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  • Obama signs reauthorization of Export-Import Bank

     

    Flanked by a bipartisan group of lawmakers, President Obama signed a bill reauthorizing the Export-Import Bank, a move that he said would help U.S. businesses dealing with a shaky economy.

    "By reauthorizing support for the Export-Import Bank, we’re helping thousands of businesses sell more of their products and services overseas and, in the process, we’re helping them create jobs here at home,” the president said, as lawmakers including Republican Rep. Gary Miller (CA) and House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer stood beside him at an auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.

    Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

    House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer shakes hands with President Barack Obama after Obama signed the Export-Import Bank Reauthorization Act of 2012 at the White House in Washington May 30, 2012.

    REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque (UNITED STATES - Tags: POLITICS BUSINESS)

    Today’s bill-signing extends the authority of the 78-year-old bank, created to help finance American exports, through September 2014 and raises the amount it can lend to $140 billion.

    While he praised the bipartisan group of lawmakers who helped shepherd the bill through Congress, the president added that the economy was still too volatile for the government not to do more, noting specifically the Euro zone crisis and the struggles of some rising economies like India and China’s.

    “Obviously, the world economy is still in a delicate place because of what’s going on in Europe and the fact that some of the emerging countries have been slowing down.  It is absolutely critical for us to make sure that we are full speed ahead.”

    Referencing his five-point Congressional “To Do list” which he’s used to contrast with a “do-nothing Congress,” the president urged the body to pass his other short-term legislative priorities like tax credits for businesses hiring more workers and those using energy-efficient technologies.

    “There are a number of things that my administration can do on our own and we’re going to keep on doing them, but it gets a whole lot easier if we get some help from Congress,” he said.

  • Walker leads by 7 heading into Tuesday's Wisconsin recall

     

    Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) enjoys a 7-point advantage over Democratic challenger Tom Barrett among likely voters in Tuesday's recall election.

     

    Darren Hauck / Reuters

    Republican Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker debates with Democratic challenger and Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett before the start of the debate in Milwaukee.

    Fifty-two percent of likely voters said they would vote to retain Walker, according to a Marquette Law School poll released Wednesday; 45 percent of likely voters said they would support Barrett, the mayor of Milwaukee.

    The poll suggests that Walker is heading toward victory on Tuesday, which would deliver a stinging rebuke to Democrats and members of the labor community who had sought the first-term governor's removal after he pushed a controversial bill curbing collective bargaining rights for many public employees through the Wisconsin state legislature.

    The Marquette poll has been tracking the trajectory of the recall election for the better part of this spring. The survey found Walker and Barrett locked in a virtual tie ahead of the Democratic primary in early May, though a May 16 poll reflected Walker opening an advantageover his Democratic opponent.

    Labor groups and Democrats supportive of Barrett have been circulating a number of internal polls over the past week showing a closer race than many outside observers have expected.

    In the meanwhile, Walker and Barrett have debated, and the campaign has evolved into a rather pointed battle between the two candidates, who squared off in the initial 2010 gubernatorial contest.

    Barrett has demanded that Walker release records associated with a criminal investigation into former aides, while Walker has barnstormed the state to brag of positive economic indicators that, he contends, were made possible in part by his initial collective bargaining reforms.

    Thousands of dollars in outside spending have also flooded Wisconsin airwaves in this high-stakes contest. Republicans are hoping an organization forged in Walker's 2010 election and last year's state Senate recalls carries the day; Democrats are meanwhile enjoying the assistance of organized labor.

    Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz was in Wisconsin on Wednesday to help with fundraising, and Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, who heads Democratic gubernatorial campaign efforts, will be in the state this weekend.

    A series of Republican heavyweights, including New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, have also campaigned in support of Walker, and Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus will be in his native Wisconsin this weekend, too.

    The poll, conducted May 23-36, has a 4 percent margin of error.

  • Planned Parenthood up with $1 million ad buy

    - ROMNEY UP ON HISPANIC MEDIA... IN OHIO?
    - CROSSROADS DUMPS IN ANOTHER $2 MILLION
    - CONSERVATIVE OUTSIDE GROUPS SPENT HALF OF ALL MONEY SO FAR

    Planned Parenthood has bought at least $1.2 million in ad buys -- with more to come -- in Iowa, Florida, Wisconsin, and Washington, D.C., ad tracker SMG Delta confirms.

    The ad will run in Des Moines, West Palm Beach, Wasau and La Crosse (ahead of the Wisconsin recall June 5th), and D.C, for three weeks from today through June 19.

    Here's the ad:

    Also, Mitt Romney is going up with an additional $7,000 on Hispanic media for the next week, starting today. But the ad is running in... Cleveland.

    Ohio, not exactly known for its politically consequential Hispanic population, is just 3.1 percent Latino, according to the U.S. Census. (Cleveland is 10 percent Hispanic.)

    Romney so far has spent just $21,000 on Spanish-language media (the other spending was in Raleigh, NC). Obama has spent $1.4 million on Hispanic media so far and is currently running targeted Spanish-language ads in the key battlegrounds of Colorado, Florida, and Nevada through June 10th.

    And we're seeing Crossroads GPS putting up another $1.6 million in battleground states, ensuring that they'll be on air in Iowa, New Hampshire, Ohio, Virginia, Colorado, Michigan, Florida, and Pennsylvania for the next three weeks, through June 19th.

    Conservative outside groups are promising to spend $1 billion combined. Democratic groups lag far behind.

    Crossroads has now spent a whopping $24.3 million, and Romney-aligned outside groups have spent about half of all the general-election money on campaign ad time that has been bought so far -- $42 million of about $85 million.

    For graphics purposes:

    TOTAL SPENDING: $85.4 million
    Obama-aligned: $38.7 million
    Romney-aligned: $46.7 million

    By group:
    o    Obama $31.4m
    o    Crossroads GPS $24.3m
    o    Priorities USA $6.3m
    o    Americans for Prosperity $5.4m
    o    Romney $5.2m
    o    American Future Fund $4.5m
    o    ROF $4.1m
    o    AEA $3.2m
    o    Priorities-League of Conservation Voters $980k

  • Obama calls Romney to offer congratulations

     

    Updated 12:20 p.m. - President Obama called Mitt Romney on Wednesday to congratulate the former Massachusetts governor on winning the necessary delegates to secure the Republican presidential nomination.

    The Obama campaign released a short readout of the call, which occurred at 11:30 a.m. ET on Wednesday.

    "President Obama said that he looked forward to an important and healthy debate about America’s future, and wished Governor Romney and his family well throughout the upcoming campaign," said an Obama campaign statement emailed to reporters by spokesman Ben LaBolt.

    "It was brief and cordial," said a Romney campaign aide. "Gov. Romney thanked the president for his congratulations and wished him and his family well."

    Romney, per NBC News projections, surpassed the necessary 1,144 delegates he needs to clinch the nomination after winning last night's Texas primary.

    Neither Obama nor Romney has any public campaign events on the schedule today.

    Garrett Haake contributed.

  • First Thoughts: Still fighting on GOP turf

    Mary Altaffer / AP

    Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks in Craig, Colo. Romney is calling for more "assertive measures" against Syrian President Bashar Assad, including arming the Syrian opposition.

    The hottest 10 advertising markets: Still fighting on GOP turf… If you’re looking to explain why the Obama-Romney race is close, look no further than the fundamentals… Romney gets trumped by Trump on the day he mathematically clinches GOP nomination… It’ll be Dewhurst vs. Cruz in July… And congressional incumbent Silvestre Reyes goes down in Texas.

    *** Still fighting on GOP turf: What do this week’s 10 hottest advertising markets (from May 28 to June 4) in the presidential contest tell us? The race is still being fought on GOP turf -- all states that George W. Bush carried in 2004 (and three that John Kerry never contested). Six of the top 10 advertising markets are in North Carolina and Virginia, according to NBC/SMG Delta. (Still don’t think that North Carolina is a true battleground?) The other four markets are in Colorado, Ohio, and Iowa. The New York Times confirms that Team Romney has placed “a priority on winning Florida, North Carolina, Ohio and Virginia,” plus one more. Come October, if the major battlegrounds are only those first four states, then that will be very good news for Team Obama. But if you start seeing Pennsylvania or Michigan added to this list, then you know the worm has turned. Here are the top 10 advertising markets (in advertising points):

    The Daily Rundown's Chuck Todd reports on the results of the Texas GOP primary.

