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Pro-Clinton Group Goes International

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Ready for Hillary fundraises in London, Paris, and Geneva.

Supporters rally in front of the "Hillary Bus," sponsored by the group Ready for Hillary, outside Hillary Clinton's book tour event in Washington last Friday evening.

Olivier Douliery / Abaca Press

Ready for Hillary, the central political action committee backing Hillary Clinton's possible presidential bid, is taking its fundraising operation overseas.

Last month, the group hosted fundraisers in London, Geneva, and Paris, according to Ready for Hillary's Communications Director Seth Bringman. The events, held the week of May 12, were attended by Allida Black, the group's co-founder. Tickets for the fundraisers started at $250. About 25 people attended each event.

Bringman said the fundraisers came about when Clinton supporters abroad "were eager to participate in the Ready for Hillary effort" and asked to host the events. "We didn't envision these events when we laid out our fundraising plan, but when supporters reach out and offer to help, we want to provide that opportunity."

"We're honored to have received so much support from Americans abroad," Bringman said. The group, which started assembling a list of Clinton supporters that now totals more than 2 million people, has collected contributions from every U.S. territory and from "service members across the globe," he added.

A group of Clinton supporters also recently had a get-together in Tokyo, though that event was more informal; no ticket price was set. Ready for Hillary is planning another fundraiser abroad — this one in Ireland — sometime later this summer.

The former secretary of state started her coast-to-coast publicity tour to promote her new memoir, Hard Choices, last Tuesday in New York. She has said she'll make up her mind about another presidential run by the end of this year.

Ready for Hillary, which is betting she launches that White House bid, spent the last week trailing Clinton in a 37-and-a-half-foot Winnebago it calls the "Hillary Bus." The group has been seen signing up hundreds of new Clinton supporters at nearly ever book tour stop, and plans to continue trailing her this summer.


Senators Question Obama's Authority For U.S. Military Strikes In Iraq

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Rand Paul and Senate Democrats say the administration needs to come to Congress before any Iraq operations. Obama will meet with congressional leaders Wednesday.

Sen. Chris Murphy

T.J. Kirkpatrick / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Senate critics of President Barack Obama's war on terror efforts are warning the White House must come to Congress for authority if the president wants to launch significant military action in Iraq.

Democrats and Republicans alike have raised questions about the authority of the Obama administration to wage war against terrorist groups, the continued territorial gains by ISIS (the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria) and deteriorating situation in Iraq have given the debate new urgency on Capitol Hill. The administration announced Monday they would dispatch up to 275 U.S. troops to protect the U.S. Embassy in Iraq.

"A new war has started and if people want to go be involved in a new war, the job of Congress is to vote on it," Republican Sen. Rand Paul said Tuesday. "I don't think you can have a Congress of 10 years ago make a decision for the people here 10 years later."

"I think the president has essentially admitted the Iraq AUMF has functionally expired," said Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy, who, along with Paul, is part of a bipartisan group of lawmakers who have pushed to reign in the administration's authority under the 2001 Authorized Use of Military Force resolution. "I think we have over a dozen AUMFs on the books and we need a comprehensive look at which are functional and which are obsolete. The Iraq AUMF is functionally obsolete."

"If he's looking for a longer-term military engagement I don't think he can do that under the Iraq AUMF … he's got to come back to Congress," Murphy added.

The question of whether Obama can launch military operations against ISIS under existing legal authority remains an open one. In theory, he could invoke Article II of the Constitution, as he did in launching air strikes against Libya in 2011. But that decision caused a firestorm of criticism in Congress, and the administration could face significant bipartisan backlash.

Alternatively, the administration could invoke the 2001 Authorized Use of Military Force resolution, which has been used in the increased use of drones. But because al-Qaeda has broken with ISIS, that could prove difficult.

Likewise, while parts of the 2003 Iraq War resolution appear to give the administration broad authority to conduct military operations in the country, legal experts are split on whether it remains operable or if the technical end of the war means the administration would need a new resolution.

Regardless of what authority the White House ends up invoking, Democratic allies in the Senate made clear Tuesday they don't want to see any military action.

"Nothing's changed," Sen. Jon Tester of Montana said. "If any one is surprised by what's happening in Iraq they certainly saw the world from a different view than I saw it. Get our troops home, get our people out of there, they've been fighting for 2,000 years, we aren't going to stop them."

Asked if he felt Obama should come to Congress for authorization of any expanded military activity in Iraq, Tester said simply, "It'd be great if he would."

Muslim Law Student Takes On Conservative Think Tank's Benghazi Panel

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The Washington Post’s report that a Heritage Foundation panel reacted in an ugly way to a question about peaceful Muslims failed to pan out after video of the event surfaced.

