Melissa McEwan, Shakesville AlterNet: PEEK. August 29, 2008. These days Palin is all about praising Hillary's efforts, but she used to sing a different tune.
Nomi Prins, The Women's International Perspective AlterNet: Election 2008. August 29, 2008. Why didn't Obama choose Hillary as his running mate? It's a question he needs to answer.
Eric Boehlert, Media Matters for America. August 29, 2008. From the primaries to the convention, the media have become experts at inventing a storyline and skewing facts to support it.
Kathleen Reardon, Huffington Post. August 27, 2008. Hillary Clinton's call to support Barack Obama was unequivocal. Now everyone else needs to follow her lead.
Marie Cocco, Washington Post Writers Group. August 26, 2008. It is usually the job of the party nominee to build unity once a vanquished rival has conceded. Unless the loser happens to be a woman.
Petulant, Shakesville AlterNet: PEEK. August 25, 2008. Hillary on McCain's recent attack ads that feature her: "I am Hillary Clinton and I do not approve that message."
Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet AlterNet: Election 2008. August 24, 2008. Without a campaign job, Jimmy Carville said to be spreading nasty rumors; right-to-lifer picks fights.
Steve Benen, The Carpetbagger Report AlterNet: PEEK. August 15, 2008. In theory, by having her name placed in nomination, Clinton could actually become the Democratic presidential nominee. But she won't.
Booman, Booman Tribune AlterNet: PEEK. August 13, 2008. MoDo has 33 columns between now and the election. Let's see how many of them she devotes to attacking John McCain.
Ann Friedman, The American Prospect. July 22, 2008. The Year of the Woman was 16 years ago, and the number of women in elected office has flatlined. We have yet to break the 25 percent barrier.
Don Hazen, AlterNet. July 8, 2008. A pilot feature of AlterNet on key questions of the day -- is Obama really tacking to the center, and why gas is so damn pricey.
Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet. April 21, 2008. For a state that hasn't had a competitive presidential primary in decades, there is enormous voter interest in the Dem candidates.
Celeste Fremon, Huffington Post. April 18, 2008. At a closed-door fundraiser after Super Tuesday, Clinton blamed what she called the "activist base" of the Dem Party for electoral defeats.
Barbara Ehrenreich, Barbaraehrenreich.com. March 20, 2008. When it comes to unsavory religious affiliations, Hillary Clinton is a lot more vulnerable than Barack Obama.
Ellen Snortland, Pasadena Weekly. March 17, 2008. Without breaking through the female leadership dearth, women will never be able to see if they can end war.
Peggy Simpson, Women's Media Center. February 6, 2008. Wonkish Clinton may never match Obama's soaring rhetoric about hope, but the media should not underestimate the strength of her campaign.