Jonathan Martin's Blog entry on this is VERY SHORT:
On what, they won't say.
"We'll have something to talk about," is all a campaign aide would allow.
Check back again in this space or over on our front-page in the morning.
http://www.politico.com/...
But there has been a TON of speculation on this running all nite on various blogs around these here internets, and Obama has fallen a bit on INTRADE tonite.
The most interesting and wildest(ie. Completely flippn' crazy) speculation I've seen comes from HILLBUZZ, via the Hillary Clinton Forum.
http://www.hillaryclintonforum.net/...
It could be something big, or it could be just more hot air.
Whatever it is, McCain is dumping something in the morning to try and control the weekend news cycles.
UPDATE:
McCain's "Story" could be tied to this, just posted on SKYNEWS:
US election officials believe they have uncovered massive attempted voter fraud less than a month before the country goes to the polls to choose its new president.
Eleven separate investigations have now been launched into a voter registration group called the Association of Community Organisations for Reform – or Acorn.
The authorities believe they may have duplicated voter forms, employed convicts to register people and even stolen the names of the American football team the Dallas Cowboys in order to create fake voters.
The suspicions started when authorities in Las Vegas raided the organisation's offices, removing eight computer hard drives and several boxes of documents
.
http://news.sky.com/...
Yet ANOTHER Related ACORN Story now:
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/...
Thousands of allegedly fake voter registrations by a nationwide organization are being investigated. At least nine states are reviewing voter paperwork, and Allegheny County police are looking into similar accusations.
Employees of the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, commonly known as ACORN, are under investigation in Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin since local election officials started noticing irregularities among the thousands of registrations submitted by ACORN.
In Lake County, Ind., Elections Board Director Sally LaSota told The (Munster) Times newspaper that out of 2,000 new voter applications dropped off by ACORN employees, "about 1,100 were no good."