A Heritage Foundation panel focusing on the Benghazi controversy went a bit off topic when an American University law student named Saba Ahmed took the opportunity to ask a question:

A Heritage Foundation panel focusing on the Benghazi controversy went a bit off topic when an American University law student named Saba Ahmed took the opportunity to ask a question:

"I know that we portray Islam and all Muslims as bad, but there's 1.8 billion followers of Islam."

"I know that we portray Islam and all Muslims as bad, but there's 1.8 billion followers of Islam."

"We have 8 million-plus Muslim Americans in this country and I don't see them represented here."

"We have 8 million-plus Muslim Americans in this country and I don't see them represented here."

"How can we fight an ideological war with weapons?"

"How can we fight an ideological war with weapons?"


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Dr. Oz Admits To Senator Many Of The Diet Drugs He Promotes Aren't Based In "Fact"

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An acknowledgement from Dr. Oz that he markets products to his viewers that don’t have the “scientific muster” to be presented as fact.

TV doctor Mehmet Oz, host of the popular syndicated program The Dr. Oz Show, took a lot of heat while testifying before a Senate committee Tuesday about his claims that some diet products are "miracles" for weight loss. In one exchange lasting ten minutes, Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill accused Oz of deliberately lying.

Here's the video of McCaskill's exchange with Oz:

View Video ›

From McCaskill's press release on the hearing:

McCaskill's hearing follows recent enforcement actions against companies engaged in deceptive advertising of weight-loss products. Last month the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced that it is suing the Florida-based company, Pure Green Coffee, alleging that it capitalized on the green coffee bean diet fad by using bogus weight-loss claims and fake news websites to market its dietary supplement. The FTC claimed that weeks after green coffee was promoted on the Dr. Oz Show, Pure Green Coffee began selling their Pure Green Coffee extract, charging $50 for a one-month supply.

Via mccaskill.senate.gov


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White House To Meet With LGBT Advocates About Federal Contractor Executive Order

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A Thursday meeting to discuss the planned executive order, BuzzFeed has learned.

Olivier Douliery/Abaca Press / MCT

WASHINGTON — LGBT advocates will meet with White House officials Thursday afternoon to discuss the federal contractor executive order announced Monday.

The Thursday meeting, first noted in a Politico report, will involve discussions about the planned executive order, as well as the ongoing implementation of the Windsor Supreme Court decision striking down part of the Defense of Marriage Act. BuzzFeed obtained a copy of the email sent to invited guests, which was sent Monday.

Among the key questions unresolved with the announcement is the scope of any religious exemption to be contained in the executive order. In recent weeks, some LGBT organizations and activists — including the National Center for Lesbian Rights and Transgender Law Center — have announced their opposition to the Senate-passed version of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act because of the scope of its religious exemption. It is still unclear how that debate and the pending Hobby Lobby case before the Supreme Court will figure into consideration of any religious exemption in the executive order.

In the announcement, the White House gave no timing on when Obama will sign the executive order, which is expected to amend or be modeled after an existing executive order banning federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.

Obama, for his part, is expected to give his first comments about the executive order plans in a speech Tuesday evening in New York City at the Democratic National Committee's LGBT gala.


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Rob Portman Says Support For Marriage Equality Makes Winning A National Republican Primary Tough

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“Republicans ought to treat people as they are…”

Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio said his support for marriage equality puts him at odds with his party and "probably makes it difficult" to "win a primary election at a national level." Portman made the comments in an interview with Hoover Institute fellow Peter Robinson that was posted online Tuesday.

Here's the video of Portman making the comments:

View Video ›

"It puts me at odds with my party in many respects," Portman said. "I believe it's a conservative position."

Portman said he "never really thought deeply" about the issue of marriage equality until his son came to him and his wife and told them he was gay.

"I never really thought deeply about it. It seems to me to the extent that it's not a choice, which is what I believe. That is, Republicans ought to treat people as they are."

When the interviewer brought up the 2016 presidential election and speculation that he might run, he said supporting marriage equality would making winning the primary difficult. "It probably makes it difficult for me to win the primary election at a national election."

Here's the full video of Portman's interview:

youtube.com


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Missouri Executes Man Early Wednesday After Courts Deny Stay Requests

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John Winfield was the second prisoner to be executed in the U.S. in a two-hour period between Tuesday and Wednesday.

According to the Associated Press, Winfield took four or five deep breaths as the drug was injected, puffed his cheeks twice and then fell silent.

