Joe Scarborough of MSNBC observed that the media only speak of "litmus tests" when it comes to Republicans choosing pro-life backers, never Democrats choosing pro-choice supporters.
Asked on "The Colbert Report" about a possible U.S. Senate bid in Pennsylvania in 2010, MSNBC "Hardball" host Chris Matthews said, "I want to be a senator."
After revealing that she is handy with a gun, Air America's Rachel Maddow argued that the media has been unfair to Barack Obama over his recent comments about people who "cling" to guns.
Appearing on today's "Face the Nation," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., made a nasty joke at Bill Clinton's expense, suggesting that the former president had a senior moment.
Law professor Jonathan Turley, an ABC News analyst, strongly suggested that the United States' polygamy ban is unconstitutional.
Chris Matthews, who has repeatedly praised Barack Obama, expressed "concern" that his rival, Hillary Clinton, could do better than expected in the Pennsylvania primary.
"Morning Joe" had a field day with Bill Clinton's fibs about wife Hillary's Tuzla tangle with the truth. Her ads say she's ready to take emergency calls at 3 a.m. as president, but her husband said she's not so alert at 11 p.m.
On the April 9 episode of "Hardball," Chris Matthews said anything but "no" to Michael Smerconish's suggestion that Matthews is well-positioned to run for the U.S. Senate.
On "Morning Joe," host Joe Scarborough and MSNBC political correspondent David Shuster agreed that the firing of chief Clinton campaign strategist Mark Penn didn't come nearly soon enough.
Kate Snow of "Good Morning America" said the failure by Bill and Hillary Clinton to file and release their 2007 tax returns shows "they're human."