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First Read is an analysis of the day's political news, from the NBC News political unit. First Read is updated throughout the day, so check back often.

Chuck Todd, NBC Political Director

Mark Murray, NBC Deputy Political Director

Domenico Montanaro, NBC News Political Reporter



Reading the tea leaves in Ohio

Posted: Monday, March 03, 2008 4:17 PM by Mark Murray

From NBC/NJ's Mike Memoli
COLUMBUS, OH -- Today in Ohio’s capital city, the temperature reached the upper 60s, with a mix of sun and clouds. Tomorrow’s forecast calls for rain, and lots of it. So which day would you rather vote?

Across the state, Ohioans are in fact voting today. And hundreds of thousands have cast ballots in the past few weeks, as voters take advantage of the state’s new early voting option. Local elections officials are reporting record numbers of early votes cast in tomorrow’s primary. And though both Democratic campaigns have encouraged their supporters to vote early, there is some evidence that Obama may have an upper hand.

“Without question I think both campaigns on a national level, since they hit Ohio have encouraged early voting,” said Steve Harsman, director of elections in Montgomery County. “We’re at well over three times the number we had in the primary in 2004, and we’re anticipating a huge turnout tomorrow.”

Since 2006, Ohio voters have had the option to request absentee ballots 25 days before primary elections, and without giving a reason. Through the so-called “no-fault” absentee balloting, a person can also come in person to a county board of election office, request an absentee ballot, and immediately return it.

“We’re doing 4, 5, 600 ballots a day out of our office,” said Brian Williams, director of elections in Summit County, which includes the campaign hot spot of Akron. “That’s just unprecedented as far as over-the-counter votes, and a reflection of how the campaigns are recommending people vote in person.”

Kelly Pallante, director of the Trumbull County Board of Elections, says people have been lined up outside her office all day to vote. She said over 3,000 people have voted in person, and another 4,000 by mail. In 2004, just over 3,000 people voted absentee for the primary. In Franklin County, officials have extended the voting hours to 9:00 pm tonight to keep up with the demand. “It’s just been so popular this year,” said Ben Piscitelli, spokesperson for the board of elections there. “We were open on President’s Day, which should have been a county holiday.”

Officials unanimously agree that the Democratic Party is what is driving the interest. Some said that the Obama campaign in particular seems to have generated the most activity. In Montgomery County, Harsman said that the day after the Obama campaign did a massive phone push to get people to vote, more than 1,000 people came in person to vote, doubling or tripling the usual day-to-day traffic. “From our experience, it’s Obama that’s having the impact here,” said Summit County’s Williams, who added that some voters have been mistakenly putting “Obama” in the part of the form where they are supposed to indicate their party.

Clinton’s campaign has been active as well in encouraging early votes. On the first day of balloting, Gov. Ted Strickland led events all over the state to draw attention to early voting as he cast his ballot in Franklin County. This weekend, it held events in all 88 counties in which early voting was a focal point.

But it appears that Obama’s campaign has been more deliberate about encouraging these votes, even at events for campaign surrogates. At an event in Akron for Michelle Obama last week, a field organizer asked for a show of hands of how many people had already voted. More than a third of the crowd raised their hands. And the next day, at an event in Canton, the campaign had vans waiting outside the event waiting to bring people to vote at the Stark County Board of Elections.

“You guys are the die-hards, you’re the supporters, you’re gung-ho, so we want your votes now!” field organizer Maureen Tracey-Mooney told a crowd at a Michelle Obama event in Cincinnati last month.

Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner said last week that nearly 200,000 absentee ballot requests had been received in Franklin and Cuyahoga Counties alone. She predicts a statewide turnout of over 50%, based in part on the early voting numbers in Ohio and the turnout in other states this year. In 2004, turnout for the primary was just under 33%.

“I think the voters are pretty excited, because we thought that we’d be an afterthought after Super Tuesday,” Brunner said. “But it’s kind of like the BCS National Championship where we started watching primary after primary in states just like we watched all those different [bowl games]. And here Ohio State ended up in the national championship.”

And amid concerns about how smoothly the election will run, Brunner added: “The one thing I can tell you is we’ll perform better in the election than the Buckeyes did.”

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Comments

..I don't see how Senator Clinton can continue after tomorrow. She has got to withdraw from the race so that the party can unite for the general election.
ep-ny  said

well a man arrested little bit ago for heckling Pres.Clinton.Sure enough as they led him away he had his white paper like he was told.Question:Does he get a bonus for following orders?You people talk about clean campaign.About Hillary doing anything to win.This is a good example of what you think is cute and right.Makes me sick and proves old politics reigns in your camp.

ep-ny, you really think that all of those people that were fainting at Obama's rallies wasn't staged. People were dropping like flies until the press caught on and started reporting on how odd it was that Obama shown in every video always seems to know before the person actualy fainted.  Since the press made an issue of the fainting supporters, not one person has fainted.

Everytime someone would faint, Obama knew exactly where they were in the crowd even though the people standing all around the fainting person didn't notice a thing.  What a crock.  Everyone of those fainting spells were staged and Obama was in on it as evedenced by the way he would clearly appear to be anticipating the person about to faint before they fainted even if they were standing behind him.

Let me guess, he has eyes in the back of his head.
Today was a perfect example of the mistake that HRC is making in the campaign. I respect her but she is conditioned by the 90's environment where you HAD to win, regardless of tactics, just to be at the table. She keeps telling people how they shouldn't respect Obama, like the NAFTA comments today. Note apology from Canada: "The statement issued by the Foreign Affairs department in Ottawa this afternoon said Canada doesn't want to interfere in the U.S. election but regularly holds talks with people involved in presidential campaigns.

The statement said: "There was no intention to convey, in any way, that Senator Obama and his campaign team were taking a different position in public from views expressed in private, including about NAFTA."