AP Photo/Missouri Department of Corrections


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Clinton On IRS: "Anytime The IRS Is Involved For Many People It's A Real Scandal"

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Asked about President Obama calling the IRS’ targeting of tea party groups a “phony scandal,” former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said, “Anytime the IRS is involved, for many people it’s a real scandal.” But Clinton also said there wasn’t evidence showing the scandal was deliberate, defending the president.

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Obama: Keep Pressure On Congress To Pass ENDA

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Executive action to protect federal LGBT workers is “helpful,” but not enough, President Obama tells supporters at a Democratic National Committee fundraising event in New York City.

President Barack Obama speaks June 9, 2014, in Washington, D.C.

Olivier Douliery/Abaca Press / MCT

President Barack Obama said Tuesday during a fundraiser in New York City that even though his administration is moving forward with an executive order barring discrimination against LGBT employees of federal contractors, Congress should continue to be pressured to pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA).

"It would be better if congress would pass a more comprehensive law," Obama told supporters gathered at the annual Democratic National Committee LGBT Gala. "We're working on that. Don't take the pressure off Congress."

Obama said that he instructed his staff Monday to draft an executive order for his signature — a point that led to a long, standing ovation from the crowd — however, the president said that while taking the executive action to protect LGBT employees of federal contractors is helpful, "it doesn't reach everybody who it needs to reach. Congress needs to start working again."

Obama did not address when he would sign the executive order or provide details on any type of religious exemption it might include, but LGBT advocates are set to meet with White House officials on Thursday to discuss the plans.

The president's comments pushing for action on ENDA are notable in light of the fact that a number of LGBT advocacy organizations and activists in recent weeks have announced their opposition to the version of ENDA the U.S. Senate passed last November because it includes what they see as an objectionable religious exemption that would continue to allow for discrimination.

The National Center for Lesbian Rights is one of the groups that announced its opposition to the religious exemption in the legislation, and following Obama's remarks the group's executive director said she is hopeful such exemptions will not make it into the final version of the bill.

"We are enormously grateful for the President's leadership and support for enacting federal protections for LGBT workers," NCLR's Kate Kendell said in a statement to BuzzFeed. "There is a groundswell of support for removing the current discriminatory religious exclusion from ENDA, and we are confident the final bill will not include it."

In addition to addressing his administration's action on workplace discrimination, the president touted advancements for LGBT rights and protections carried out in recent years, such as refusing to defend the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and making it illegal to deny people health care based on their sexual orientation or gender identity. He also celebrated recent court rulings in favor of marriage equality, saying, "In 19 states, you are now free to marry the person you love."

"Pride month is a time of celebration and this year we've got a lot to celebrate," he said. "Despite the great work of the incredibly talented and courageous lawyers, it's important to understand it's not just laws changing, it's hearts and minds."

Hillary Clinton Is Reminding Herself What A Presidential Campaign Is Like

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What if this book tour is less a campaign than a test?

Olivier Douliery/Abaca Press / / MCT

Last week, on Tuesday, Hillary Clinton did an event in Manhattan, then headed to Chicago for an event later that day.

The next morning, Rahm Emanuel interviewed her, then she flew back to New York for a luncheon Thursday and the kind of dinner (elephants!) that David Koch also attended. Philadelphia and D.C. on Friday. A Costco in Virginia on Saturday. Toronto and Boston on Monday.

She did interviews with Diane Sawyer last week (mixed, but decent performance) and NPR's Terry Gross (not a great showing). There was the People magazine interview, and the subsequent trolling over whether she held a chair or a walker on People's cover. This week, a Canadian television station. Tuesday, she literally went from a town hall at CNN — live from the neon campaign-style surreality of the CNN set — straight to a debate-style Fox News interview.

It doesn't end, either. She will blaze on all over the country to California twice, Seattle, Kansas City, Denver, and on and on, for at least another week.

This is a ludicrous schedule. It's insane, like the media version of an Iron Man race for one of the most recognizable people alive. If it weren't for Eric Cantor's surprise defeat and the hellish Iraq situation, Clinton's media saturation level would be even higher, if such a thing were even possible.

This is not a book tour. And so this speedball approach to promoting Clinton's book has been widely seen as a pre-campaign roll out, meant to workshop ideas and messages and inject Clinton's name into the midterm election year, buttressing her presence between exiting the State Department and the next presidential cycle. A pre-2016, public test of the Clinton brand: Don't forget Hillary Clinton, the diplomat.

But that wouldn't necessarily require appearances like a town hall interview, or the sheer grind of Clinton's travel schedule.

What if this is an entirely different type of test?

If you weren't sure you were running for president — you weren't sure you had the energy or the will for the unyielding bullshit of it all, the travel, the media, the labyrinth of past comments and old documents shaking loose, the indignity of asking donors over and over again until you raised a billion dollars — maybe you would create a challenge for yourself. Simulate running for president as best you could.

