Does Obama have an 'enemies list'?
Karl Rove says he does, amid a larger fight over anonymous campaign donations. Pundits choose their sides
The DNC has charged Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie with channeling "secret foreign money" into ads to defeat the Dems. Rove says Obama has put him on his list of enemies. Photo: Getty SEE ALL 13 PHOTOS
Best Opinion: Pirate's Cove, Huff. Post, Wash. Examiner
The president has a Nixon-like "enemies list," charges GOP strategist Karl Rove. His provocation: An advertisement from the Democratic National Committee that accuses "Bush cronies" Rove and Ed Gillepsie of channeling "secret foreign money" into ads attacking Democrats, and levels similar charges at the Chamber of Commerce. The DNC ad comes after days of Democratic allegations that the Chamber and Rove's American Crossroads fund are using donations from foreign companies, including state-run oil firms, to influence the midterms elections. Who is playing dirty tricks here? (Watch The Week's Sunday Talk Show Briefing about "foreign money")
Good for Rove for calling Obama out: The DNC's "loathsome ad" is "a despicable abuse of power," says William Teach in The Pirate's Cove. Its personal attacks on Rove and others is a dissent-quashing "violation of the spirit of the First Amendment," and attacking the Chamber of Commerce is proof that the Democrats are, in fact, "anti-business." Don't think the Chamber will forget this in 2012.
"Democrats continue attacked Chamber Of Commerce"
Don't fall for Rove's "crocodile tears": "Innuendo" about a Nixon-style enemies list from Rove, long "defined by his use of dirty tricks," carries an "obvious element of chutzpah," says Sam Stein in The Huffington Post. Maybe he secretly admires how the White House has turned this foreign-funding issue "into partisan red meat." But Rove, and the Chamber, can "clear the air" at any time by disclosing who is giving them the attack money.
"Karl Rove accuses Obama of having an 'enemies list'"
If these are dirty tricks, the GOP can relax: Asking Rove and the Chamber to prove that they are not spending foreign money is like asking Obama to show the "Birthers" that he is not foreign-born, says David Freddoso in The Washington Examiner. But the most telling part of this flap — which, let's be honest, will make "most people's eyes glaze over" — is that, weeks before disastrous midterms, the "Democrats have no better ammo than this."
"Schieffer shoots down White House smears against the Chamber of Commerce"
The Republicans' 'hicky' ad flap
The GOP pulled an ad attacking West Virginia senatorial candidate Joe Manchin when its blue-collar types turned out to be actors cast to look like rubes

The West Virginia senate race between wealthy Republican industrialist John Raese and Democrat Joe Manchin (the state's current governor) is getting tense. A controversial ad — paid for by the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) — purports... More
Sean Duffy's 'light-hearted' logrolling ad
The Republican congressional candidate — a former reality-TV star and lumberjack champion — puts an unusual skill to use in a campaign commercial

The video: Wisconsin congressional hopeful Sean Duffy is a prosecutor and former reality-TV star — but he was also once a world-class competitive lumberjack. And Duffy, a Republican who once appeared on MTV's "The Real World," puts his logrolling skills...
MoreAlan Grayson's 'Taliban Dan' ad
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The video: Even in a midterm election year full of scalding campaign ads, Rep. Alan Grayson's latest attack on his Republican challenger is a doozy. Grayson, a Florida Democrat, compares GOP candidate Daniel Webster's position on women's issues to the Taliban's... More
The Dems' aggressive new attack ads
Democrats around the country are going for the jugular in spots that question their opponents' personal integrity, reports The NY Times. Here's a video gallery

With midterm elections less than six weeks away, nervous Democrats are rolling out unusually ferocious attack ads unusually early in the campaign season, according to The New York Times. While Republicans have generally been trying to tie their opponents to health... More
Ad wars: Should Democrats paint the GOP as Tea Partiers?
The White House strongly denies a plan to cast the GOP as beholden to Tea Party "extremists," but not everybody thinks it would be such a bad idea

White House strategists are debating whether to run a national ad campaign casting the Republican party as all but taken over by Tea Party extremists, according to The New York Times. "We need to get out the message that it's now really dangerous to re-empower... More


































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