, a new CNN poll released Sunday shows that an overwhelming majority of Americans believe that "our system of government is broken."

The poll of 1,012 Americans, conducted by Opinion Research Corporation, reveals that 78 percent believe that our government is broken, while 22 percent said it is not. It comes as Democrats are trying to convince voters there needs to be a change in Washington. In turn, Republicans argue that Democrats are obstructionists who seek to block the GOP at every turn.

Meanwhile, the Bush administration is dealing with the fallout this morning from a senior U.S. diplomat's interview with Al Jazeera. The diplomat said there is a chance history will show the U.S. displayed "arrogance" and "stupidity" in handling the war in Iraq. The Washington Times looks at how the GOP is trying to get back on message, while The New York Times notes Democrats have found something that has been lacking for years: optimism.

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tennessee, discusses the midterm elections on Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, and Sens. Jack Reed, D-Rhode Island, and Arlen Specter, R-Pennsylvania talk about Iraq, North Korea and the elections with Wolf. Brian Ross, ABC News chief investigative correspondent, discusses the Foley page scandal on Reliable Sources.
***

NYT: Guardedly, Democrats Are Daring to Believe
WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 -- There is something unusual bubbling in Democratic political waters these days: optimism. With each new delivery of bad news for Republicans — another Republican congressman under investigation, another Republican district conceded, another poll showing support for the Republican-controlled Congress collapsing — a party that has become so used to losing is considering, disbelievingly and with the requisite worry, the possibility that it could actually win in November.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/22/us/politics/22dems.html?_r=1&ref=politics&oref=slogin

Washington Times: GOP seeks to get back on message
Republican House candidates still feel some heat from the revelation that Rep. Mark Foley sent inappropriate and sometimes lurid Internet messages to teenage boys, but party leaders insist they are starting to get their message out again to voters. http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20061022-124642-9236r.htm

Boston Globe: Voter ire may tip scale in House
DELHI, Ohio -- As Democratic House candidate John Cranley works the bingo halls and street festivals of Cincinnati, he hands out blue plastic cups that he hopes will help knock Representative Steve Chabot out of office -- and House Republicans out of the majority.
"Had enough?" the cups said.
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2006/10/22/voter_ire_may_tip_scale_in_house/

Washington Post: Democrats Strengthen Chances
For Senate Democrats in the past two weeks have significantly improved their chances of taking control of the Senate, according to polls and independent analysts, with the battle now focused intensely on three states in the Midwest and upper South: Missouri, Tennessee and Virginia. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/21/AR2006102101047.html

CNN: Diplomat: U.S. arrogant, stupid in Iraq
(CNN) -- A senior U.S. State Department diplomat has told Arab satellite network Al Jazeera that there is a strong possibility history will show the United States displayed "arrogance" and "stupidity" in its handling of the Iraq war. Alberto Fernandez made his comments on Saturday to the Qatar-based network in a 35-minute interview from Washington, where he is director of the Office of Press and Public Diplomacy in the Bureau of Near East Affairs.
http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/10/22/iraq.main/index.html?eref=rss_topstories

Washington Times: Bush sticks to mission: U.S. victory
President Bush yesterday acknowledged that U.S. commanders are changing tactics in Iraq nearly every day but declared that the mission "is clear and unchanging." "Our goal," he said, "is victory." The president's remarks aired in his weekly radio address as he met to discuss the situation in Iraq with top generals and other advisers at the White House. http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20061022-124644-9954r.htm

LAT: Bush's family profits from 'No Child' act
A company headed by President Bush's brother and partly owned by his parents is benefiting from Republican connections and federal dollars targeted for economically disadvantaged students under the No Child Left Behind Act.
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-na-ignite22oct22,0,1996210.story?track=mostviewed-homepage

NYT: Democrats Play Up Candidates’ Service
GLEN ELLYN, Ill. — As she campaigns for Congress in the suburbs of Chicago, Tammy Duckworth, a Democrat and an Iraq veteran, speaks with chilling conviction about the war. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/22/us/22duckworth.html?ref=politics

Hartford Courant: Joe Keeps Focus On Mud
Upon hearing that Ned Lamont was about to launch his closing advertising blitz, Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman hastily called a press conference to pre-emptively denounce ads he'd never seen. "Ned is going to use his wealth to run an uglier campaign and throw as much manufactured mud at me as he possibly can ... every half hour of every television viewing day from here on in," Lieberman said. http://www.courant.com/news/politics/hc-senate1022.artoct22,0,5008517.story?coll=hc-headlines-home

Palm Beach Post: Harris dismisses signs she's trailing as 'silly'
WEST PALM BEACH — Katherine Harris stood along the outer edge of the county commission chambers, waiting to be introduced to the packed room of loyal Republicans. She got the attention of the county's GOP chairman, Sid Dinerstein. He was told she's in the building. "They tell me this as if we don't know each other," he said.
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/pbccentral/content/local_news/epaper/2006/10/22/m1a_harris_10221.html