You could create something like a bank stress test for yourself. It's almost a luxury. You could artificially create the conditions of a presidential run. You could get a taste of the changed media environment, and the new young voters. You could look a whole lot of women in the eye and see if they're really excited about your run, or just meeting a celebrity at the bookstore. And you could look within, and find out if you can handle it again — and if you really want it.

Clinton does have to decide soon. In particular, she hasn't really committed yet to campaigning for Democrats running this November. If she chooses not to run, she can skip Iowa, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and more. If she's running, she has to make those stops.

Those of us who write about the Clintons, the most enduring story of the American political press for a quarter-century now, are also testing our passion for this kind of campaign: The impenetrable bubble, the fossilized storylines, the generation of distrust. We spend a lot of time running our mouths about it on Twitter.

But what's Hillary thinking? And what if this Hillary Clinton book tour — which feels so much like a campaign that it must be a campaign — isn't a campaign at all? What if it's a test?

New Firm Aims To Fix The Chronic Republican Problem Of Bad Polling

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What two GOP strategists would have done differently with Eric Cantor’s campaign.

Courtesy of Echelon

With Eric Cantor's surprise primary defeat still fresh in Republicans' minds, a new opinion research firm is launching this week that aims to fix the GOP's increasingly dire polling problem, bring the party up to speed in the election data wars, and upend the way political campaigns are run.

In an interview with BuzzFeed, Echelon Insights' co-founders, veteran GOP digital strategist Patrick Ruffini and pollster Kristen Soltis Anderson, said the new firm will merge the campaign crafts of telephone surveys, focus groups, and data analytics to help Republican clients rethink the way they deploy resources and shape their messages.

"The idea is to have data and information as the nerve center and the hub of how decisions are being made on campaigns, instead of just relying on the highest-paid person's opinion," said Ruffini.

Traditionally, he said, campaigns are made up of competing factions, with pollsters in one corner, digital staffers in another, and a Stuart Stevens-like guru at the head of the organization, making decisions after he hears out his staffers' arguments.

Echelon will seek to overturn that model by combining those efforts into one comprehensive intel-gathering operation.

"There are things you can learn from a focus group that are unique and important, and they're different from the things you can learn from a telephone poll ... or analysis of social data," said Anderson. "These are things that shouldn't be treated individually by separate operatives who are siloed off in different parts of the organization."

The two strategists are well-positioned to pioneer a more integrated approach. Ruffini began blogging in the early 2000s, and quickly became one of the GOP's foremost digital operatives, filling his résumé with of-the-time titles like "webmaster" for George W. Bush's 2004 campaign, and "eCampaign director" at the RNC. More recently, as the tech and political climates have shifted, he has specialized in data analytics. Anderson, meanwhile, comes from a more traditional opinion research background, working as vice president of the D.C. polling firm The Winston Group.

Ruffini and Anderson concede their vision won't be easily realized. The gurus, after all, like being in charge, and much of the lucrative political campaign industry is built around the silo-centric model they want to explode. "It's really hard to convince a large culture of consultants and operatives to throw away the things they used to do and think about things in an entirely new way," said Anderson.

But they point to Democratic firms like BlueLabs — comprised of the Obama 2012 analytics team — and Civis Analytics, as examples of how similar strategies have been successfully implemented.

What's more, Anderson said, Cantor's loss has made their pitch much easier: "I think this was a real wakeup call for folks."

In an embarrassing bit of trivia that will likely go down in campaign lore for years to come, Cantor's pollster, John McLaughlin, conducted internal polling that showed the incumbent up by a whopping 34 points two weeks before the primary. Cantor readied himself for a comfortable landslide, and was understandably shocked when he suffered a double-digit defeat instead.

It was only the most recent sign that much of the GOP's professional polling is in shambles. Last year, the party and its donors pulled out of the Virginia gubernatorial race when it saw polls showing Republican Ken Cuccinelli trailing by a wide margin; on election night, he lost by less than three percentage points. And in 2012, the Romney campaign confidently predicted victory until the very end, relying on elaborate internal polling models that turned out to be wildly off base.

Ruffini and Anderson said Echelon's approach could have helped Cantor spot the warning signs that McLaughlin (and most of the political press) missed.

For one thing, they would have constructed a polling model that wasn't so quick to weed out responses from "unlikely voters." Typically, Anderson said, the process of identifying the likelihood that a respondent will vote is "sadly, pretty arbitrary" — based largely on unreliable self-reporting, rather than the data available on a given voter. "My approach would be to survey a much wider set of people."