It went on to say: "We deeply regret any inference that may have been drawn to that effect."

The Foreign Affairs statement addresses the furor brought on by the memo, which provided new fodder for Clinton, who suggested Obama was saying one thing to Ohio voters and another thing to Canadians about trade."
what really gives you the right to call this race.You would call every name possable if Hillary did it.These people are adults and dont need you to umpire the race.I am really tired of Obamas arragonce and his supporters,better watch driving that car into the ditch.Doublr standard is that your new politics?
Perhaps of interest!

March 3, 2008
Limbaugh urges listeners to vote for Clinton
Posted: 04:51 PM ET

Limbaugh wants the Democratic race to continue.
(CNN) – As Hillary Clinton battles to keep her presidential bid alive, she may be getting help from an unlikely source: conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh.

Limbaugh has been actively urging his Texas listeners to cross over and vote for Clinton in that state's open primary Tuesday, arguing it helps the Republicans if the Democratic race remains unsettled for weeks to come.

"I want Hillary to stay in this…this is too good a soap opera," Limbaugh told fellow conservative talk-show host Laura Ingraham on Fox News Friday. He reiterated the comments on his Monday show and replayed the exchange with Ingram.

He also said Clinton is more willing than the Republican National Committee and John McCain's campaign to criticize Barack Obama.

"We need Barack Obama bloodied up politically. It's obvious that the Republicans are not going to do it, they don't have the stomach for it," Limbaugh continued. "As you probably know we're getting all kinds of memos from the RNC saying we're not going to be critical. Mark McKinnon of McCain's campaign said he'll quit if they get critical over Obama. This is the presidency of the United States we're talking about. I want our party to win I want the Democrats to lose.”

In January, liberal Daily Kos blogger Markos Moulitsas urged readers in Michigan to vote for Mitt Romney in the GOP primary for similar reasons. Romney went on to win Michigan, though exit polling showed Democrats who voted in that primary favored McCain.

On his Monday show, several listeners appeared dismayed that Limbaugh was urging them to support the New York senator.

"Wouldn't you love to cream Hillary though…why are you so afraid of her? Look at how ineptly she has campaigned against Obama," Limbaugh responded to one listener who said she wanted to see Clinton out of the race immediately.

"I'm asking people to cross over, and if they can stomach it and I know it's a difficult thing to do, vote for Clinton," he also told Ingraham Friday. "But it will sustain this soap opera, and it's something I think we need and it'll be fun, too."

Several recent polls suggest Clinton is statically tied with Obama in Texas, and the New York senator's campaign has characterized Tuesday's vote as a crucial test of strength.

– CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney

I just saw a piece on CNN that said the Clinton campaign is still pushing to have Obama release all correspondence and emails on the Rezko matter.  He has stated that he has released what he has - an email from the former owner of the property stating it was a legitimate deal, which should be the end of it.  Why can't either the Obama campaign or CNN respond to the Clinton campaign that if there were anything else to release, it would be done when the Clintons release their tax returns.  They have something to hide.  They are notorious for playing dirty.
if hillary clinton gets the nomination we are all in trouble. first which hillary is going to show up on the first day? if that phone rings, what is she going to say? i'm a woman you can't pick on me, why do i get the first question? and of course mcCain wants hillary to win the nomination paving his own way into the white house, and four more years of bushinomicks.
Americans Want the Best about Hillary's senatorial record is an excellent post -- thanks for enlightening us with information the press should be sharing.

You may want to share that post/information with Republicans for Obama and other web sites you think might help the cause.

Obama '08, please!
Yay, Obama! Yay, Dems! Yay, USA! Let's become an America so wonderful, we've never dared to imagine it before. YES, WE CAN!
Yes we can!!!
Go Obama!!!
Dear Hillary - As a woman who has fought hard all her life to be credible in a man's world - I am very, very ashamed of you as a candidate to the highest office in our land and as a potential representative of the U.S.  It is bad enough that your ad depicting your ability to keep our children safe is ludicrous - because it is attributable to you that our kids were sent into harm's way in Iraq.  You, who have campaigned as an advocate for children.  You have shown no public remorse for the thousands who have been killed – and the many more thousands who have been wounded - but when someone verbally insults your daughter, as did David Shuster then “hell hath no fury”.  His comments may have injured your daughter’s integrity – but not her life.  Your actions towards the children of others – was far more reprehensible than Mr. Shuster’s by far.  In the name of victory - you have endangered alienating the enthusiasm and interest in our government that has been encompassing us all – especially our youth..  Instead of reveling in the new found excitement of government - at a time when it truly feels as if that government has failed us  - your condemnation of hope, your must win at all costs tactics, leaves someone who has supported you in the past - disillusioned.  You will not see this but it feels good to write it - as someone who opposed the war from the beginning I must say it was not popular and was hard to stand up opposing the war in Iraq and be judged by the vast majority of those in your community as unpatriotic and on the side of the enemy.  Your declaration that Obama's comments opposing the war as "just a speech" is wrong and unfair.  You probably could have won the nomination simply on your own merits - you probably will still win, too bad your message of merits appears to have been replaced by your fears, because I cannot imagine what else could have made you respond with so much negativity and disrespect, not only to your opponent but to us all.  We deserve better than we are getting.  It is so sad for our country that you could not run your campaign with dignity, integrity, respect and pride in what I believe most of us in this country stands for and what our country was founded upon.  Hope for a better day.  You have drained many of us of ours.  Congratulations on that win.  It is one you have certainly deserved.
yesterday "fox" went in he steet and asked potential obama voters what they know abouthhis achievements.
Most of them just liked his approach and his promise for change.imagine how many he can add after your publication of his impressive scorecard as senator!


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