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September 5, 2008 4:53:01 PM CDT



Election 2008 track this thread

Started by S Goldstein; Last updated Jun 6, 08 1:33 PM CDT by K Schwartz | View history

Election 2008

Competition is hot for the highest office in the land. Will it be Barack Obama or John McCain? Just so long as it isn't George...

The most diverse crowd of presidential hopefuls ever hit the campaign trail for 2008. On the left, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton geared up for a close race; John Edwards rounded out the top three on the Democratic side, with Al Gore playing the role of potential spoiler. Months later, the charismatic-but-inexperienced junior senator emerged as the delegate winner. Meanwhile, on the right, the Reaganites held out hope for a definitive Fred Thompson run. Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani became early favorites, only to bow out, with the others, in favor of John McCain.

Stories

Stories 121 - 140 of 2535

<< Prev 1 ... 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ... 127 Next >>
  • August 2008
    • DNC Keynoter Is Red-State Success Story

      DNC Keynoter Is Red-State Success Story

      (Newser) - Keynoting tonight at the Democratic Convention is former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner, who broke through partisan gridlock despite the state’s conservative tilt and his own northern roots, the Christian Science Monitor reports. Warner, a successful businessman before entering politics, was elected governor of Virginia in 2001. Though faced with a Republican legislature and one-term limit, he left office a huge success. More »

    • Clinton Never Was in Running for Veep Slot

      Clinton Never Was in Running for Veep Slot

      (Newser) - In a meeting soon after Hillary Clinton conceded the nomination, Barack Obama told her he probably wouldn’t select her for the VP slot, sources close to the conversation told the Washington Post . She had requested that he not put her through a charade of vetting if she wasn't a serious candidate; he didn’t want to raise false hopes and knew after the rough primary season that the two wouldn’t make a good match. More »

    • Obama Plot Not a 'Credible Threat': Cops

      Obama Plot Not a 'Credible Threat': Cops

      (Newser) - Authorities say the armed man arrested near Denver on Sunday never posed a "credible threat" to Barack Obama despite reports he threatened the Democratic candidate, AP reports. "We're absolutely confident there is no credible threat to the candidate, the Democratic National Convention, or the people of Colorado," the city's US attorney said today. More »

    • High Marks for Michelle's Passion, Kennedy's Emotion

      High Marks for Michelle's Passion, Kennedy's Emotion

      (Newser) - How did the speakers do on the first night of the Democrats’ big show? There’s no shortage of opinions: Mark Halperin, in Time , gives good grades to Caroline Kennedy and Michelle Obama, the latter of whom likely convinced the country she’s ready to be first lady “in a major way.” But he saves his highest praise for Ted Kennedy’s moving speech. More »

    • Hillary, Like Suffrage, Is a Symbol of Frustration

      Hillary, Like Suffrage, Is a Symbol of Frustration

      (Newser) - Many have noted that Hillary Clinton’s speech tonight comes on the anniversary of women’s suffrage, but that’s not necessarily the uplifting coincidence it appears to be, writes feminist author Susan Faludi in the New York Times. Despite Clinton’s fantastic primary showing, her supporters remain disconsolate because feminist history is loaded with half-measures and failed successes—and suffrage was one of them.  More »

    • Hillary Can Only Lose Tonight—but She Knows How to Lose

      Hillary Can Only Lose Tonight&mdash;but She Knows How to Lose

      (Newser) - Hillary Clinton's mission in Denver tonight is both painful and fraught with peril, Marie Cocco writes in the Washington Post . As “cheerleader in chief" who may want to pursue another run herself, she can't really win—surely she'll be criticized for being either too methodical or too exuberant, and her supporters will misbehave—but Clinton has to know that going in, and “Clinton is a woman who knows how to lose.” More »

    • Advice for Obama: Don't Take Any Advice

      Advice for Obama: Don't Take Any Advice

      (Newser) - As Barack Obama arrives in Denver, the once-buoyant candidate is being assailed with bad advice from all sides, writes David Brooks. From a Dukakis-style policy blitz to Michael Moore-ish pugilism, the suggestions for Obama's team are a "Greatest Misses compilation" of past failures. Obama knows what he should do, says the New York Times columnist: push on, stay authentic, and tune out "the phantasmagorical vapors of his own party." More »