Next, they would have scoured the social web and other publicly available data on the internet to regularly take the temperature of Cantor's district. Anderson pointed to a tweet by Google's Rob Saliterman showing that searches for Cantor's little-known opponent had spiked in Virginia in the final week of the race — a potential red flag that the incumbent's advisers apparently missed. "I don't know if that's something the campaign knew about, but it maybe would have tipped them off that there's growing interest about your opponent," said Anderson.

Finally, they would have taken measures early on to increase the campaign's "situational awareness," identifying the candidate's weak spots, and figuring out how an obscure insurgent could pose a threat in certain circumstances.

"Maybe no one knows who this David Brat guy is, but [voters] are really probing and casting a skeptical eye on your message," said Ruffini. "I would have tried to figure out what type of candidate could beat him ... Maybe we would have tried red-teaming, where you embed someone within the organization whose only job is to question assumptions and construct the nightmare scenario."

Anderson also noted that Obama's 2012 campaign did groundbreaking opinion research work — internally deemed the "ethnography project" — by asking members of a focus group to keep daily diaries that operatives could look to as they crafted their message.

They acknowledge that it's easy to second-guess campaigns with the benefit of hindsight, but they are eager to put their approach to the test — and they have their eye on 2016.

"We have very big plans for where we'd like this to go," said Ruffini.


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Here's What You Learn From Reading 20 Years Worth Of Maureen Dowd Columns About Hillary Clinton

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From the Snow Queen Elsa to the Flying Dutchman. Seventy-two percent of the columns are “negative,” says Media Matters, which read them all.

Olivier Douliery / Abaca Press

Frazer Harrison / Getty Images

Like an obsessed Anne Harrington in All About Eve, New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd has been writing about Hillary Clinton for more than two decades, comparing her to characters from Scarlett O'Hara to the Terminator.

Dowd has written 195 columns about Hillary Clinton, according to an analysis of her columns by the liberal group Media Matters, released on Wednesday. An advance copy of the review was provided to BuzzFeed by the organization.

The study found that most were negative toward the former first lady (141 columns). Some were neutral (39 columns). Fewer were positive (15 columns). The pieces, printed opposite the editorial page of the Times, explain Clinton through cultural figures who also include Godzilla, "Mommie Dearest," and the Flying Dutchman, a fictional ghost ship cursed to sail for eternity without making port.

The organization, which tracks conservative media, is run by David Brock, a Clinton ally who founded American Bridge, a Democratic PAC. Brock also runs Correct the Record, a group dedicated to defending Clinton from partisan attacks.

Dowd's latest column inspired the Media Matters review. The piece, published in last Sunday's paper, riffed on Clinton's book tour through a curious frame: the Snow Queen, Elsa, from the popular animated Disney movie Frozen.

"Those close to them think that the queen of Hillaryland and the Snow Queen from Disney's 'Frozen' have special magical powers," Dowd wrote in her column, "but worry about whether they can control those powers, show their humanity and stir real warmth in the public heart."

During her first week on book tour, promoting her second memoir, Hard Choices, Clinton was criticized as "out of practice" and "rusty." She got confrontational with NPR's Terry Gross during an interview that focused on her marriage equality record. She said in another interview that when she and Bill Clinton left the White House in 2001, they started their new life "dead broke" — a comment she spent the week clarifying during various other appearances.

Four days into her tour, Clinton announced to an audience in Washington that she was "truly done, you know, being really careful about what to say."

Dowd heard in Clinton's words the title song of Frozen: "Let It Go."

"After feeling stifled at times and misunderstood, after suffering painful setbacks, the powerful and polarizing Elsa and Hillary proclaim from their lofty height that they're going to 'let it go' ...'I don't care what they're going to say,' Elsa sings at the climactic moment when she decides to let down her hair, ratchet up her star power and create her glittering ice palace. 'Let the storm rage on. The cold never bothered me anyway!'"


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Hillary Clinton's Book Is The No. 2 Hardcover In First Week

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Hard Choices sells 85,721 hard copies, according to Nielsen figures. The book topped the nonfiction list, but fell short to a sci-fi romance novel overall.

Olivier Douliery / Abaca Press

Hillary Clinton's new memoir was the second-most purchased hardcover book in its first week, according to Nielsen Bookscan data that records physical book sales at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-a-Million, Wal-Mart, and other retailers.

The BookScan figures, released Wednesday to publishers and obtained by BuzzFeed, account for sales during the week ending on Sunday, June 15 — a period covering the first six days Clinton's book, Hard Choices, was available for purchase. They reflect strong but not spectacular sales for a book that has dominated the political conversation.

