Top Items:

Here the People Rule — According to the silver-penned Peggy Noonan, writing in The Wall Street Journal over the weekend, “In the end the Palin candidacy is a symptom and expression of a new vulgarization in American politics.” — Leave aside Noonan's negative judgment on Sarah Palin's candidacy, a judgment I don't share.
Discussion:
Newsweek, Bark Bark Woof Woof, Hullabaloo, The Mahablog, Daily Kos, Connecting.the.Dots, TPMCafe, Sadly, No! and Detroit Free Press


More Challenges for McCain, From Ayers to the Palin Pick — Obama leads on optimism and temperment in final weeks. — More challenges for John McCain: Likely voters overwhelmingly reject his effort to make an issue of Barack Obama's association with 1960s radical William Ayers.
RELATED:

Palin says voters ‘irritated’ by robocalls
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Shakesville, Washington Monthly, Truthdig, Jonathan Martin's Blogs and Ben Smith's Blogs

Biden to Supporters: “Gird Your Loins”, For the Next President “It's Like Cleaning Augean Stables” — ABC News' Matthew Jaffe Reports: Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., on Sunday guaranteed that if elected, Sen. Barack Obama., D-Ill., will be tested by an international crisis within his first six months …

Jon Stewart to Sarah Palin: ‘[Expletive] You.’ — Speaking to a college audience in Boston, Mass. Friday, “Daily Show” host Jon Stewart used his stand-up routine to respond to Sarah Palin's comments about “pro-America” parts of the country, shedding the profanity restrictions that govern his Comedy Central show.
Discussion:
Salon, NewsBusters.org, Simply Left Behind, Confederate Yankee, Scared Monkeys, Boston Globe and Mother, May I Sleep …

The Real Plumbers of Ohio — Forty years ago, Richard Nixon made a remarkable marketing discovery. By exploiting America's divisions — divisions over Vietnam, divisions over cultural change and, above all, racial divisions — he was able to reinvent the Republican brand.


What Bradley Effect? — WITH only two weeks to go before the election, talk has turned to the Bradley effect. The phenomenon is named for Tom Bradley, the African-American mayor of Los Angeles, who lost the 1982 California governor's race even though exit polls predicted he'd defeat his Republican opponent, George Deukmejian.
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Busy day expected as early voting starts — Monday marks the first day of early voting in South Florida. But in a high-stakes presidential election, voting early doesn't guarantee avoiding lines. — MRVASQUEZ@MIAMIHERALD.COM — Buoyed by the hype and excitement befitting …
Discussion:
Ben Smith's Blogs
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Safety in Numbers? Poll-Driven Press Goes Out on a Limb — The network maps are bathed in blue, the pundits contemplating a landslide, the conservative columnists preparing for the indignities of an Obama administration. — With the numbers breaking Barack Obama's way …

Barack Obama is the better choice for our president — In the past 50 years, The Eagle has never recommended a Democrat for president. We made no recommendations in 1960 and 1964 — when Texas' own Lyndon B. Johnson was on the Democratic ticket — nor did we in 1968 …


Many Holes in Disclosure of Nominees' Health — Fifteen days before the election, serious gaps remain in the public's knowledge about the health of the presidential and vice-presidential nominees. The limited information provided by the candidates is a striking departure from recent campaigns …
Discussion:
Firedoglake, Washington Monthly, The Swamp, Open Left, Electoral-vote.com, TIME.com, Prairie Weather and AMERICAblog News

The Republicans have lifted the lid off their rightwing id — Now McCain's supporters are casting Obama as anti-American. This may well scare voters, but not the way they mean to — A year or two ago, if you'd told me that Barack Obama would be leading John McCain by a seemingly comfortable margin …


Obama's Secret Campaign Cash: Has $63 Million Flowed from Foreign Sources? — As Barack Obama reaped a stunning $150 million in campaign donations in September, bringing his total to more than $600 million, new questions have arisen about the source of his amazing funding.


Turning Indiana blue — Sen. Barack Obama speaks at a rally at the Indiana State Fairgrounds in Indianapolis, Oct. 8, 2008. — INDIANAPOLIS — In presidential elections since the Depression, Indiana has been the lone industrial state where the elephants always roam.


Deficit Rises, and the Consensus Is to Let It Grow — Like water rushing over a river's banks, the federal government's rapidly mounting expenses are overwhelming the federal budget and increasing an already swollen deficit. — The bank bailout, in the latest big outlay …


Nafta-Plus — Canada looks to Europe in anticipation of Obama protectionism. — Barack Obama's promise to unilaterally rewrite the North American Free Trade Agreement if Canada and Mexico won't go along with his ideas on labor and the environment has not gone unnoticed in Ottawa.

Ontario police arrest man in voter fraud case — Mark Jacoby, who owns a firm hired by the California Republican Party, violated state laws with his own registration, authorities say. — SACRAMENTO — The owner of a firm that the California Republican Party hired to register tens of thousands …
Discussion:
PoliGazette, BuzzFlash.org, cab drollery, Winds of Change.NET, www.redstate.com, The BRAD BLOG and Pam's House Blend
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ACORN INSTILLED FEAR: WORKERS — Pushed to meet daily quotas and bullied by bosses if they didn't, Ohio ACORN workers faked voter registrations, signed up people more than once, and even paid off registrants to keep from being fired, its canvassers told The Post. — “Every day, there was pressure on us.
Discussion:
Chicago Boyz

Obama ‘Flooding’ Florida Beginning With Tampa Visit — TAMPA - As early voting begins in Florida, some of the biggest names in Sen. Barack Obama's presidential campaign will barnstorm Florida for three days, starting with Obama's appearance at a rally today at Tampa's George M. Steinbrenner Field.
Discussion:
TIME.com

How to Read the Constitution — The following is an excerpt from Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas's Wriston Lecture to the Manhattan Institute last Thursday: — When John F. Kennedy said in his inaugural address, “Ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country …