    1. Norfolk-Portsmouth (Obama/1500, Romney/1400, Crossroads/730, Priorities/450)
    2. Roanoke-Lynchburg (Obama/1500, Romney/1500, Crossroads/750)
    3. Greensboro-High Point (Romney/1400, Obama/1100, Crossroads/780)
    4. Columbus, OH (Romney/1400, Obama/1000, Crossroads/525, Priorities/365)
    5. Raleigh-Durham (Obama/1200, Romney/1100, Crossroads/840)
    6. Richmond-Petersburg (Obama/1100, Romney/1100, Crossroads/340, Priorities/315)
    7. Cedar Rapids (Obama/1300, Romney/1100, Crossroads/340)
    8. Charlotte (Romney/1200, Obama/1000, Crossroads/515)
    9. Cincinnati (Romney/1200, Obama/1000, Crossroads/460)
    10. Colorado Springs (Obama/1400, Crossroads/630, Priorities/420)

      *** Where everyone is advertising: Here’s also a snapshot of where everyone is advertising this week:
      Obama ($7.3 million): CO, FL, IA, NC, NH, NV, OH, PA, VA,
      Romney ($2 million): IA, NC, OH, VA
      Crossroads ($5 million): CO, FL, IA, MI, NC, NH, NV, OH, PA, VA
      Priorities ($1.1 million): CO, FL, OH, PA, VA

      *** Romney and the Republicans are already outspending Obama and the Democrats: By the way, it’s now official: With the addition of the new Romney ad buy, Romney and the GOP outside groups have passed Obama and the Democratic outside groups in total ad spending for the general election,  $45 million to $39 million. Team Obama $38.7M; anti-Obama $35.6M; Team Romney $9.3M.

      *** It’s the fundamentals, stupid: It seems like everyone is chasing narratives to explain why all the current polling shows the Obama-Romney contest to be close. Is Romney stronger than people expected? Did the Bain attacks backfire? (Folks, remember that the two-minute Obama TV ad on Bain had less than $100,000 behind it.) To us, the answer is: “It’s the fundamentals, stupid.” Earlier in the year, Obama enjoyed a larger lead over Romney 1) during the throes of the contested GOP primary race, and 2) when the economy was adding 200,000-plus jobs a month. Now? The GOP primary race is over, and that job creation has slowed down. Plus, there are now new economic worries coming out of Europe. Funny how this works with the Obama numbers: When the economic anxiety level lowers, his numbers rise; when anxiety rises, his numbers fall. To some of our media buddies: Don’t go chasing narrative waterfalls. Yes, we have spent too much time watching the movie “The Other Guys.”

      *** Trumped by Trump: Remember what we wrote yesterday -- that hanging out with Donald Trump could overshadow you, for all the wrong reasons? Or what we wrote on Friday -- that associating with him is playing with fire? Or what we wrote in February -- that getting his endorsement could backfire? Well, yesterday Trump hijacked Romney’s big day of clearing the 1144 delegate number when 1) the Romney campaign scheduled a fundraiser with Trump on that same day; 2) Trump engaged in more “birther” talk on CNBC; and 3) Trump did it again on CNN. Unfortunately for the Romney camp, this was entirely preventable; you could have seen it coming from miles away. The Obama campaign gleefully fired off this statement yesterday: “If Mitt Romney lacks the backbone to stand up to a charlatan like Donald Trump because he's so concerned about lining his campaign's pockets, what does that say about the kind of President he would be?" Today’s optics for Team Romney aren’t that great, either: Romney hits a California fundraiser co-hosted by Hewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman, whose troubled firm is planning to lay off some 25,000 workers. But Meg Whitman is no Donald Trump.

      *** Romney passes the 1144 number: But here was the good news for Team Romney yesterday: Winning the Texas primary last night, he surpassed the 1144 delegates needed to clinch the GOP nomination. As of earlier this morning, here’s where the delegate count now stands: Romney 1183, Santorum 261, Gingrich 135, Paul 129.

      *** It’ll be Dewhurst vs. Cruz in July: Also in Texas last night, Lt. David Dewhurst failed to get 50% in the Senate GOP primary -- instead he got 45% -- and that will force a July run-off against second-place finisher Ted Cruz. (By the way, Craig James got less than 4% of the vote; The Leach mob got him?) Make no mistake: Dewhurst is in real trouble. A run-off against a Tea Party insurgent, especially in the dead of summer, is an establishment candidate’s worst nightmare.

      *** Reyes goes down: And in Texas, we saw a congressional incumbent -- Rep. Silvestre Reyes (D) -- lose his primary. Reyes “was narrowly defeated by former city councilman Beto O'Rourke, who favors legalizing marijuana but has said he wouldn't push for that in Congress,” the AP writes. “O’Rourke’s bid was boosted by a Texas-based super PAC, the Campaign for Primary Accountability, which invested heavily in two House contests in the Lone Star State,” Roll Call adds. But Nathan Gonzales of the Rothenberg Political Report makes a very important point: In 15 states so far, 130 out of 132 House incumbents (98%) have been re-nominated in races not featuring members vs. members.

      Countdown to WI recall: 6 days
      Countdown to GOP convention: 90 days
      Countdown to Dem convention: 97 days
      Countdown to Election Day: 161 days

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    1. Programming notes

      *** Wednesday's "Daily Rundown" line-up: Romney campaign spokeswoman Andrea Saul... Obama deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter... Slate's Sasha Issenberg on the science of the Obama campaign's ad strategy... More 2012 headlines with The Washington Post's Dan Balz, Democratic strategist Jamal Simmons and former Bush 43 White House Political Director Sara Taylor Fagen.

      *** Wednesday’s “MSNBC Live with Thomas Roberts” line-up: MSNBC’s Thomas Roberts talks with former ambassador Marc Ginsberg, Real Clear Politics’ Erin McPike, Julian Epstein, Armstrong Williams, Newsweek & The Daily Beast’s Michael Tomasky and Mary Mitchell of the Chicago Sun-Times.

      *** Wednesday’s “NOW with Alex Wagner” line-up: Alex Wagner’s guests include Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-TX), New York Magazine National Affairs Editor John Heilemann, former RNC Chair Michael Steele, former DNC Communications Director Karen Finney, and New York Times Magazine Editor Hugo Lindgren

      *** Wednesday’s “Andrea Mitchell Reports” line-up: NBC’s Andrea Mitchell interviews the Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza, the New Yorker’s Philip Gourevitch, Romney foreign-policy adviser Dan Senor, USA Today’s Susan Page, and NBC’s Ayman Mohyeldin.

      *** Wednesday’s “News Nation with Tamron Hall” line-up: MSNBC’s Tamron Hall interviews Michael Smerconish, Anne Kornblut, and GOP strategist Susan Del Percio.

    2. 2012: Cueing Dr. Evil -- 'One BILLION dollars'

      “Republican super PACs and other outside groups shaped by a loose network of prominent conservatives – including Karl Rove, the Koch brothers and Tom Donohue of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce – plan to spend roughly $1 billion on November’s elections for the White House and control of Congress, according to officials familiar with the groups’ internal operations,” Politico writes. “That total includes previously undisclosed plans for newly aggressive spending by the Koch brothers, who are steering funding to build sophisticated, county-by-county operations in key states. POLITICO has learned that Koch-related organizations plan to spend about $400 million ahead of the 2012 elections - twice what they had been expected to commit.”

      More: “Just the spending linked to the Koch network is more than the $370 million that John McCain raised for his entire presidential campaign four years ago. And the $1 billion total surpasses the $750 million that Barack Obama, one of the most prolific fundraisers ever, collected for his 2008 campaign.”

      But here’s a Dem-leaning outside group: Planned Parenthood is readying a $1.4 million buy in Florida, Iowa, and Virginia, according to Time, with this ad.

    3. Romney: Sealing the deal

      Lots of headlines about Romney clinching the nomination.

      The Boston Globe also notes: “After accepting the nomination at the convention, Romney will be the first Mormon nominee from a major party, succeeding where others, including Senators Orrin Hatch and Mo Udall, and Romney’s father, George, did not. Mitt Romney lost the nomination to John McCain in 2008.”

      And: “He is also the third presidential nominee from Massachusetts in the past quarter century, joining Democrats Michael Dukakis in 1988 and John Kerry in 2004. The last Republican nominee from Massachusetts was Calvin Coolidge, in 1924.”

      But there’s also this one from AP: “Romney clinches nomination, but Trump overshadows.” AP writes: “The Trump event and surrounding controversy overshadowed the Texas primary win that officially handed Romney the nomination, a triumph of endurance for a candidate who came up short four years ago and had to fight hard this year as voters flirted with a carousel of GOP rivals.”

      The Hill: “Trump overshadows Romney with Obama 'birther' comments.”

      “The provocative real estate magnate used the spotlight to promote his long-debunked contention that Obama was born in a foreign country,” the Washington Post adds. “Romney aides admitted that this was an unhelpful distraction. At a moment when they wanted to put the president on the defensive, it was Romney who found himself in that position, leaving it to his aides to assert that he disagrees with Trump — while Obama’s aides said his refusal to publicly condemn his surrogate showed poor moral leadership.”

      The New York Times: Mitt Romney, having initially weathered the first sustained general election attack, is entering a critical 90-day stretch to the Republican convention on relatively equal footing with the White House and is unleashing a new offensive to win over independent voters and further undermine confidence in President Obama’s stewardship of the economy... [T]he resilience of the Romney campaign, at least in the first six weeks since he emerged as the party’s likely nominee, has proved frustrating to some Democrats who predicted that he would be deeply wounded by the combative primary race. For a candidate who is not naturally beloved by many conservatives, Mr. Romney has faced little resistance unifying party activists, donors and elected officials who want to keep Mr. Obama from winning a second term.