The Bookscan service tracks approximately 85% of retail sales for physical books at the biggest booksellers, but does not account for e-books, made for tablets like Kindle. In addition to tracking Amazon and Barnes & Noble sales, BookScan tracks hundreds of independent bookstores and big-box retailers like Costco.

The figures show Clinton sold 85,721 hardcover copies in its first week.

Diana Gabaldon's Written in My Own Heart's Blood — the latest installment in the author's long-running historical sci-fi romance Outlander series — sold 3,030 more hardcover copies than Clinton's book. (The Gabaldon novel was released on June 10, the same day Simon & Schuster published Clinton's title.)

Clinton's book topped the BookScan nonfiction list.

One Nation, the memoir by the popular Republican, Dr. Ben Carson, ranked second on the nonfiction list this week, selling more than 26,000 copies. (Carson's book was published late last month.)

Bookstores and other retailers preordered 1 million copies of Clinton's book — burning through the first printing — two weeks before it had been published.

The Bookscan data provides a partial but significant glimpse at consumer interest.

The 656-page book, Clinton's second memoir, is an account of her four years as secretary of state. The coast-to-coast Hard Choices publicity tour, which began last Tuesday at a Manhattan Barnes & Noble, may preface what many Democrats hope will be Clinton's second White House bid in 2016.

Clinton allies and critics have been waiting to see how well the memoir sells, and where it debuts on the New York Times best-sellers list this week.

Specific figures for sales at Barnes & Noble, the country's largest retail bookseller, were released to publishers on Monday and reported by BuzzFeed.

Hard Choices sold just over 24,000 copies through the retailer, debuting at No. 1 on the store's hardcover sales list.

But the book did not perform as well at the store as her first memoir, Living History, did in the summer of 2003. The week it was released, a Barnes & Noble spokeswoman said it sold more than 40,000 copies in 24 hours — breaking the record for the retailer's release-day sales. Barnes & Noble, which represents an increasingly small share of the book market, sold just over half that amount in Hard Choices hardcovers this past week, according to the BookScan figures.

Later on Monday, the conservative magazine, the Weekly Standard, quoted a publishing source who described the book as "a bomb." The following day, Simon & Schuster President Jon Karp told Politico he was "thrilled" with the book's sales.

"We're confident we have a major best-seller," Karp said.

Politico also cited a Simon & Schuster source saying the book sold 100,000 copies overall, including hardcover, e-book, and pre-order sales.

Clinton's advance for Living History was $8 million. Simon & Schuster is rumored to have paid significantly more for her second book.

Even if Hard Choices does not sell as well as its predecessor, the publishing house will still make back millions of the advance from licensing foreign editions of the book. Clinton is also expected to spend time overseas during an international portion of her publicity tour sometime later this summer.

A Simon & Schuster spokesman did not immediately return a request for comment.

Anti-Tax Crusader Grover Norquist Endorses Renaming Redskins After Ronald Reagan

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“A great idea.”

Chris Ritter/BuzzFeed/Greg Fiume / Getty Images

Washington, D.C., anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist, who has been on a long campaign to name pretty much everything after Ronald Reagan, said renaming Washington's football team the "Washington Reagans" is a "great idea."

The United States Patent and Trademark Office canceled six federal trademark registrations for the name of the Washington Redskins after ruling that the name is "disparaging to Native Americans." The ruling was in response to Blackhorse v. Pro Football, Inc., a petition requesting the term "Redskins" be stripped of its trademark protections.

"This is a great idea," Norquist told BuzzFeed when asked about chatter about the new name on social media. "The former Redskins can be the Ronald Reagans on winning years and the Nancy Reagans on losing years. Unless that gets us in more trouble elsewhere."

"However, this should not distract from our ongoing efforts to trade DC statehood for ('Reagan') naming Rights," Norquist added, calling the notion "fun to consider," if not necessarily serious.

Norquist started the Reagan Legacy Project in 1997 and is the founder of Americans for Tax Reform, the anti-tax advocacy group founded in 1985 at the request of Reagan.


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Jan Brewer: State Should Consider Expanding Nondiscrimination Law To Protect Gay And Lesbian Arizonans

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“I do not believe in discrimination,” she said on Tuesday, according to the Arizona Capitol Times .

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer said Tuesday that it could be time for the state to consider legislation that would add sexual orientation protections to the state's nondiscrimination law, reported the Arizona Capitol Times.

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer said Tuesday that it could be time for the state to consider legislation that would add sexual orientation protections to the state's nondiscrimination law, reported the Arizona Capitol Times .

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, file

Existing state law prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, or disability in instances like public accommodations, housing, and employment, according to the Arizona attorney general's website.

