Chew Toyz

Things to chew on this weekend.

Third term?

Bob Whereatt (of Star Tribune fame) writes for MinnPost that all signs point to Gov. Pawlenty running for a 3rd term. Pawlenty's spokesman Brian McClung says Pawlenty won't decide until after the 2008 election. Whereatt suggests that Pawlenty's high approval numbers and aspirations for a higher office put him in position for another run. No one has been elected to three full consecutive terms. What do you think? Will he run again? Can he win if he does?

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But will there be enough hotel rooms on the island?

DFL Rep. Betty McCollum is hopping mad at any attempts to strip federal security funding for the 2008 Republican National Convention. Her office issued a news release earlier this week in response to Rep. Roy Blunt's (R-MO) suggestion that the $50 million in convention funding wasn't an emergency since they've known about the convention for quite some time. McCollum said the GOP can take their convention somewhere else if they don't back the funding (see last line).

"...if Republican leadership eliminates this security funding I will be calling on St. Paul's mayor and city council to pull the plug on the convention. The Republicans can take their convention to Guantanamo Bay where security won't be a problem..."

Raise your hands if you remembered that Alan Keyes was running for president.

(props to anyone who got that joke).

Apparently some who get paid to cover this stuff forgot about Keyes as well. Jake Tapper and the New York Times wrote about the Keyes appearance this week. One reason for the political amnesia may be that Keyes hasn't spent much time campaigning in Iowa.

Worst Debate ever?

There wasn't a whole lot of love for the final GOP debate before the Iowa Caucuses. Charles Krauthammer called it the worst debate ever:

That was not just the worst debate of 2007, that was the worst debate in western history, and that includes the ancient Greeks. There was no record in any major European record of a debate this transcendently and crushingly dull. It was an astonishment.

By the way, you can listen to the GOP debate here and the Democratic debate here.

Will the members of the Senate impose cloture on themselves and tell us who they back for president?

The blog has been trying to shake loose who DFL Sen. Amy Klobuchar will back for president. We're interested because New York Senator Hillary Clinton, Illinois Senator Barack Obama and former North Carolina Senator John Edwards have all campaigned for Klobuchar during her 2006 Senate run.

Klobuchar will only say that she's staying out of it and will leave it to the caucus goers. Apparently she isn't the only Senator with that view. The Washington Post says most members of the Senate have been slow to endorse their colleagues. For the record, GOP Sen. Norm Coleman is backing Rudy Giuliani for president.

The eccentricities of polling in Iowa

The New York Times has an interesting story on how polling in Iowa isn't so easy or always on target.

Finally

Play the game that's sweeping the nation. DC Smackdown!