    • Obama's Veep Text Reached Record 2.9M

      Obama's Veep Text Reached Record 2.9M

      (Newser) - Barack Obama's cell phone text to supporters naming Joe Biden as his running mate reached 2.9 million people, according to Nielsen—enough for a $290,000 bill at normal text rates. The statistics company ranks the message the nation's "single largest mobile marketing event" to date. More »

    • GOP Looks to Rain on Convention Parade

      GOP Looks to Rain on Convention Parade

      (Newser) - The days of the parties giving each other a breather during convention week are long gone, the New York Times reports. As Democrats reveled in Denver yesterday, the Republicans began popping balloons--launching attack ads, holding press conferences underscoring the Clinton-Obama divide, and trotting their candidate out on the Tonight Show. The Dems, for their part, plan to be just as aggressive during the Republican National Convention. More »

    • Leno's McCain Jokes Hit Homes

      Leno's McCain Jokes Hit Homes

      (Newser) - John McCain yesterday made what has become a mandatory stop on the campaign trail: The Tonight Show . He used the appearance to defuse jokes about his age in advance of his 72d birthday this week and attempt to do some damage control over his recent confusion about how many homes he owns. Leno quipped in his monologue that "thousands" of homes—"most of them belonging to John McCain"—were ruined by tropical storm Fay, reports Politico. More »

    • Kennedy: 'Dream Lives On'

      Kennedy: 'Dream Lives On'

      (Newser) - Ted Kennedy, vowing that "nothing is going to keep me away," made an impassioned plea for Barack Obama tonight at the Democratic convention, MSNBC reports. Kennedy, who's battling brain cancer, declared it a "season of hope" and said the nation needs Obama's lofty ambitions. "When John Kennedy thought of going to the moon, he didn't say, 'It's too far to go there, we shouldn't even try,'" he said. "We can reach the moon again." More »

    • Obama Out to Stop Ad Linking Him to Radical

      Obama Out to Stop Ad Linking Him to Radical

      (AP) - Barack Obama is striking back to stamp out an ad that links him to a 1960s radical, eager to demonstrate a far more aggressive response to attacks than John Kerry did when faced with the 2004 "Swift Boat" campaign. Obama not only aired a response ad to the spot linking him to William Ayers, but sought to block stations from running the commercial by warning station managers and asking the Justice Department to intervene. More »

    • Dems, Still Bruised, Open Convention

      Dems, Still Bruised, Open Convention

      (AP) - The Democrats opened their 2008 presidential nominating convention today in Denver, a four-day political festival to nominate Barack Obama for president and fellow Sen. Joe Biden as his running mate. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who is battling brain cancer, was in Denver for the opening and might speak tonight to fellow Democrats still trying to recover from a long and bruising primary battle between Obama and Hillary Clinton. More »

    • Jesse Jackson Jr.: Obama's Like Jackie Robinson

      Jesse Jackson Jr.: Obama's Like Jackie Robinson

      (Newser) - Barack Obama is like Jackie Robinson: he’s got to perform despite racist taunts, Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., son of the civil-rights leader, said during a Politico-sponsored panel discussion today ahead of the Democratic convention. Like the baseball pioneer, Obama “has to keep smiling,” in the face of vicious rumors “because no one wants an angry African American in the White House,” Jackson said. More »

    • Way More Than Just Standing By Her Man

      Way More Than Just Standing By Her Man

      (Newser) - When Barack Obama met Michelle Robinson, she was on the fast track at a prestigious Chicago law firm. As the story goes, Obama took her with him when he left to start a public life, surprising Michelle’s friends and family. But Mrs. Obama’s own entrée into not-for-profit circles and public service connected her husband to a Chicago network that has been invaluable, Time reports ahead of her convention speech. More »

    • It's Not Race That's Holding Him Back

      It's Not Race That's Holding Him Back

      (Newser) - Barack Obama goes into this week's convention in Denver with only the slimmest of leads—or, as some polls suggest, trailing John McCain. In a year when it's widely assumed that any Democratic candidate should be a shoo-in, many in the press have suggested that Obama's race is costing him support. Not so, writes Matt Bai in the New York Times , who says that the candidate "faces genuine obstacles that are more salient than skin color." More »

    • Madge Sticks It to McCain, Is Sweet to Obama

      Madge Sticks It to McCain, Is Sweet to Obama

      (Newser) - Is Madonna using her Sticky & Sweet world tour to strike back at John McCain’s celebrity ad? During a remix of “Like a Prayer,” a screen flashes images of destruction followed by shots of Hitler, Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe, and then McCain, reports the New York Times . Barack Obama makes a cameo in another montage including images of Gandhi, John Lennon, and Al Gore. More »