There are no such statewide protections on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

The Republican governor condemned discrimination, but questioned whether LGBT people face discrimination in the state to the extent that there should be a change in law. “If it needs to be addressed, it needs to be debated in the legislature," she said.

The Republican governor condemned discrimination, but questioned whether LGBT people face discrimination in the state to the extent that there should be a change in law. “If it needs to be addressed, it needs to be debated in the legislature," she said .

AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, David Wallace

"Testimony needs to be presented," she said, according to the paper. "Let the representatives of the people who have been elected by the populace of the state of Arizona determine and get it up to the governor."

With that, Brewer said she would evaluate such legislation and "do the right thing to do for the state."


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Hillary Clinton's Hard (Knock) Choices

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She has been talking a lot about hard choices lately.

President Obama Tickles Giant Talking Robot Giraffe

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“Hee hee. That tickles.”

President Obama met a giant talking robot giraffe on Wednesday. The president got the chance to interact with giraffe at the "White House Maker Faire" an event that "celebrates every maker — from students learning STEM skills to entrepreneurs launching new businesses to innovators powering the renaissance in American manufacturing."

Here is a Vine of Obama tickling the giraffe:

vine.co


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Conservative Groups Hold Back On Whip Endorsement

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“Either Stutzman or Scalise would be an upgrade.”

Alex Wong / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Top conservative outside groups say they won't play in the contested Republican House leadership race for majority whip.

Two of the three candidates for whip, Reps. Steve Scalise and Marlin Stutzman, have longstanding ties to the conservative movement, but so far have been mostly unable to wrangle any public support from leading groups like FreedomWorks, Club for Growth, and others.

After Eric Cantor's surprise defeat and decision to step down as majority leader, current Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy announced he would run to succeed him — a bid some expected would draw a big challenge from conservatives. Instead, McCarthy is all but guaranteed to win, and the race for whip has instead become the more contested affair.

The whip vote on Thursday is expected to be tight and could possibly go a second ballot. No candidate is yet claiming to have a majority of votes.

FreedomWorks says it is skipping the whip battle because the group is more focused on the majority leader race and supporting long-shot candidate Raul Labrador. The group is actively asking its members to call their congressman and ask them to vote for the Idaho Republican.

"A lot of fiscal conservatives are behind Stutzman, but either Stutzman or Scalise would be an upgrade," said Matt Kibbe, president of FreedomWorks. "We are sitting this round out, but there will be a whole new round of leadership fights after the election."

Club For Growth, another conservative group that doles out a lot of campaign cash for candidates in regular election cycles, said they wouldn't get involved in the leadership races at all.

"We don't take a position on leadership races," said Barney Keller, a spokesman for Club for Growth. "Our view is that if our PAC helps elect enough champions of economic freedom, then they'll elect one of their own as leader."

Tea Party Patriots is also staying out. Representatives for the group said that's because Jenny Beth Martin, the group's president, hasn't "discussed with the local coordinators and received their input."

When asked if they plan to come to a consensus on who to support before Thursday's vote, Diana Banister, whose firm represents Tea Party Patriots, emailed, "They are focused on the [Mississippi] senate race right now."

Heritage Action didn't respond to multiple requests for comment. But the group does keep a "scorecard" of how conservatively members vote. The whip race's reported frontrunner, Rep. Peter Roskam, bottoms out at 52%, but Scalise and Stutzman are neck-and-neck with scores of 81% and 84% respectively.

Roskam fell out of grace with the party's more conservative wing because of his perceived close ties to current "establishment" leadership.

But Scalise has also taken criticism from the right, particularly surrounding his leadership of the Republican Study Committee. In December, he fired RSC executive director Paul Teller, amid allegations he provided outside conservative groups with inside information about the RSC. Teller now works for Sen. Ted Cruz.

Joe Lieberman Slams Obama Foreign Policy: "There Is No Leadership"

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“And ya, know, he’s gonna be president for two-and-a-half more years and again some terrible things could happen in that time for us if he doesn’t turn it around.” Tiger21, which hosted the event later demanded BuzzFeed take the video of Lieberman which came from a publicly available video on YouTube down.

Former Democratic Sen. Joe Lieberman offered a lengthy attack on President Obama's foreign policy, warning the White House's policies seem to be sending the world "to hell."

Speaking at an event hosted by Tiger21, a peer-to-peer learning network for high net worth investors, Lieberman bluntly, and repeatedly, knocked Obama.

TIGER 21 requires members have $10 million in liquid assets to invest, sign nondisclosure agreements and pay $30,000 in annual dues.

