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NEWS FLASH

Mitt Romney Was Among Top Donors To Immigration Adviser Kris Kobach’s 2010 Campaign | A ThinkProgress review of campaign finance records reveals that Mitt Romney’s Free and Strong America PAC was among the largest donors to Kris Kobach’s successful 2010 campaign for Kansas Secretary of State.  Romney’s PAC contributed $2,000 to the anti-immigrant hardliner’s campaign. Only Kobach himself and six other donors contributed more. Kobach, who is currently advising Romney on immigration issues, is the author of the highly controversial and harmful Arizona and Alabama immigration laws.  Today, Kobach told the Washington Post that he expected Romney to rule out any immigration measure that granted any form of legal status to undocumented immigrants.

Mitt Romney Praises Fox News For Giving Him ‘Good, Fair Play’

In an interview with conservative radio host Laura Ingraham this morning, presumed GOP nominee Mitt Romney praised Fox News, saying it gives him better “play” than other networks:

ROMNEY: In a network that is fair and balanced, our network gets a good, fair play. But there are some networks that do not give us the fair play. We’ve gotta put some of our people there.

Listen here:

“Fair and balanced” is, of course, Fox’s slogan, but most watchers would likely agree that the network — the least trusted on TV — is anything but.

Even fellow Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich has charged that the conservative network is in the tank for Romney. “I assume it’s because Murdoch at some point said, ‘I want Romney,’ and so ‘fair and balanced’ became ‘Romney,’” Gingrich said last week. “Callista and I both believe CNN is less biased than Fox this year,” Gingrich said of he and his wife.

Rick Santorum agreed, saying of Romney earlier this year, “He has Fox News shilling for him every day.”

As an analysis conducted by the Columbia Journalism Review before Santorum dropped out noted that the non-Romney candidates were “hard to find” on Fox. “Judging from the lopsided tenor of most of the coverage during the broadcast day on Fox News…Mitt Romney already had been anointed as the GOP nominee,” CJR noted.

NEWS FLASH

Romney Campaign Still Claiming Controversial Immigration Adviser Is Not Adviser | Yesterday, we noted that the Romney campaign appeared to be trying to distance itself from controversial conservative immigration activist Kris Kobach, who had been serving as an informal adviser to the presumed GOP nominee. But when we spoke to Kobach, he denied this, telling ThinkProgress, “my relationship with the campaign has not changed.” He later told NRO that the campaign confirmed to him that he was still and adviser. But when Politico’s Glenn Thrush asked the Romney campaign again about Kobach’s claim that he’s still working with Romney, a spokesperson had, no comment other than to stand by the claim that Kobach is merely a “supporter,” rather than adviser to the campaign.

Red Sox Fan Scott Brown Under Fire For Happily Taking Money From Yankees President

Boston Herald graphic

What’s the worst thing a politician from Red Sox Nation could do? Taking money from the arch-rival Yankees might be high on the list. And that’s exactly what Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA) did.

Brown last month took the maximum $2,500 from Randy Levine, the president of the New York Yankees, according to newly released campaign finance records. “We’re happy to accept Randy Levine’s donation,” said Brown campaign spokesman Colin Reed.

Levine has rightly earned the enmity of Red Sox fans for years. He once accused the Red Sox of “riding our coattails” and attacked the club for allowing “an atmosphere of lawlessness…to be perpetuated” at Fenway Park. When the Yankees signed former Red Sox pitcher Roger Clemens in 2002, Levine took aim at the Sox for “whining” about “New York’s century of success.”

The conservative Boston Herald is not happy with Brown for taking Levine’s money: “That’s right, the commander of the Evil Empire is helping to pay for all those Brown ads championing his support of the Red Sox.” “It’s one thing to be bipartisan, Senator, but this is taking it a little too far. There’s no compromising in baseball,” the paper’s Joe Battenfeld added.

Indeed, the tabloid’s cover today rips Brown for his “Bronx Cheer,” a reference to the borough in which the Yankees play:

The Herald produced another image (above right) mocking Brown by dressing him up as a Yankees catcher. Meanwhile, New York news site DNAinfo is not pleased with Levine for giving to Brown.

This is the second strike for Brown in as many weeks on the Red Sox. Last week, he ran a radio ad touting that he stood up to political opponents who wanted to move the Red Sox out of historic Fenway Park. But as it turns out, Brown was one of those people, trying to arrange a meeting to move the team.

“What’s next, a Derek Jeter endorsement?” the Herald asked.

NEWS FLASH

Republican Who Hosted M16 Shooting Event To ‘Remove’ Giffords In 2010 Wins Nomination For Her Seat | Republican Jesse Kelly, a construction manager and Tea Party favorite, won the Republican nomination primary last night to fill the seat left vacant by the resignation of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ). Kelly will face former Giffords district manager Ron Barber in the June 12th special election. Kelly, in his unsuccessful 2010 bid for the same seat, infamously hosted an M16 automatic weapons shooting campaign event to help supporters “get on target” to “help remove Gabrielle Giffords from office.” Just months later, a gunman went on a shooting spree at a Giffords community event in Tuscon, leaving six dead and a dozen wounded — including both Giffords and Barber. Giffords resigned her seat in January to focus on her recovery.

Alyssa

Guest Post: Will Halo 4 beat the Presidential Race with Gamers on Election Day?

By Andrea Peterson

Yesterday, Microsoft announced Halo 4 will reach U.S. consumers on November 6, 2012 — also known as “Election Day.” To call the Halo series important would be an understatement; the first-person shooter is without a doubt the flagship series for Microsoft’s Xbox 360 console and has sold over 34 million games worldwide. Sales of the most recent installment Halo: Reach were record breaking at the time, with over $200 million in sales on its first day This begs the question: With thousands of gamers likely to line up at midnight to pick up a copy of Halo 4, how many will choose to stay in and play over getting out to vote?

According Nielsen Games, as of October 2011 35% of 18 to 24 year olds owned an Xbox 360 – the exclusive release console of Halo 4. That’s 35% of the only age group to show statistically significant growth in the 2008 cycle that will have something exciting to distract them from voting on Election Day… and 35% of the President’s base: President Obama won 66% of votes from 18 to 30 year olds in 2008. And unfortunately, gamers who know they will be unable to tear themselves away from the Master Chief on Election Day may find it harder to vote due to new barriers and limits on advance and absentee voting thanks to conservative voter suppression efforts around the country.

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