As the Washington Post reported, this past weekend visitors to Rudy Giuliani's campaign website (www.joinrudy2008.com) came face-to-face with a placeholder which read, "Happy Labor Day Weekend! JoinRudy2008.com is down temporarily and will be live again soon with an improved look." Why the re-launch? Getting lapped by Fred because of a primitive platform was probably a significant boost to the argument constantly being made by the online team.
The bad news for Rudy was that placeholder was the only thing on the site. Not even an email capture or a link to a donate page made the static page. Energy lost. The decision had been made to yank the site before the new one had finished cooking and the Post nailed them for it.
The good news for Rudy is that Labor Day weekend is over and the modern site is up-and-running.
Let's have a look under the hood and see what we can find...
Is John McCain actually starting to "get it?" I would argue so. At least the evidence is starting to look that way.
Let's dig in...
Duncan Hunter's campaign team has come to a few realizations: He's not the front-runner. He can't command media attention like some of the other nominees. And his biggest strength is his unique blend of being both a populist and a conservative.
Roll up those strings in to a ball of yarn in the modern world and you've got Duncan Hunter's "broadband bypass strategy."
Let's dig in...
Democratic Presidential Candidate Chris Dodd hits it out of the park with his appearance on Jon Stewart.