      “They make awkward bedfellows, to be sure: Mitt Romney, the strait-laced Mormon who does not gamble, drink or cavort, and Sheldon Adelson, the socially liberal casino mogul whose resorts rank among the world’s favorite places to do all three,” the Boston Globe says. “Yet Romney met with Adelson Tuesday in Las Vegas, and the billionaire has pledged to support Romney against President Obama -- presumably with money earned from gambling, which ‘undermines the virtues of work and thrift,’ according to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”

      More: “There is inherent irony in the alliance with a man whose profession so clearly conflicts with Romney’s religious mores. But gambling is an activity on which Romney has generally favored regulation over condemnation. And the meeting with Adelson -- who has contributed $25.3 million to conservative candidates and committees during the current election cycle, none of it to Romney -- is only the latest example of the presumptive Republican presidential nominee’s willingness to embrace people and policies with which he personally disagrees.”

    4. Obama: First lady hits the 'Daily Show'

      NBC’s Carrie Dann reports: Appearing on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart last night, the First Lady didn't directly address her husband's drug use in his youth, but she did describe him "buckling down" after the death of his father. Asked by Stewart about recent reports that sound like "a Cheech and Chong movie," Mrs. Obama said that by the time her husband transferred to Columbia University, "like so many young people he realized that he could do more with his life ... I think when he lost his father that was one of those click-in moments, and he really buckled down."

      “[A] health insurance tax credit for small businesses, part of President Barack Obama's health care law that gets strong support in public opinion polls, has turned out to be a disappointment,” AP writes. “Time-consuming to apply for and lacking enough financial reward to make it attractive, the credit was claimed by only 170,300 businesses out of a pool of as many as 4 potentially eligible million companies in 2010. That's put the Obama administration in the awkward position of asking Congress to help fix the problems by allowing more businesses to qualify and making it simpler to apply. But Republicans who run the House say they want to repeal what they call ‘Obamacare,’ not change it.”

    5. More 2012: It's Dewhurst vs. Cruz

      Ex-Rep. Artur Davis is now officially a Republican.

      FLORIDA: “A new Florida Opinion Research poll finds former Gov. Charlie Crist (I) would trounce Rick Scott (R) in Florida's 2014 gubernatorial race if Crist ran this time as a Democrat, 48% to 34%,” Political Wire writes.

      ILLINOIS: “Brad Harriman, the Democratic nominee to replace retiring Rep. Jerry Costello (D-Ill.), has dropped out of the race, creating a major void and giving Republicans a better chance of winning the seat,” The Hill reports. “Harriman, who was Costello's hand-picked candidate and highly touted by national Democrats, cited a neurological disorder as his reason for quitting the campaign.”

      NEVADA: Shelly Berkeley’s up with a new bio ad.

      NORTH CAROLINA: The Democratic mess in the Tarheel state continues… “Adriadn Ortega, the young man who claimed that former state Democratic Party Executive Director Jay Parmley sexually harassed him, is threatening to sue the party and Chairman David Parker for defamation and breach of contract,” WRAL reports.”In a letter sent to Parker Tuesday, Ortega's lawyer, Kieran Shanahan, demands that the party save all documents that might be related to the episode.”

      TEXAS: “Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and former state Solicitor General Ted Cruz are headed to a July 31 runoff to determine the Republican nominee for Senate, igniting a showdown between the Washington, D.C., tea party community and the Texas GOP establishment,” Roll Call writes, adding, “Cruz advancing to the runoff is a welcome development for Beltway-based conservatives who have been playing in GOP primaries with the hopes of recreating some of the tea party movement’s 2010 magic — especially after falling way short with their preferred candidate in the Nebraska Senate GOP primary earlier this month.”

      “In a major upset, longtime U.S. Rep. Silvestre Reyes has lost the race for the Democratic nomination to retain his congressional seat in far West Texas,” AP writes. Reyes lost narrowly to former El Paso city councilman Beto O'Rourke. Reyes appeared to be closing the gap as more votes were tallied, but O'Rourke finished with just more than 50 percent of the vote to avoid a runoff with all precincts reporting. The 67-year-old Reyes was first elected to Congress in 1996. Reyes received a rare primary endorsement last month from President Barack Obama.”

      The power of outside groups: “O’Rourke’s bid was boosted by a Texas-based super PAC, the Campaign for Primary Accountability, which invested heavily in two House contests in the Lone Star State. In the other race where the PAC spent money, the 4th district GOP primary, 16-term Rep. Ralph Hall won easily,” Roll Call writes. “Reyes was not surprised. Acknowledging the tough primary, his campaign spent more than $460,000 and both sought and secured the endorsements of Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, who has had a decent record of backing winners in Democratic House primaries this cycle. Clinton campaigned for Reyes at a rally in El Paso last month.”

      “With few House incumbents facing competitive primaries Tuesday in Texas, most of the action was in a handful of contests for safe open and new seats. As expected, almost all of those crowded races will be decided by July 31 runoffs after no candidate was able to get at least 50 percent of the primary vote,” Roll Call writes. “Democrats were unable to avoid a runoff in the one district that is expected to be competitive this fall. State Rep. Pete Gallego will face former Rep. Ciro Rodriguez in the Democratic runoff in the redrawn majority-Hispanic 23rd district. The winner will take on freshman Rep. Francisco “Quico” Canseco (R), who is a top target for Democrats.”

      WISCONSIN: Political Wire: “Wisconsin election officials ‘are predicting that between 60 to 65 percent of the voting age population, or about 2.6 to 2.8 million people, will cast regular and absentee ballots in the June 5 recall election,’ the Wisconsin State Journal reports. ‘That level of turnout would be higher than the 49.7 percent of voters who turned out in the November 2010 gubernatorial general election, in which Gov. Scott Walker beat Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, his current challenger, by about five percentage points.’

      FLORIDA: “A new Florida Opinion Research poll finds former Gov. Charlie Crist (I) would trounce Rick Scott (R) in Florida's 2014 gubernatorial race if Crist ran this time as a Democrat, 48% to 34%,” Political Wire writes.

      ILLINOIS: “Brad Harriman, the Democratic nominee to replace retiring Rep. Jerry Costello (D-Ill.), has dropped out of the race, creating a major void and giving Republicans a better chance of winning the seat,” The Hill reports. “Harriman, who was Costello's hand-picked candidate and highly touted by national Democrats, cited a neurological disorder as his reason for quitting the campaign.”

      NEVADA: Shelly Berkeley’s up with a new bio ad.

      NORTH CAROLINA: The Democratic mess in the Tarheel state continues… “Adriadn Ortega, the young man who claimed that former state Democratic Party Executive Director Jay Parmley sexually harassed him, is threatening to sue the party and Chairman David Parker for defamation and breach of contract,” WRAL reports.”In a letter sent to Parker Tuesday, Ortega's lawyer, Kieran Shanahan, demands that the party save all documents that might be related to the episode.”

      TEXAS: “Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and former state Solicitor General Ted Cruz are headed to a July 31 runoff to determine the Republican nominee for Senate, igniting a showdown between the Washington, D.C., tea party community and the Texas GOP establishment,” Roll Call writes, adding, “Cruz advancing to the runoff is a welcome development for Beltway-based conservatives who have been playing in GOP primaries with the hopes of recreating some of the tea party movement’s 2010 magic — especially after falling way short with their preferred candidate in the Nebraska Senate GOP primary earlier this month.”

      “In a major upset, longtime U.S. Rep. Silvestre Reyes has lost the race for the Democratic nomination to retain his congressional seat in far West Texas,” AP writes. Reyes lost narrowly to former El Paso city councilman Beto O'Rourke. Reyes appeared to be closing the gap as more votes were tallied, but O'Rourke finished with just more than 50 percent of the vote to avoid a runoff with all precincts reporting. The 67-year-old Reyes was first elected to Congress in 1996. Reyes received a rare primary endorsement last month from President Barack Obama.”

      The power of outside groups: “O’Rourke’s bid was boosted by a Texas-based super PAC, the Campaign for Primary Accountability, which invested heavily in two House contests in the Lone Star State. In the other race where the PAC spent money, the 4th district GOP primary, 16-term Rep. Ralph Hall won easily,” Roll Call writes. “Reyes was not surprised. Acknowledging the tough primary, his campaign spent more than $460,000 and both sought and secured the endorsements of Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, who has had a decent record of backing winners in Democratic House primaries this cycle. Clinton campaigned for Reyes at a rally in El Paso last month.”

      “With few House incumbents facing competitive primaries Tuesday in Texas, most of the action was in a handful of contests for safe open and new seats. As expected, almost all of those crowded races will be decided by July 31 runoffs after no candidate was able to get at least 50 percent of the primary vote,” Roll Call writes. “Democrats were unable to avoid a runoff in the one district that is expected to be competitive this fall. State Rep. Pete Gallego will face former Rep. Ciro Rodriguez in the Democratic runoff in the redrawn majority-Hispanic 23rd district. The winner will take on freshman Rep. Francisco “Quico” Canseco (R), who is a top target for Democrats.”

      WISCONSIN: Political Wire: “Wisconsin election officials ‘are predicting that between 60 to 65 percent of the voting age population, or about 2.6 to 2.8 million people, will cast regular and absentee ballots in the June 5 recall election,’ the Wisconsin State Journal reports. ‘That level of turnout would be higher than the 49.7 percent of voters who turned out in the November 2010 gubernatorial general election, in which Gov. Scott Walker beat Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, his current challenger, by about five percentage points.’