Nashville Tennessean: Last days of Senate race draw big names
With early voting under way and less than three weeks before Election Day, the political big guns are converging on Tennessee. The latest will be the man called "America's mayor." Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani's appearance in Chattanooga on Monday for Republican Bob Corker's Senate campaign is the latest sign that the Volunteer State is seen as one of three key rivalries deciding which party will control the U.S. Senate. http://www.tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061022/NEWS0206/610220360

The Plain Dealer: Tale of two reformers
In the race for Ohio governor — already the most expensive in state history — Democrat Ted Strickland and Republican Ken Blackwell are trying to convince voters of the same thing. http://www.cleveland.com/election/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/115961734690170.xml&coll=2

Lincoln Star Journal: Positively negative?
She doesn’t let them talk to her anymore. They had their chances. Now their words just offend the ears. “I’m Pete Ricketts and I approved this ...” No, Nancy Wells doesn’t hear that part. She’s already hit the power button. At 57, mud fights between grown-ups just lack appeal. http://www.journalstar.com/articles/2006/10/22/top_story/doc453ab31e98904370585573.txt

LAT: Madam Speaker? Pelosi likes the sound
SEATTLE — It's only 9 a.m. and Nancy Pelosi has already had two breakfasts and a bowl of chocolate ice cream. The House minority leader has met with a couple of donors in a hotel dining room, run back up to her room for a live radio interview, down to the dining room again for a sit-down with the local newspapers, and up to her room for a phone strategy session. http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-na-pelosi21oct21,0,1926083.story?track=mostviewed-homepage

Washington Post: Fighting for The Spoils
This must be how Machiavelli ate his corned beef sandwiches.
Sitting in a South Side deli, Rahm Emanuel doesn't so much eat his lunch as overwhelm it with two hands and a hard stare. It's a combat glower familiar to the political opponents, reluctant donors and more than a few allies who have encountered the White House fixer-turned-Democratic-congressman in his still-young career. By most accounts, they usually didn't fare much better than the sandwich.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/21/AR2006102101049.html

CAMPAIGN '06 Amendment 43
Denver Post: As fall chills the air, Paul and Karen Hicks reap the sugar beet harvest on their acreage near Berthoud, painting a pastoral portrait of the nuclear family grounded in a 30-year marriage. http://www.denverpost.com/ci_4530160

Novak: Warner out, Gore in? VIA Union Leader
WASHINGTON – Former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner’s decision to withdraw from consideration for the 2008 Presidential nomination has produced speculation at high levels of the Democratic Party that former Vice President Al Gore may run again.
http://www.unionleader.com/article.aspx?headline=Robert+D.+Novak%3a+Warner+out%2c+Gore+in%3f&articleId=aff34d15-fdf2-4b7b-9034-773045b02487

Boston Globe: Consultant's e-mails show Mormon plan for Romney
Despite repeated denials by the Mormon Church and Governor Mitt Romney's advisers, e-mails from a key Romney consultant state that the leader of the worldwide church was consulted on an effort to build Mormon support for the governor's potential presidential bid and that a key church leader has been involved in mapping out the plan. One e-mail also describes Romney's personal involvement in the planning
http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/10/22/consultants_e_mails_show_mormon_plan_for_romney/

Washington Post: How Foley Skirted Rules To Pursue Relationships
They met on the House floor. He was a 16-year-old political junkie, dressed in the drab navy blazer and gray slacks of a congressional page, rushing phone messages to the members he served. Rep. Mark Foley was tanned and charismatic, a successful politician in his mid-40s willing to joke with him between votes.http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/21/AR2006102101050.html
CNN Poll: Spare the 'Rodham,' spoil her election
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- If presidential elections were held today, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton would likely have a comfortable edge over Sen. John McCain, but take away her maiden name and McCain has a better shot of landing in the Oval Office.

So say the results of a CNN poll released Friday by Opinion Research Corp., which asked 506 adult Americans whom they preferred among potential 2008 presidential candidates. The margin of error for the survey is plus or minus 4.5 percent.

Full story
RELIABLE SOURCES--Airs Sunday 10:00 -11:00 AM
Topic: Breaking the Foley Scandal
Guest: Brian Ross, ABC News chief investigative correspondent

Topic: Bush/Cheney Media Blitz
Guest: John Dickerson, chief political correspondent, Slate Magazine; author, "On Her Trail"
Guest: Michael Medved, radio talk show host, Salem Radio Network
Guest: Rachel Maddow, radio talk show host, Air America Radio

Topic: New Book
Guest: John Dickerson, chief political correspondent, Slate Magazine; author, "On Her Trail"

Topic: Sen. Obama Media Obsession
Guest: Lynn Sweet, Washington bureau chief, Chicago Sun-Times
Guest: Clarence Page, columnist, Chicago Tribune

Host: Howard Kurtz
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