    • Obama-Clinton Tension Runs High in Denver

      Obama-Clinton Tension Runs High in Denver

      (Newser) - Months after Hillary Clinton announced her support for Barack Obama, tensions between the two camps have flared again, Politico reports, and behind-the-scenes sniping in Denver is intense. Bill Clinton is unhappy with his speech assignment—Wednesday night's theme, securing America's future, leaves him little room to revisit the successes of his own presidency—while Obama aides say Clinton associates still act like the former first couple has leverage. More »

    • Lefty Ticket a Boon to McCain

      Lefty Ticket a Boon to McCain

      (Newser) - Barack Obama has taken a big risk by choosing a VP almost as liberal as he is, writes Fred Barnes in the Wall Street Journal . In the past, Democrats have found success in politically balanced tickets: centrist Jimmy Carter and lefty Walter Mondale, moderate Bill Clinton and more liberal Al Gore. Despite a slight move leftward since ’04, America remains a center-right nation, Barnes claims. More »

    • Some Blacks Think Obama Could Threaten Progress

      Some Blacks Think Obama Could Threaten Progress

      (Newser) - Despite being a landmark in black American history, Barack Obama’s pending nomination could stall civil rights progress, some blacks say, because his success could fuel an argument that racial divisions have been healed, the New York Times reports. The danger is “that we declare victory,” a sociologist said. “Historic as this moment is, it does not signify a major victory in the ongoing battle.” More »

Stories 121 - 140 of 2535

<< Prev 1 ... 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ... 127 Next >>
Presidential hopeful U.S. Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., speaks during an economic policy town hall meeting Friday, July 27, 2007, at West Virginia State University in Institute, W.Va. (AP Photo/Jeff...   (Associated Press)
Presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speaks to reporters in Grand Rapids, Mich. on Tuesday, July 24, 2007. McCain on Tuesday brushed aside derogatory comments made by former House Speaker Newt...   (Associated Press)
Democratic presidential hopeful U.S. Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks during a gathering of supporters, Saturday, July 28, 2007, at Union Park in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)   (Associated Press)
Republican presidential hopeful and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, answers a question during an interview in Chicago in this June 14, 2007 file photo. Romney's campaign found 9,732 ways to spend...   (Associated Press)
Democratic presidential hopeful, former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards speaks about his tax reform policy, Thursday, July 26, 2007, at Grand View College in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)   (Associated Press)
Republican presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani gestures as he speaks to a group of supporters in San Francisco, Monday, July 23, 2007. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)   (Associated Press)
Democratic presidential hopeful New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson gestures as he makes his point during the debate sponsored by CNN, YouTube and Google at The Citadel military college in Charleston, S.C.,...   (Associated Press)
Prospective Republican presidential candidate former U.S. Sen. Fred Thompson, of Tennessee, speaks at a South Carolina Republican Party fundraiser, Wednesday, June 27, 2007, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Brett...   (Associated Press)
Democratic presidential hopefuls former Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., left, Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., center, and Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. are seen on a monitor at the back of the hall during the Democratic...   (Associated Press)
Republican presidential hopefuls, from left, Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo.; former secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson; Sen. Sam Brownback R-Kan.; former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney;...   (Associated Press)
Democratic Presidential hopefuls from left former Sen. Mike Gravel, D-Alaska; Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn.; former Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C.; Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y.; Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.;...   (Associated Press)
The White House is seen in morning sunlight in Washington as President Bush, who is in Camp David, Md., transferred the powers of the presidency to Vice President Dick Cheney on Saturday, July 21, 2007,...   (Associated Press)
White House   ((c) Seansie)
The White House   ((c) LollyKnit)
In this April 6, 2006 photo, Senator John McCain, R-Ariz., background, and Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., take part in a news conference on Capitol Hill, as Senate Democrats and Republicans announced they...   (AP Photo)
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Hott 4 Hill feat. Taryn Southern   (Hott4Hill (YouTube))
Obama Girl has a Crush on Obama   (youngnwild (YouTube))
Debate '08: Obama Girl vs Giuliani Girl   (olio100 (YouTube))

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Background

United States Presidential Election, 2008
Wikipedia

The United States presidential election of 2008 will be 55th consecutive quadrennial election for President and Vice President of the United States, and is scheduled to be held on November 4, 2008. The President serves as the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, head of state and head of government....

» Read more about United States Presidential Election, 2008 at Wikipedia

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