    6. In Vegas, Romney fundraises with Trump, woos casino magnate

       

      LAS VEGAS, Nev. -- In a whirlwind half-day visit to Sin City, Mitt Romney is enlisting a powerful new financial backer, rallying the troops with the state's governor and is set to collect millions at a high-dollar fundraiser with the ever-controversial Donald Trump, all before the sun sets in the desert tonight.

      No sooner had Romney's campaign parked the chartered 737 plane (right next to Donald Trump's black and gold emblazoned jet), the candidate was off to meet with billionaire casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, who almost singlehandedly kept Newt Gingrich's campaign afloat with millions of dollars in donations to Gingrich's super PAC, but signaled months ago he would support the Republican nominee.

      Aides said the meeting lasted nearly an hour at the Venetian Las Vegas Casino, Hotel and Resort, but there was no word of a formal endorsement or gift to the pro-Romney super PAC.

      Romney next visted a Somers Furniture warehouse, but not for a new ottoman. The former Massachusetts governor campaigned for the first time with Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval, a rising star in the Republican party who originally backed Texas Governor Rick Perry early in the primary campaign.

      Romney took aim at President Barack Obama's 2009 comments not to "blow a bunch of cash in Vegas," by pledging his love for the city, which helped deliver a major caucus win for the all-but-certain Republican nominee back in February.

      "I'm counting on you guys to go out and make sure that you elect a president who tells people to come to Las Vegas, not to stay away from Las Vegas. Who gets us on the track to have a strong and vibrant economy again," Romney said.

      As Romney continued to attack the president as "hostile" to business, he veered into new territory, passing along the story of a restaurant owner he met with in a closed-door roundtable who suggested adding a new provision to the constitutional requirements of the presidency: time in business.

      "I’d like to have a provision in the Constitution that in addition to the age of the president and the citizenship of the president and the birthplace of the president being set by the Constitution, I’d like it also to say that the president has to spend at least three years working in business before he could become President of the United States," Romney quoted the restauranteur as saying. "You see then he or she would understand that the policies they’re putting in place have to encourage small business, make it easier for business to grow."

      And perhaps no man is more embroiled over the constitutional requirements of the presidency than Romney's host at his final Vegas event of the day, Donald Trump, who today doubled-down on his controversial beliefs that President Obama's birth certificate may be fraudulent, telling CNN that "a lot of people don't agree with that birth certificate," a charge host Wolf Blitzer labeled "ridiculous."

      Trump hosted the fundraiser for Romney tonight at the Trump International Hotel just off the Las Vegas strip with a top asking price of $50,000. Trump spokesman Michael Cohen said the event tonight could raise "millions" for Romney campaign's victory fund.

      Among the guests was Newt Gingrich who said, “We believe this is an American-born, job-killing president.”

      Answering a question about Trump, he continued: “Others believe he was born elsewhere and kills jobs. But Obama is a jobs-killing president. He was born in Hawaii. That doesn’t affect that he is killing jobs.”

    7. With Texas win, Romney secures delegates to win nomination

      Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

      Mitt Romney walks to an awaiting car after walking off of his campaign plane at McCarran International Airport on May 29, 2012 in Las Vegas.

      Updated 9:45 p.m. ET -- Mitt Romney won the Republican primary in Texas on Tuesday, a victory that gives him more than the 1,144 delegates needed to secure his party's presidential nomination.

      Following a bruising primary season earlier this year that extended longer than many Republicans had hoped, NBC News projected that Romney had finally won the necessary delegates to secure the nomination, though the former Massachusetts governor won’t earn the official nod until August's Republican National Convention in Tampa.

      The race for the Republican nomination has been largely over since the April 3 primary in Wisconsin. Romney's win in that contest prompted the eventual withdrawals of his remaining rivals: Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich, and Ron Paul. It also hastened the onset of President Barack Obama's own re-election offensive versus Romney.

      "I am honored that Americans across the country have given their support to my candidacy and I am humbled to have won enough delegates to become the Republican Party's 2012 presidential nominee," Romney said in a statement Tuesday evening. "Our party has come together with the goal of putting the failures of the last three and a half years behind us."

      Romney spent the evening at a closed-doors fundraiser in Las Vegas with Gingrich and reality television star Donald Trump.

      While conservatives appear to have rallied behind the former Massachusetts governor, the long campaign season was not without its consequences for Romney.

      The Republican has been fundraising aggressively to make up for money spent during the nomination battle, which depleted, in part, his relative financial parity versus Obama. 

      Appearing at a campaign event is Las Vegas, GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney tells supporters that he will focus on putting Americans back to work if he is elected president.

      But more significantly, the Obama campaign has been turning some of the most stinging attacks on Romney from other Republicans and revived them for use in the general election.

      "I have no illusions about the difficulties of the task before us. But whatever challenges lie ahead, we will settle for nothing less than getting America back on the path to full employment and prosperity," Romney said in his victory statement. "On November 6, I am confident that we will unite as a country and begin the hard work of fulfilling the American promise and restoring our country to greatness.”

      Case-in-point: the Obama campaign has spent much of the past two weeks attacking Romney's experience at Bain Capital, the private equity firm Romney had co-founded. That is a line of attack first advanced by Gingrich and Texas Gov. Rick Perry in January.

      Romney's continued advantage versus Obama, though, lies with an economic recovery that still rests on precarious footing.

      May's NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that half of Americans judged last month's jobs report as unsatisfactory. That dampened optimism for a recovery -- and, in turn, for Obama -- could become a potent political weapon for Romney, especially if continued economic unrest in Europe slows the pace of the recovery in the U.S.

       

       

    8. Romney: Obama grasping for 'twig' as evidence of progress

       

      CRAIG, CO -- Deep inside Colorado's coal country, Mitt Romney on Tuesday accused President Obama of grasping for a "twig" to hold onto as evidence the administration's economic policies had succeeded.

      Romney said that, if he were elected, he would usher in a more business-friendly administration before a crowd of several hundred supporters gathered for a rally in Craig's rustic downtown.

      "Now [President Obama's] campaign these days is trying to find a twig to hang on to, some little excuse they can grab and say, ‘Look, things are getting a little better, aren’t they?’ And the answer is yeah, things are getting a little better in a lot of places in this country, but it’s not thanks to his policies. It’s in spite of his policies," Romney said.

      The presumptive GOP nominee continued: "You see, every recession ultimately comes to an end, but you’d expect that this deep recession might come back to an aggressive turnaround, but it didn’t happen."

      The former Massachusetts governor's campaign has said his focus this week would be on an administration "hostile" to business, and Romney pressed this thesis during today's rally as well.

      "Government sees small business and big business as the enemy. We’re not the enemy. Some of these liberals say they like a strong economy but then they act like they don’t like business. An economy is nothing but the collection of all of our businesses together," Romney said. "I want our government to support small business, middle-size business, big business. I want jobs. I want government that’s an ally of business not an enemy of business.”

      Romney, who will likely clinch the nomination with the results of tonight's primary in Texas, also continued to lash the president's energy policy; his remarks found a welcome audience composed of roughly 150 coal workers, dressed in dirty overalls and hard hats.

      "He said he was going to create some 5 million green energy jobs. Have you seen those around here anywhere?" No, as a matter of fact he's going after energy," Romney said of the president. "He says he for all of the above when it comes for energy, you heard that. And yet he's made it harder to get coal out of the ground, he's made it harder to get natural gas out of the ground, he's made it harder to get oil out of the ground."

      But Romney's pessimism about energy and the economy was not echoed by the citizens of Craig (Population roughly 10,000. Elevation: 6,185 feet) who came out in droves to see the Republican candidate, and listen to a local high school band cover pop hits on a glorious Colorado morning. A number of residents described for reporters a recovering economy based on hunting and fishing, and coal mining and oil exploration along the western slope.

    9. Romney plays with fire in Trump association

       

      Is Mitt Romney playing with fire in his dealings with Donald Trump?

      The presumptive Republican presidential nominee will appear with Trump, the pugnacious real estate mogul and reality television star, at a fundraiser Tuesday in Las Vegas. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a nemesis of Romney's throughout the Republican presidential primary, will round out the group.

      Steve Marcus / Reuters

      Real estate mogul Donald Trump's ties to presidential candidate Mitt Romney run deeper than most run-of-the-mill supporters of the former Massachusetts governor.

      Setting aside Gingrich’s own bombast, it’s Trump who could prove the bigger long-term headache for Romney. The latest example of that came Tuesday morning, when Trump said he’s still unconvinced that President Barack Obama was born in the United States, further linking Romney to that sentiment in a subsequent tweet from his @realDonaldTrump handle:

      @BarackObama is practically begging @MittRomney to disavow the place of birth movement, he is afraid of it and for good reason. He keeps using @SenJohnMcCain as an example, however, @SenJohnMcCain lost the election. Don’t let it happen again.

      It’s become clear that Trump’s ties to Romney run deeper than most run-of-the-mill supporters of the former Massachusetts governor. Romney and Trump appeared together when the “Apprentice” host made official his endorsement on Feb. 2. Since then, Trump’s become an involved surrogate for Romney, doing radio interviews and robocalls during the height of the GOP primary. He’s also hosted fundraisers for Romney, most notably one on Ann Romney’s birthday that netted the campaign $600,000.

