Rick Lazio
What Does She Know? Cool Mrs. Clinton Skates to a Finish
Who's Our Senator? An Enigma Inside a First Lady
Spencer's Stop-Hillary Money
Remember how more than half of Rick Lazio's donors in the 2000 Senate race came from out of state?
That was nothing, apparently, by the standards of Candidates Running Against Hillary Clinton.
John Spencer, who listed 39,000 people as donors in the last fundraising period, has drawn 90 percent of his campaign cash so far from outside New York, according to his campaign.
-- Josh BensonEvents for June 9, 2006
Nick Perry will endorse Yvette Clarke for Congress on the steps of Brooklyn Borough Hall.
Good Counsel Homes holds its annual Ball for Life.
The New York State Conservative Party holds its 44th Anniversary Dinner at the Sheraton, with guests Sam Brownback, John Faso, Mary Donohue, Rick Lazio, Grover Norquist, Curtis Silwa, and Joe Bruno.
—Nicole BrydsonFreddy's Third Guru
Verdi, who now seems to be one of a few new hands, had more than a cameo on the campaign, producing an ad which got attention Upstate by casting Rick Lazio as an ostrich on the topic of the local economy, accompanied by a guy in an ostrich suit at Lazio events.
The "abortive" reference, though, was to an interesting little fight within the Clinton campaign in which Verdi was on the losing side. As Mike Tomasky writes in his book on the race, Verdi wanted Clinton to address some of the knocks on her, notably "carpetbagger," directly.
He proposed, for example, a spot that showed her policy agenda emerging from a carpetbag.
But Clinton's main media advisors, Mandy Grunwald and Mark Penn, pushed back, and persuaded Clinton to stick with a more traditional media campaign.
"Penn and Grunwald's strategy was not a great hit with the press," Tomasky notes. "But it's the voters who matter." read more »
Which is to say that we in the press are looking forward to Freddy's next round of ads.Pirro Declares ‘I'm a Fighter'; G.O.P. Cheers










