XM's uber-politics channel POTUS '08 will be providing the XM Nation with full coverage of the Super Tuesday contests as voters go to the polls in 24 states tomorrow.
Hosts Rebecca Roberts, Joe Mathieu, and Adrienne Mitchell will anchor the Super Tuesday coverage from the XM studios in Washington, D.C. Meanwhile, POTUS' Scott Walterman will be in The City of Angels to cover the California primaries, while Tim Farley will be in Manhattan to report on the results in New York state.
Tammy Haddad, the veteran network TV political producer and media commentator, will host the latest edition of "High Definition Politics" on POTUS (ch 130) on Tuesday at 6pm ET. Haddad's guests for the hour- long special will include CNN political correspondent Jessica Yellin; Bob Shrum, presidential campaign adviser for Al Gore and John Kerry; Todd Harris, presidential campaign adviser for Fred Thompson and John McCain's 2000 bid; Mike Allen, chief political correspondent for The Politico; and Alexandra Stoddard, political analyst and associate editor for The Hill.
But wait, there's more.
The Washington Post, FOX News, Los Angeles Times, the polling firm Zogby International, National Journal, and Campaigns & Elections' Politics magazine - all contributors for POTUS - will report news from Super Tuesday states across the nation. Bloggers and podcasters will also weigh in with opinions and analysis.

Random predictions from a guy who picked the Giants: The GOP race effectively ends tomorrow night when McCain wins enough delegates to take the nomination outright, and Obama scores upsets in CA and elsewhere.
damn, do they always have to find the WORST picture of Hillary?
Hilary looks psycho in that photo!
> The GOP race effectively ends tomorrow night when McCain wins enough delegates to take the nomination outright
If that happens, odds on a Democrat president go from likely to certain.
I have to say, XM is doing an amazing job with POTUS so far and I expect it to get even better. It's a shame they aren't advertising it more. Tell people they can buy a cheap $30 radio and listen to it for free, and hope the free previews of other channels convince them to try a subscription down the road.