      “Donald Trump is playing an extremely important role, which has been acknowledged by both Ann and Mitt Romney, which has been acknowledged by them in election night speeches,” said Michael Cohen, a spokesman for Trump, in an interview.

      Former Sen. Blanche Lincoln and former Rep. Tom Davis talk about the pros and cons of Mitt Romney associating himself with Donald Trump.

      Romney put some distance between the two men, though, before taking off for Colorado late on Monday night. "You know, I don't agree with all the people who support me and my guess is they don't all agree with everything I believe in. But I need to get 50.1 percent or more and I'm appreciative to have the help of a lot of good people," he told reporters aboard his campaign charter plane.

      Romney was burned back in April when conservative rocker (and campaign supporter) Ted Nugent called Obama “evil,” and said if the incumbent were to win re-election, “I will be either be dead or in jail by this time next year.”

      FIRST THOUGHTS: Playing the Trump card

      Democrats stoked that story in the media, forcing Romney to personally address the Nugent controversy; now, it appears as though they’re hoping for another opportunity to do the same with Trump.

      That is, when — not if — Trump goes off-message, Romney will have to answer for the controversy. His campaign won’t have the luxury of shrugging off a figure like Trump, who’s undeniably much closer to the Republican nominee than Nugent.

      "It raises a question, that's come up before during this campaign, as to whether Gov. Romney will embrace these extreme voices in his party, or stand up to them," Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt said Friday on MSNBC.

      Ben LaBolt, National Press Secretary for the Obama campaign, joins Andrea Mitchell to discuss the President's political strategy, as well as new poll numbers that show a tight race between Obama and Mitt Romney.

      And already, the Obama campaign released a video on Tuesday bracketing the fundraiser this evening, contrasting Romney's relative silence toward Trump with the actions taken by Republican nominee John McCain in 2008 to shun extreme voices in the GOP.

      For now, the Romney campaign has emphasized its singular focus on the economy, casting media firestorms around Trump or Romney’s previous work at Bain Capital as nothing less than a distraction.

      "In a world of record job loss, record home loss, more people falling into poverty than time since the Depression, I don't think this stuff matters," said a Romney aide. "I would think the last few weeks would be a good lesson in that. From the anniversary of the Osama bin Laden killing to gay marriage, this election is just about one thing: are you happy with the economy and who do you think will do a better job?"

      But the irony for Romney is that, for a campaign that prides itself on discipline and focus, its association with Trump threatens at any moment to knock the candidate off-message.

      • Consider just a small sampling of the things Trump has recently said:
        May 22: Trump said on CNN that invoking Obama’s association with the controversial Rev. Jeremiah Wright in the campaign, which Romney had disavowed, is fair game. "These tapes are devastating for the president. I mean, Rev. Wright is an angry man. He's extremely angry at the president,” Trump said on CNN. “I see nothing wrong with using it."
        May 22: Also on May 22, Trump stoked the flames of “birtherism,” skepticism of whether the president was born in the U.S., despite Obama having released his long-form birth certificate a year earlier, showing he was, in fact, born in Hawaii. Trump tweeted: “I wonder if @BarackObama ever applied to Occidental, Columbia or Harvard as a foreign student. When can we see his applications? What do they say about his place of birth.”
        May 7: Trump suggested, during the Chen Guangcheng incident, that the United States’ economic tension versus China could translate into an actual war in due time. “It's not a war with bullets, but it's certainly a war,” Trump said of those economic tensions. “Maybe someday, it ends up with bullets because, frankly, they're building a military like you wouldn't believe.”

      And there are more politically substantive examples of Trump breaking with Romney and the GOP.

      “I just think it’s very dangerous,” he said of Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan’s budget proposals this March on FOX. “Already, the Democrats are just starting to write their campaign literature based on this plan. I think it’s very dangerous for the Republicans.”

      Cohen said that Trump didn’t presume to speak for Romney.

      “Donald Trump is his own individual, and he will make statements that he feels are accurate, are on the minds of other Americans and are significant in showing the voters who the real Barack Obama is,” he said. “Whatever questions will be posed to Gov. Romney and the Romney camp, they are certainly entitled to answer as they see fit. The current president and vice president don’t agree on all topics. Not all Republicans agree with all Republicans, and not all Democrats agree with all Democrats. Everyone is entitled to their own opinion.”

      And to Trump’s credit, he’s never been known as a shrinking violet. His views have certainly been publicly aired at this point, and voters may be able to better distinguish between his headline-grabbing comments and the more staid sentiments of Romney.

      But in a campaign cycle driven by grievance politics (“When will Mitt Romney/Barack Obama apologize for…?”), it’s difficult to imagine Romney not having to answer for some outburst of Trump’s between now and November.

      “He’ll stand up next to Donald Trump, and he’ll talk about why he wants to be president, and why he believes the economy needs to be turned around,” Romney adviser Kevin Madden said Friday on MSNBC of the way Romney would relate to Trump. “Anytime that something goes off of that – or something where Gov. Romney would disagree – he’s going to make that very clear, just as he has in the past, and he’ll do it in the present, and he’ll do it in the future.”

      NBC’s Garrett Haake contributed to this report.

      Andrea Mitchell talks with Kevin Madden, a Romney campaign adviser, about Donald Trump's involvement in Mitt Romney's presidential campaign, and whether or not Trump will help or hurt Romney's chances come November.

    10. First Thoughts: Playing the Trump card

      Romney plays his Trump card again… But is this a smart card to play?... More Dem handwringing… The Romney camp’s pushback on Bain… Primary Day in Texas -- watching Romney cross the 1144 magic number and that Senate GOP primary… Odds and ends: Scott Brown up with new TV ad, while Dem convention marks less than 100 days out with new web video… Recapping Friday’s Walker-Barrett debate… And Christie’s sports-gambling push.

      Ethan Miller / Getty Images

      Ann Romney and Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, look on as Donald Trump endorses Mitt Romney for president during a news conference at the Trump International Hotel & Tower Las Vegas February 2, 2012.

      *** Playing the Trump card: Here's a little thought exercise: What if a chief Obama surrogate/fundraiser happened to be the nation's foremost critic of the Mormon faith, who argued that it was nothing more than a cult? Or what if the Obama campaign was holding a fundraising contest with a celebrity who believed that 9/11 was an inside job? Or even if Obama held a joint fundraiser with Bill Maher? It’s hard to differentiate those hypotheticals from Mitt Romney’s association with Donald Trump, who in recent days has said that hitting Obama with Jeremiah Wright is fair game and that there are still doubts about Obama’s place of birth. The Romney-Trump association tonight includes a fundraiser with “The Donald,” as well as an upcoming fundraising dinner contest with him. Why hang out with someone -- multiple times -- who could overshadow you, for all the wrong reasons? Could you imagine John McCain or George W. Bush doing something similar? In fact, the Obama campaign is out with a web video contrasting McCain from ’08 with Romney’s association with Trump in this campaign.

      At a fundraiser in Las Vegas on May 26 for the presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney is designed to raise $2 million at the Trump International Hotel. The Daily Rundown's Chuck Todd reports.

      *** Guilt by association: Look, we’re not big fans of “guilt by association” attack politics. And while it’s as old as the Republic, it’s cheap and usually has little impact on the public at large. But Trump is not exactly someone who is helpful to Romney in his attempt to warm himself to swing voters, particularly women. Perhaps there’s something else the Romney campaign is up to; maybe they believe by hugging Trump now, it’ll be easier to tell him “no” when he asks to speak at the Republican convention. As George Will put it, “I do not understand the cost benefit here. The costs are clear. The benefit — what voter is going to vote for him because he is seen with Donald Trump? The cost of appearing with this bloviating ignoramus is obvious, it seems to me.”

      *** Romney responds to the criticism of Trump: Last night, Romney was asked about his association with the nation’s most famous “birther.” His answer didn’t address the controversial topic. “I don't agree with all the people who support me and my guess is they don't all agree with everything I believe in. But I need to get 50.1% or more, and I'm appreciative to have the help of a lot of good people,” he said, per NBC’s Garrett Haake. By the way, msnbc.com’s Mike O’Brien today will have a more in-depth piece looking at Romney and Trump.

      *** Dem handwringing: From our coverage of past presidential campaigns, Republicans have always been better -- and more comfortable -- when it comes to hand-to-hand political combat. Exhibit A: Some of the Democratic handwringing we saw over the past two weeks about whether the attacks on Bain Capital are fair. And here’s Exhibit B: More handwringing about whether President Obama has engaged too early in the campaign. The handwringing is mostly taking place in the Acela corridor by folks that haven’t seen any polling data in the industrial Midwestern states or any focus groups, at least when it comes to Bain. The more intriguing debate folks will have in December is about how quickly and sharply the president decided to personally attack Romney. He could have easily decided to stay above the fray for longer, but the decision was made they couldn’t do that. Team Obama will argue, they needed to fire up their own base and running AGAINST someone helps fire them up faster than simply asking them to help re-elect the president. So they may have had no choice but to engage earlier than planned simply to get their own base motivated. Still, hand wring all you want. The problem, though is that the toothpaste is already out of the tube.

