Not that this comes as any surprise, but the quickest and readiest kind of live-blogging material at hand is provided via our biggest media outlets. Two examples, off the top, this morning:

1) Karl Rove is one of today's guests on Fox News Sunday, vis-a-vis Chris van Hollen representing the other side I suppose. BTW, I do not think that the pairing of a behind-the-scenes hack, however experienced he is in some sense, and a duly elected congressman is an equal pairing. Typically, Fox provides more of a venue to the GOP as repped by Rove here, and less to the Dems, with a congress member demoted to the level of commentator. (Rove is now a columnist for Newsweek, owned by the Washington Post Co.)
   Chris Wallace presents the 2008 election as a contest between a president low in the polls and a Congress low in the polls. What is NOT happening here is mention of the obvious point, namely that the reason Congress sank so dramatically in polls after the 2006 elections is that it did not move to impeach Bush and to get out of Iraq. So on Fox, Rove gets to deliver his line, and a typical GOP talking point, that Congress is low in opinion polls because of taxing and spending, and not supporting our troops.

2) On Inside Washington, some cursory discussion of the most recent investigation into Rudy Giuliani. No in-depth review of the whole Giuliani chronology, which wd of course be precluded by time constraints. So Nina Totenberg and Charles Krauthammer chime in that the story is only another way of bringing up Giuliani's private life -- a talking point that segues instantly into parallels with Bill Clinton and his troopers, etc.
    No one points out that Rudy Giuliani's moving expenses around on the books is actually fraud, an impeachable offense in any office with impeachment attached to it. Bookkeeping is fundamental, and Giuliani's public response that these transportation expenses were not spread around to different agencies for obfuscation is ludicrously transparent.
    Also not pointed out is that Bernard Kerik started with Giuliani as his driver and bodyguard and is likely to know in some detail about Giuliani's handling of his transportation matters from the start.
    Far from being just basically a veiled attempt to bring in Giuliani's 'private life,' the travel story is by all signs the tip of the iceberg.