------------------------------------------------------
            The Hardball Briefing On MSNBC
------------------------------------------------------

Just one day after announcing the brand new Hardball Campaign Ad Challenge, 
excitement is growing from coast to coast as amateur ad makers everywhere get 
to work on their own 30-second spots. Go to http://hardball.msnbc.com for more 
on the challenge. And tomorrow, we'll announce our all-star panel of judges. 

Tonight on Hardball, presidential contender John Edwards talks about his 
poverty tour and his presidential campaign. Can he win support for his campaign 
by highlighting poverty as an issue? Can he recapture his early lead in Iowa to 
beat Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama? Can a win in Iowa send him to the 
nomination? 

Plus, anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan tells Chris whether she thinks Democrats 
in Congress are doing enough to accomplish what she wants -- to get U.S. troops 
out of Iraq. 

Also tonight, Hardball's David Shuster is on Capitol Hill for the latest on the 
Senate's plans to stay up all night to debate Iraq. He'll also talk to some of 
the many pro-war and anti-war activists descending on the Capitol to make their 
voices heard. 

MSNBC Political Analyst Ron Reagan and Pete Hegseth, an Iraq vet and head of 
the Vets for Freedom, will be here for the Hardball Debate: Has the president's 
plan run its course and will leaving Iraq make us safer or not? 

The Hardball Roundtable of Time.com's Ana Marie Cox, the New York Post's 
Charles Hurt, and radio talk show host Armstrong Williams will be here to break 
down the big news of the day.

Don't miss Wednesday's Hardball with Judy Miller, the Pulitzer Prize winner who 
served 85 days in jail in the CIA leak case. 

Brooke Brower compiled the "Hardball Briefing" in Washington, D.C.

=========================================
This e-mail is never sent unsolicited. You have received this The Hardball 
Briefing Newsletter newsletter because you subscribed to it or, someone 
forwarded it to you.

To remove yourself from the list (or to add yourself to the list if this 
message was forwarded to you) simply go to

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7140407/, select unsubscribe, enter the email 
address receiving this message, and click the Go button.

Microsoft Corporation - One Microsoft Way - Redmond, WA 98052
MSN PRIVACY STATEMENT
http://privacy.msn.com <http://privacy.msn.com/>

Reply via email to