      *** The Romney camp’s pushback on Bain: Speaking of Bain, the Romney camp has a counterattack of sorts with a new web video noting that firms like Solyndra received federal loans but have since gone bankrupt. It’s their attempt to muddy up all the Bain enterprises that went belly up with the stimulus-assisted firms that did the same. The Romney camp tells First Read that its message this week is that Obama “is hostile to job creators.” Says a Romney official: “Take a look at Solyndra -- that is a perfect example of how President Obama is hostile to job creation. President Obama believes we would be better off if political appointees were making decisions on where taxpayer money is spent. President Obama’s economic leadership has failed and at times has shown the worst of cronyism, like in the case of Solyndra.” Some outside groups also have a similar hit on the president, turning the “private equity” argument into a question of “what did the president do with public equity”?  It’s a clever non-response response.

      *** Texas’ “two step” primary: It’s primary day in the Lone Star State, and there are two primaries to watch. The first is the presidential: Mitt Romney is expected to reach the 1144-delegate magic number tonight. Here’s currently at 1,084, and he’ll get a lion’s share of Texas’ 155 delegates. The second primary is the crowded Senate GOP race to fill the seat being vacated by Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. The top-two contestants are Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and state Solicitor General Ted Cruz. If no one gets a majority of today’s primary vote, there will be a run-off featuring the top-two finishers. Don’t miss this Club for Growth TV ad that’s been hitting Dewhurst for being labeled “a moderate.” This ad tells you everything you need to know about your U.S. Senate, particularly on the GOP side. Polls in Texas close at 9:00 pm ET.

      *** On the trail: Romney campaigns in Craig, CO and Las Vegas, NV before attending his fundraiser with Trump at the Trump International Hotel in Vegas.

      *** Scott Brown ad, Dem convention video: Here are some final odds and ends today: Sen, Scott Brown (R-MA) is up with a new TV ad emphasizing his moderate and “bipartisan” credentials. (It’s kind of the opposite to that Club for Growth ad above.) “We're Americans first and I'll work with anyone to get things done,” Brown says to the camera. "I was the tie-breaking vote on Wall Street reform, led the way on a jobs bill for veterans and helped pass a strong new ethics law for Congress. You know what makes me really proud? Being called one of the most bipartisan senators in the country.” In addition, the Democratic convention has a new web video marking that we’re less than 100 days out until the Dem convention in Charlotte and launching its effort to get the grassroots involved in the convention.

      *** Recapping Friday’s Walker-Barrett debate: On Friday night, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) and challenger Tom Barrett (D) participated in their first debate tied to next week’s recall. The Wall Street Journal says that Barrett, who is trailing in the public polling, came out swinging. “‘Scott Walker started this political civil war. I will end this civil war,’ Mr. Barrett said early on in the debate in a prelude to the aggressive posture he maintained all evening. ‘His plan was to divide and conquer, that's not how you get things done.’ Mr. Walker, a first-term Republican, took his shots at Mr. Barrett—calling him a weak mayor at the helm of one of the poorest cities in the nation--but he also intermittently tried to distance himself from the attacks by stressing his accomplishments lowering taxes and creating better business environment for the state.”

      *** Christie’s sports-gambling push: And be sure not to miss New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s (R) push to legalize sports gambling in his state. Why is this important in politics? It’s a way -- and perhaps the last way -- for Republican governors to get increased revenues without raising taxes.

      Countdown to WI recall: 7 days
      Countdown to GOP convention: 91 days
      Countdown to Dem convention: 98 days
      Countdown to Election Day: 162 days

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    11. Programming notes

      *** Tuesday’s “Daily Rundown” line-up: Former Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) and former Rep. Tom Davis (R-VA) on Romney working with Trump…Gov. Bob McDonnell on the Wisconsin recall… The latest 2012 headlines with The Washington Post’s Anne Kornblut, National Review’s Mona Charen and Priorities USA Action’s Bill Burton.

      *** Tuesday’s “Jansing & Co.” line-up: MSNBC’s Chris Jansing interviews the New York Times’ Peter Baker, Roll Call’s David Drucker, Rep Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO), USA Today’s Susan Page, TheGrio.com’s Nana Ekua Brew-Hammond, Congressional Medal of Honor Recipient Col Jack Jacobs, GOP strategist Alice Stewart, and Dem strategist Doug Thornell.

      *** Tuesday’s “MSNBC Live with Thomas Roberts” line-up: MSNBC’S Thomas Roberts talks with the Huffington Post’s Amanda Terkel, GOP strategist Hogan Gidley, Dem strategist Morris Read, Wisconsin state Sen. Jon Erpenbach, and Texas Senatorial Candidate Tom Leppert.

      *** Tuesday’s “NOW with Alex Wagner” line-up: Alex Wagner’s guests include former State Department spokesman James Rubin, Politico’s Glenn Thrush, Chicago Sun-Times Washington Bureau Chief Lynn Sweet, Salon.com’s Steve Kornacki, the Boston Globe’s Scott Helman, and California Congressional Candidate Andy Caffrey

      *** Tuesday’s “Andrea Mitchell Reports” line-up: NBC’s Andrea Mitchell interviews the Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza, NBC’s Ayman Mohyeldin, former Sen. (and Romney supporter) Jim Talent (R-MO), the Economist’s Greg Ip, former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, former RNC Chairman Michael Steele, and author Lynn Sherr.

      *** Tuesday’s “News Nation with Tamron Hall” line-up: MSNBC’s Tamron Hall interviews Michael Smerconish, conservative Iowa radio talk show host Steve Deace, the New York Time’s Michael Shear, and NBC Latino’s Victoria De Francesco Soto

    12. 2012: Playing it safe

      “In the risky business of running for president, Barack Obama and Mitt Romney are largely playing it safe,” the AP’s Benac notes. “For all the small daily dramas of the 2012 campaign, there's a risk-averse dynamic playing out: Neither candidate has been making bold new policy proposals or displaying a free-wheeling personal style. So far, at least.”

      AP’s Electoral College analysis: “President Barack Obama faces new warning signs in a once-promising Southern state and typically Democratic-voting Midwestern states roughly five months before the election even as he benefits nationally from encouraging economic news. Obama's new worries about North Carolina and Wisconsin offer opportunities for Republican Mitt Romney, who must peel off states Obama won in 2008 if he's to cobble together the 270 electoral votes needed to oust the incumbent in November.”

      “The financial firepower that fueled the rise of a network of conservative advocacy groups now pummeling Democrats with television ads can be traced, in part, to Box 72465 in the Boulder Hills post office, on a desert road on the northern outskirts of Phoenix,” the L.A. Times reports. “That's the address for the Center to Protect Patient Rights, an organization with ties to Charles and David H. Koch, the billionaire brothers who bankroll a number of conservative organizations. During the 2010 midterm election, the center sent more than $55 million to 26 GOP-allied groups, tax filings show, funding opaque outfits such as American Future Fund, 60 Plus and Americans for Job Security that were behind a coordinated campaign against Democratic congressional candidates.” Here’s a helpful interactive.

      “Bill Clinton is going to bat for President Obama, bashing Mitt Romney as ‘extreme,’ in e-mails touting a blockbuster June fund-raiser in Manhattan with the current and former presidents,” the New York Post writes.

      Paging Chicago Cubs fans… Political Wire: “Billionaire investor Joe Ricketts, who dropped plans for a $10 million advertising blitz linking President Obama with the fiery race-based rhetoric of the Rev. Jeremia Wright, ‘is involved in another effort slated for this summer, a documentary film based on a widely criticized book, The Roots of Obama's Rage by Dinesh D'Souza, which asserts that Mr. Obama is carrying out the 'anticolonial' agenda of his Kenyan father,’ the New York Times reports.”

    13. Obama: The 'kill list'

      “U.S.-led coalition troops battling Afghan Taliban insurgents have killed Al Qaeda’s second-in-command in Afghanistan in an air strike in the country’s eastern province of Kunar, the coalition said Tuesday,” the L.A. Times writes.

      Meanwhile, the New York Times takes an in-depth look at Obama’s war with al Qaeda. “Mr. Obama is the liberal law professor who campaigned against the Iraq war and torture, and then insisted on approving every new name on an expanding ‘kill list,’ poring over terrorist suspects’ biographies on what one official calls the macabre “baseball cards” of an unconventional war. When a rare opportunity for a drone strike at a top terrorist arises — but his family is with him — it is the president who has reserved to himself the final moral calculation. ‘He is determined that he will make these decisions about how far and wide these operations will go,’ said Thomas E. Donilon, his national security adviser. ‘His view is that he’s responsible for the position of the United States in the world.” He added, “He’s determined to keep the tether pretty short.’” 

      The L.A. Times: “Most Memorial Day messages from presidents involve the sort of solemn boilerplate remarks that barely break through the barbecue smoke and picnic chatter. On Monday, President Obama took a decidedly different tack: He noted the end of one war, promised the end of another and sought closure and healing for a third.”

      “Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on Sunday urged a divided Congress to unite and avoid scheduled budget slashing that would bring total defense cuts to almost $1 trillion in the coming decade,” the Boston Globe writes.