"In a series of decisions the president has I think sent a message to our allies and our enemies that we're not that engaged in the world anymore," Lieberman said. "I'll tell you, if you wanted to get a sense of imagining without too much of the horrific about what the world would look like without active American leadership look at the world today. It's not collapsing but as my friend said it seems to be going to hell."

Lieberman, who headlined the event, touched on a variety of topics in criticizing President Obama hitting him on his policy in Iraq, Syria, and Europe among others.

"WHAT HAPPENED: this video must be removed ASAP. this video was used without our consent and must be taken down IMMEDIATELY. If this video is not removed, we will have our lawyer be in touch with a cease and desist. pls email me immediately so I can ensure this has been taken down."

"I think Obama's paying for an overreaction, this happens," Lieberman later added. "To the foreign policy and defense policy of the Bush 43 administration. And ya, know, he's gonna be president for two-and-a-half more years and again some terrible things could happen in that time for us if he doesn't turn it around."


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House Conservatives Look To Mount More Serious Leadership Challenge In November

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Kevin McCarthy will likely win House majority leader tomorrow, to the frustration of House conservatives. They say they’ll use the next couple months to get organized.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy

Win McNamee / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — On Thursday, House Republicans will vote on leadership positions. In November, they'll do it again.

And House conservatives say next time around, they'll have a real challenge ready.

Conservatives looking for an opportunity to unseat the Republican leadership were dealt a surprise opportunity to ascend the party ranks after Eric Cantor's loss. But the hasty election left lawmakers with little time. Reps. Jim Jordan and Jeb Hensarling declined to run for majority leader, and Rep. Raúl Labrador, who stepped in as an alternative, struggled to shore up support. Californian Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy will likely sail to victory.

That won't be the case next time, several lawmakers told BuzzFeed, saying there would be more concerted effort over the next several months to challenge McCarthy in November's leadership election.

They argue there is enough time between now and November to properly sway members and convince someone else to step up and run.

"As quickly as they moved, it was hard for anybody outside of the Capitol to influence it," said Rep. Tim Huelskamp, a sharp critic of the current leadership team. "If the end result is just a promotion within the dynasty, that won't be good enough for the base of the Republican Party. Conservative groups won't be happy with that and it's as if we didn't listen at all."

"But it builds the case that we'll need new leadership in the fall. I don't think it solidifies anything for the fall, even if McCarthy gets his automatic promotion," he added. "Partly it's about time, but partly it's about understanding that race wasn't just about Eric Cantor, it was about the entire leadership team. The defeat of Eric, the insiders just don't get it."

Outside forces have largely stayed out of the leadership races. One exception is the conservative group FreedomWorks, which is backing Labrador for majority leader but has stayed out of the more contested whip race, telling BuzzFeed they were also looking towards November to plan for a shake-up then.

South Carolina Rep. Mark Sanford, who would not say who he was supporting in the leadership race, believes the unique circumstances of Thursday's leadership election would inspire conservatives to run a more serious challenge in a few months.

"Given the one week duration of this race, there's really not a credible way of mounting a really serious challenger campaign because you have to engage the outside forces and do all the other nuts and bolts of politics which is really difficult to do in a week," he said. "I'd say if conservatives are frustrated in November, I would argue there's a much greater shot of making a change at that point because you'd have time in which to do so."

But there are some perils in the November strategy: On the Hill, incumbency and power both matter — the leadership controls all-important committee assignments. And McCarthy would have both heading into the fall.

Other conservatives are more frustrated, calling the opening their best opportunity to put one of their own in the high-ranking spot.

"If people didn't want to step up for this leadership race, they're not going to step up then," said Rep. Justin Amash, who is supporting Labrador. "If you're a person that believes we need a new direction this was the best opportunity to run. [November] is a whole new ballgame and if we essentially stick to the same leadership team by re-electing them tomorrow then they hold all the cards in terms of persuading new members with promises of committee spots and chairmanships. This is the time when none of that is possible."

A second leadership election — the vote for the next whip — will also take place on Thursday, pitting current deputy whip Peter Roskam against Reps. Steve Scalise and Marlin Stutzman. The outcome of that race is less clear, and Scalise, the current chairman of the conservative Republican Study Committee, is making the pitch that the whip's race is the best opportunity to put a conservative at the leadership table.

Labrador only say that he was focused on Thursday's race but acknowledged to BuzzFeed that others were looking towards the November race as the next best opportunity to shake things up. However, he had previously told the Washington Post he too was frustrated that Hensarling or Jordan hadn't jumped in.

"That's been the most difficult thing. We had an opportunity, but everybody here plays it so safe. They're only willing to take a risk if victory is assured," he said. "I spent three days trying to get Jim and Jeb to run."

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