| | November 02, 2012 | | HURRICANE SANDY Hurricane Sandy's official death toll reached 90 on Thursday evening, as repair crews and government officials raced to restore power and basic services in the areas devastated by the superstorm. Thirty-eight were killed in New York City alone, where residents were getting restless after three days without electricity and a fully functioning mass-transit system. Bridges to the city were opened, but authorities imposed a carpooling rule that required at least three people in each vehicle. Gasoline shortages have forced many cab and car-service companies to pull vehicles off the roads, further complicating an already delicate transportation situation. PLEASE, LET IT BE OVER A sobbing kid tired of "Bronco Bama" and Mitt Romney captures the general sentiment among Americans this campaign season: Where was the passion and pathos last seen in 2008? The Daily Beast's Michelle Cottle on the cranky, exhausting election. STILL QUESTIONS The CIA and the State Department allegedly had a secret deal for security that went disastrously wrong in Benghazi in the weeks prior to the attack that killed four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador, according to a report in Friday's Wall Street Journal. When the bodies of the four slain Americans arrived in the U.S., noticeably absent from the funeral procession was CIA director David Petraeus, which officials told the Journal was due to Petraeus's efforts to hide the CIA's role in the botched security plan. But the CIA and the State Department reportedly "weren't on the same page" about their respective roles, and the rift between the two agencies is considered one of the key reasons why security seemed inadequate in the days following the attack. ALMOST THERE It's the home stretch now. A CNN/ORC poll released Thursday showed President Obama leading 50 percent to 48 percent among likely voters in Colorado, but the president's slim lead is well within the margin of error. The tightly contested battleground state--with nine electoral votes--went for Obama in 2008, and this time around, he has a tiny lead with independents. Meanwhile, a Pew study released Friday indicates that both Obama and Mitt Romney have received overwhelmingly negative coverage in the media. From Aug. 27 to Oct. 21, just 19 percent of the stories about President Obama were considered "favorable," with 30 percent considered "unfavorable." For Romney, only 15 percent were favorable and 38 percent unfavorable. | |
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