      Michelle Obama talks to USA Today’s Susan Page about her new book on the White House vegetable garden, “American Grown: The Story of the White House Kitchen Garden and Gardens  Across America.” Will she ever run for office? "Absolutely not. It will not happen. … No chance at all."

      Over the weekend, the first lady and daughters were in Atlantic City, N.J., for a Beyoncé concert.

    14. Romney: Reaching the magic number

      “For so long, he was the putative front-runner, the nominal front-runner, the weak front-runner. Then he became the all-but-certain nominee. And by Tuesday night, he’ll be able to ditch those modifiers,” the Washington Post writes.  “Willard Mitt Romney is about to do what his father didn’t and no one in his church ever has. With Tuesday’s Texas primary, he is poised to secure the 1,144 delegates required to clinch the Republican presidential nomination at the party’s August convention.”

      The AP also notes that Romney is set to clinch the nomination today, and will raise money with Donald Trump, someone he “has declined to repudiate” for his “fringe view” questioning that President Obama wasn’t born in the United States. “Trump again contended this week that Obama was born in Kenya and raised in Indonesia, pointing to information in a catalog from a literary agency that represented Obama two decades ago. That view has been debunked repeatedly,” AP notes.

      And there’s this: “Now that the issue of the president’s birth certificate has been laid to rest (mostly), some conservatives are turning their attention to a new obsession: Barack Obama's college transcripts,” the L.A. Times notes. “Last week, a website that already had offered a $10,000 reward for Obama's transcripts from Occidental College, Columbia University and Harvard Law School, increased the bounty to $20,000. About a year ago, Donald Trump, among the highest-profile ‘birthers,’ helped get the mini-movement started. After the president released his long-form birth certificate, Trump abruptly changed subjects: ‘The word is, according to what I’ve read,’ said Trump, ‘that he was a terrible student when he went to Occidental. He then gets into Columbia; he then gets to Harvard. ... How do you get into Harvard if you’re not a good student? Now maybe that's right or maybe it’s wrong, but I don't know why he doesn’t release his records.’”

      The Boston Globe goes to Utah: “For Mormons, this is a potentially volatile moment. They are deeply proud that their faith’s most prominent adherent, Mitt Romney, is steps away from a presidential nomination and could push the faith further into the mainstream of American life. With these feelings, though, comes a nagging fear that their beliefs, often misunderstood, will again be subjected to scrutiny, even ridicule, on a national scale.”

      Romney and John McCain got a crowd of about 5,000 on Memorial Day in San Diego, near his beach home in La Jolla.

      On Monday, Memorial Day, Romney promised the world’s strongest military. He said he would maintain a military "with no comparable power anywhere in the world."

      “A member of the National Labor Relations Board who was facing scrutiny for allegedly leaking sensitive information to a former adviser to Mitt Romney's presidential campaign, is stepping down, the NLRB said Sunday,” USA Today writes.

    15. More 2012: Primary Day in Texas

      ARIZONA: Now Ron Barber says he’s not sure if he’d vote for Nancy Pelosi.

      FLORIDA: Here’s a lede: “The world’s greatest deliberative body faces monumental decisions on issues ranging from crushing debt to nukes in Iran. But U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson is more likely to be seen fighting monster snakes,” the Miami Herald writes. During 12 years in the Senate, the Florida Democrat has maintained a tight focus on the state, rarely missing an opportunity to exploit headlines or take up populist causes, whether sounding alarms over Burmese pythons in the Everglades or Chinese drywall or demanding pensions for ex-Negro League ballplayers in Tampa.”

      INDIANA: Lugar won’t campaign for Mourdock.

      MICHIGAN: “Rep. Thaddeus McCotter (R-Mich.) is at risk of losing his place on the Aug. 7 primary ballot because of problems with his petition signatures, wreaking havoc on the GOP’s once-secure hold on his seat,” Roll Call reports. “In a Friday statement, McCotter announced the secretary of state had questioned whether he collected sufficient signatures to make the ballot.”

      OHIO: Stu Rothenberg was impressed with Josh Mandel, but not enough to think he’ll win the Senate race. “Mandel probably needs Romney to carry the state in the presidential race and Buckeye State voters to view the Senate contest as a referendum on an Obama-Brown tandem if the young Republican is going to defeat the incumbent,” he writes.

      PENNSYLVANIA:  A big potential issue… “Amid the complexities of Pennsylvania's new voter identification law, the news release sent out from Harrisburg on Wednesday promised to make things simpler,” the Philadelphia Inquirer writes. “The Corbett administration was announcing it had worked out a way for PennDot to check with the state Health Department to verify state birth records - a ‘simplified method to obtain photo ID for Pennsylvania-born voters,’ said the headline on the Department of State release. It may be simplified, but it still isn't simple.”

      TEXAS: The Texas Tribune breaks down each race today, including the GOP Senate primary: “After nine years as Texas' lieutenant governor, David Dewhurst can point to major conservative victories, with the passage of dozens of major bills. But critics say that when push came to shove, he often avoided tough negotiations.  You might come to believe that Ted Cruz, the former state solicitor general, is the reason the stone monument to the Ten Commandments is still standing near the northwest corner of the Texas Capitol. It's not so.”

      The Austin American Statesman: “In a Republican race for an open U.S. Senate seat, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst faces former state Solicitor General Ted Cruz, former Dallas Mayor Tom Leppert and former ESPN football analyst Craig James in a primary notable for its often negative tone and fluctuating poll results.”

      Smart Politics: “Nearly 40 percent of Lone Star State Democratic primaries for U.S. Senate have gone to a runoff since 1916 with the second place candidate winning in more than half of the runoff elections.”

    16. Romney warns of perils of shrinking military at Memorial Day event

      Denis Poroy / Reuters

      Mitt Romney, center, war veteran Nick Popaditch, left, and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., applaud during a Memorial Day event at the Veterans Museum & Memorial Center in San Diego on Monday.

      SAN DIEGO-- Mitt Romney took advantage of one of his largest crowds of the campaign season on Memorial Day to warn of the dangers of a shrinking U.S. military in a dangerous world.

      Echoing portions of his stump speech in which he cites the threat of a resurgent Russia, a nuclear Iran and a rising China as obstacles to an "American Century," Romney closed his speech at this Memorial Day tribute to veterans with a political message about a choice between divergent military philosophies this November.

      "We have two courses we can follow: One is to follow the pathway of Europe. To shrink our military smaller and smaller to pay for our social needs. And they of course rely on the strength of America and they hope for the best. Were we to follow that kind of course, there would be no one that could stand to protect us," Romney told an audience his campaign said numbered roughly 5000 people.

      "The other is to commit to preserve America as the strongest military in the world, second to none, with no comparable power anywhere in the world. We choose that course. We choose that course for America not just so that we can win wars, but so we can prevent wars."

      President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney both marked Memorial Day with speeches and politics wasn't far below the surface. NBC's Kristen Welker reports.

      Regular rally trappings like pro-Romney signage were absent at this event, which took on a more solemn character than a traditional campaign stop. Romney did not mention or attack the President in his remarks today, which were instead focused on saluting military veterans and their families, including his predecessor in the role of Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, who joined him on stage Monday.

      "We're a nation that has been formed and preserved by heroes," Romney said. "John McCain is one of them."

      Obama honors fallen troops on Memorial Day

      McCain, for his part, also praised Romney, calling him "fully qualified to be commander in chief."

      The two men and their pro-military message were warmly received here under the blazing midday sunlight. San Diego is home to the US Navy's Pacific Fleet, and Naval Base San Diego is the largest such military community on the West Coast. 

       

    17. At West Point, Biden touts foreign policy, warns of new challenges

      Lee Celano / Getty Images

      Vice President Joe Biden hands a West Point graduate her a diploma on Saturday.

      WEST POINT, NY -- At the graduation ceremony of some of the most elite new members of the U.S. military, Vice President Joe Biden on Saturday praised the Obama administration's efforts to end wars abroad, saying the military drawdowns allow for a "rebalance" of foreign policy.  

      Addressing newly minted second lieutenants at West Point's Michie Stadium, Biden spoke at length about the Obama administration's foreign policy achievements: ending the Iraq War, killing Osama bin Laden, and banning torture because "it was the right thing to do."  

      "President Obama and I came into office determined to end the war in Iraq responsibly, and today our troops are home," he said.


      Highlighting emerging issues like China's economic might and the threat of cyber attacks, the vice president said that the winding down of the Iraq and Afghan conflicts allows the United States more flexibility to address new factors that influence the global landscape.  

      Vice President Joe Biden speaks to West Point graduates on Saturday.

      "Winding down these long wars has enabled us to replace and rebalance our foreign policy, [to] take on the full range of challenges that will shape the 21st century," he said.  

      Among those challenges is the ever-evolving relationship between the United States and China, he said, noting that the two countries don't "always see eye to eye." 

      Speaking to a group of veterans, Vice President Joseph Biden recalled the emotions that overcame him when he received a call in 1972 informing him that his wife and daughter had perished in a traffic accident.

      "There's no doubt that America can compete, and America will win whenever and wherever the playing field is level," Biden said.  

      Although Biden did not mention the ongoing election fight, he echoed some lines from his past campaign speeches, including a heaping of praise on those who executed the mission to kill Osama bin Laden last year.  

