So did Barack Obama. I've also heard from Michelle, Hillary and Chelsea. If you don't get the candidate newsletters, you don't know what you're missing.
Bill Clinton's email hit my inbox at 1:32 EST. The subject: "What matters in this race." In the body, there's a bar graph comparing $1.9 million to $141,176, which I guess is for us visual people - gee, the 1.9 million is so much higher!
So, what does matter in this race? Is it the issues? Who can beat McCain? The candidate who can lead us out of war and into prosperity? Nope.
The ads we put on the air matter. The number of phone calls we make matters. The rides we give to the polls matter. And most important of all, what you do right now matters.
As the son of an English teacher, I'm cursed by grammar. While most people can read right through a misplaced apostrophe and absorb the meaning, it stops me in my tracks.
We have the best candidate with the best ideas -- and she's a fighter. She's knows that you are standing with her every step of the way.
When we send out the Songfacts newsletter, three people look it over before it goes out. I'm not sure how many people are on Hillary's list, but "She's knows" really isn't presidential - at least for Democrats.
Obama's note arrived at 2:21. Subject: "Something extraordinary." Looks like over a million people have donated to his campaign, which explains Bill's bar graph. That is pretty extraordinary, and if you live in Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island or Vermont, there's a good chance your phone is going to ring:
That's why, on this historic day, we are committing ourselves to a new goal: calling one million people before the March 4th primaries.