      "These warriors sent a message to the world that if you harm America, we will follow you to the end of the earth," Biden said.  

      And he referenced the day of the attack masterminded by bin Laden, calling the class of graduates members of a "9/11 generation" that will be remembered as America's greatest.  

      "Your generation, the 9/11 generation, is more than worthy of the proud legacy that you will inherit today," he told graduates. 

    18. FACT CHECK: Class sizes do matter

       

      Mitt Romney found himself on the opposite side of a skeptical audience on Thursday in Philadelphia, after he seemed to dismiss the impact of class sizes on student achievement.

      Mario Tama / Getty Images

      Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney greets students in a music class at Universal Bluford Charter School on May 24 in Philadelphia, Pa.

      At an event capping a weeklong messaging effort surrounding the presumptive Republican nominee’s education policy, Romney cited a study by management consulting firm McKinsey to back up his argument that the number of students per teacher in a classroom wasn’t the most important predictor of academic success.

      But the former Massachusetts governor’s assertion differs from the evidence produced in large, recent, peer-reviewed academic research showing that class size does, in fact, impact student outcomes.

      “Well, if you had a class of five that would be terrific; if you had a class of 50 that’s impossible,” Romney said, when asked his view on class sizes. “So there are points where I think those who have looked at schools in this country and schools around the world, McKinsey for instance … went around the world and looked at schools in Singapore and Finland and South Korea and the United States and looked at differences and said gosh, schools that are the highest-performing in the world, their classroom sizes are about the same as in the United States. So it’s not the classroom size that is driving the success of those school systems.”

      The Republican presidential candidate visited a West Philadelphia charter school

      A teacher in the audience pushed back, citing a landmark Tennessee study conducted by a Harvard researcher in the 1980s – famous in the world of education research – which looked at the Tennessee STAR program, or Student/Teacher Achievement Ratio, in which the state reduced class sizes across the board by about a third, from 22-25 students per teacher down to 13-17.

      The study of the program -- conducted when current U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, a Republican, was governor – found “compelling evidence that smaller classes help, at least in early grades.”

      Romney didn’t respond directly to the teacher or study during the event in Philadelphia.

       

      Political food fight

      The Obama campaign tried to capitalize. “Larger Class Sizes Are the Answer to a Better Education? On What Planet?” blared an email from Obama spokeswoman Lis Smith.

      That was echoed on a conference call today. “Romney insisted in face of logic, that small classes don't help,” said Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter. “Two years ago, [he] claimed that effort to reduce class size may hurt. I'm not sure what universe he's operating in. Every parent knows that smaller classes are preferable. Everybody knows that except Romney.”

      But Romney did acknowledge in Philadelphia that having the smallest classes are optimal, but that they’re not the driver of success in the classroom.

      The Romney campaign pointed to Obama’s Education Secretary Arne Duncan, who noted – not as a matter of personal opinion, but of official administration policy – that class sizes should be increased.

      “In our blueprint for reauthorizing the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, we support shifting away from class-sized based reduction that is not evidence-based,” Duncan said, according to a transcript of Duncan’s speech, posted by Education Week, at the conservative think tank, the American Enterprise Institute.

      Duncan has also called class size "a sacred cow," "and I think we need to take it on," said in March 2011. He later said, "My point there was that I think the quality of the teacher is so hugely important. I've said things like, give me the parent, give me an option of 28 children in a class with a phenomenal teacher or 22 children in a class with a mediocre teacher. If I was given that choice, I would choose a larger class size."

      After the Obama conference call, Romney spokesman Ryan Williams boasted on Twitter: “If @BarackObama believes what his campaign is saying, he should fire Arne Duncan for supporting @MittRomney's view on class size.”

      Romney campaign spokeswoman Andrea Saul released the following statement:

      “If President Obama is as focused on class size as his campaign seems to be, his outdated view of education reform puts him at odds with leaders like Michelle Rhee, Bill Gates, and his own secretary of education -- all of whom have said that improving teacher quality gives kids the best opportunity to learn. Secretary Duncan even said that he ‘would choose a larger class size’ if it meant having a better teacher in the room. President Obama should be ashamed that his campaign is launching such cheap political attacks at the expense of a serious discussion about education policy. If he actually believes what his campaign is saying, he should fire his education secretary for supporting the same view on class size that Governor Romney is advancing.”

      A broader reading of Duncan’s remarks before AEI shows he believes smaller classes are a good thing, but because of state budget restrictions, school districts need to find ways to adjust.

      “Consider the debate around reducing class size,” he said. “Up through third grade, research shows a small class size of 13 to 17 students can boost achievement. Parents, like myself, understandably like smaller classes. We would like to have small classes for everyone -- and it is good news that the size of classes in the U.S. has steadily shrunk for decades. But in secondary schools, districts may be able to save money without hurting students, while allowing modest but smartly targeted increases in class size.”

      In fact, research bares out that smaller class sizes have resulted in gains in K-3, but results are either inconclusive, not significant, or non-existent for older children.

      The Obama’s campaign’s Smith responded this way, in an email to First Read: “Both experience and evidence show that smaller classes are better than bigger classes, especially for young children.  But class sizes aren’t the only thing that matters, and President Obama and Secretary Duncan are also working to raise academic expectations, invest in teacher quality, and turn around struggling schools. That’s very different from Mitt Romney, who thinks that smaller class sizes don’t  matter or can even be harmful.”

       

      Taking on unions

      Romney has accused Obama of being held captive by teachers unions, but positions like the one taken above by his education secretary, as well as his administration’s push on merit pay, teacher evaluations, and support for charter schools, have rankled those unions.

      Obama has said, since the 2008 campaign, that reforms were necessary but that he would try to work “with” unions. Romney has taken a combative tone and blamed unions for promoting class size at a September Republican presidential debate in Florida.

      “[A]ll the talk about we need smaller classroom size, look that's promoted by the teachers’ unions to hire more teachers,” Romney said, adding, “[A]s president, I will stand up to the National Teachers Unions.”

      Romney’s tough talk toward labor has been a hallmark of not just his education plan, but his overall economic strategy. It’s understandable, in some ways, why Romney, like many mayors and governors of both parties across the country, would want to cut out teachers’ unions. As with many businesses, unions often prove to be an obstacle in an executive’s ability to enact wholesale changes or implement new programs – like pay for performance (merit pay), or fire teachers regardless of whether they’re underperforming.

       

      Body of evidence

      Parental involvement, effective teachers, and competent administrators are certainly major factors in how well students do. But studies have found that class sizes, when reduced by more than a couple students, especially in early grades, can have an impact on student achievement.

      A study conducted in Tennessee -- published in April 2011 in the Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, conducted by researchers from the University of Chicago and Virginia Commonwealth University -- found improvements as a result of smaller classes in “reading, mathematics, listening, and word recognition test scores” in early grades.

      A California study, conducted by economics professors at the University of Kentucky and Amherst College and published in The Journal of Human Resources, also found that test scores improved -- even when taking into consideration the number of inexperienced teachers that had to be hired to fill the 25,000 jobs created by the state’s $1 billion effort to reduce class sizes. After a few years – when the new teachers gained experience – the cost of hiring those teachers was net-even.

      “[T]here is little or no support for the hypotheses that the need to hire large numbers of teachers following the adoption of CSR [class-size reduction] led to a lasting reduction in the quality of instruction,” according to the study. “Overall, the findings suggest that CSR increased achievement in the early grades for all demographic groups…”

      And on cost: “From a purely distributional point of view, the benefits of CSR were allocated in a quite regressive manner in the short term but in a close to neutral manner as of six years following the implementation of the policy.”

      A Florida study, which followed up on the California results with a study of Florida’s similar effort, conducted by a Harvard researcher and government professor, found the class-size reduction had a minimal impact. The results “indicate that the effects … on cognitive and non-cognitive outcomes were small at best and most likely close to zero,” according to the study.

      But as it also points out, class sizes were only reduced by two or three students per class: “One might not expect a large effect given that over three years class size was only reduced by 1.9 students more in the treated districts than in the comparison districts, but I also find no evidence of positive CSR effects in grades seven and eight, where the relative reduction in class size was three students.”

      The Romney campaign, for its part, when asked about these studies, didn’t deny that class sizes impact student achievement; it’s just not “his focus.”

      “The governor said, ‘Just getting smaller classrooms didn't seem to be the key,’” a Romney aide told First Read by email. “His policies address ensuring better teachers in the classroom and rewarding their success which is a very important part of improving student outcomes. That’s his focus.”

      The Florida study also notes that providing additional teacher resources and supports, like the STAR Program did, combined with smaller class sizes, could have also had an impact: “It is impossible to disentangle the effect of reducing class size from the effect of providing additional resources.”

      That’s something the original Tennessee study made a point of as well: “The benefits derived from these smaller classes persist leaves open the possibility that additional or different educational devices could lead to still further gains. For example, applying to small classes the technique of within-class grouping in which the teacher handles each small group separately for short periods could strengthen the educational process (essentially a second-order use of small class size). The point is that small classes can be used jointly with other teaching techniques which may add further gains.”

      Like in many things, and especially in education, there’s no magic bullet. It’s a combination of a variety of tools, including class size.

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