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August 21, 2008 10:45:49 PM CDT



A New York President? track this thread

Started by Imperator; Last updated Feb 28, 08 11:05 AM CST by Imperator | View history

A New York President?

Hillary, Rudy, and Mike are looking to bring some NYC attitude down DC way. Could the presidential race turn into a three-way subway series?

After years of southerners dominating the presidency, New Yorkers now have better odds, offering up three potential candidates. Hillary Clinton and Rudy Giuliani have already declared; the coyer Mike Bloomberg remains adamant that he is not a candidate, even as he takes all the necessary steps (like leaving the Republican party) to facilitate an independent run.

Stories

Stories 61 - 80 of 276

  • October 2007
    • Rivals Boast Right Stuff in Fight for Conservative Cred

      Rivals Boast Right Stuff in Fight for Conservative Cred

      (Newser) - Republican presidential hopefuls fought bitterly over who has the best conservative credentials in an Orlando, Fla., forum last night. Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee cited their conservative executive experience, while John McCain and Fred Thompson touted conservative Senate voting records. Giuliani generally sparred with Thompson, and McCain with Romney. More »

    • Dubious Bush Benefactor Embedded in Clinton Camp

      Dubious Bush Benefactor Embedded in Clinton Camp

      (Newser) - Hillary Clinton has another backer as mysterious as the now-discredited Norman Hsu—this one a businessman who goes way back with George W. Bush. The Nation examines Clinton's ties to Alan Quasha, the Harken Energy magnate who bailed out the younger Bush’s oil company in 1986. Quasha now has an odd, under-the-radar connection to the Clinton campaign. More »

    • Clintons Keep White House Papers Buried

      Clintons Keep White House Papers Buried

      (Newser) - People curious about Hillary Clinton’s role in her husband’s White House won’t find anything helpful in his presidential library, Newsweek reports. Less than 1% of the 98 million documents and emails there are public, though all are subject to the Freedom of Information Act. Bill Clinton instructed librarians to “consider withholding” anything related to “policy, personal, or political” matters. More »

    • Giuliani: Fear Not, Conservatives

      Giuliani: Fear Not, Conservatives

      (Newser) - Conservatives at the Value Voters Summit in Washington, DC, gave Giuliani polite applause today as he admitted his moderate-to-liberal views on abortion and other issues, the AP reports. He stressed shared stands on Iraq, school choice and conservative judges, but kept mum about gay marriage. "We may not always agree," he said. "I don't always agree with myself. But I will give you reason to trust me." More »

    • Religious Republicans Dig Fred

      Religious Republicans Dig Fred

      (Newser) - Fred Thompson's campaign is making headway with conservative Christian voters, according to new polling data reported in Politico . Thompson, whose late campaign start was much maligned by Republican insiders, trails Giuliani by 8 percentage points among all Republicans, but he leads 29% to 19% among weekly Republican churchgoers—a group that holds much sway. More »

    • In Chinatown, Something Smells Fishy

      In Chinatown, Something Smells Fishy

      (Newser) - Hillary Clinton’s campaign coffers are benefiting from unlikely and possibly illegal sources, an LA Times investigation reveals. Checks for four-figure amounts are coming from dishwashers, immigrants unable to vote, and other unlikely donors in New York’s Chinatown, some of whom report feeling coerced by neighborhood associations. Other donors were impossible to track down, even with their neighbors’ help. More »

    • Christian Right Isn't Singing the Praises of GOP Candidates

      Christian Right Isn't Singing the Praises of GOP Candidates

      (Newser) - Crowded as the GOP field may be, the religious right can't  seem to find a congenial candidate. The Washington Post reports that evangelicals—today beginning a 2-day summit—remain unmoved no matter how sweetly Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, and John McCain come calling. And the idea of a Rudy Guiliani nomination has a few threatening to back a third-party candidate. More »

    • Clinton Foes to Hype '92 Phone Tap

      Clinton Foes to Hype '92 Phone Tap

      (Newser) - GOP rivals have found their latest Clinton attack material, a report the Dem frontrunner listened to an illegal tape of a cellphone conversation in 1992—and they're asking how that squares with her stance on government surveillance. A book released in June alleges Hillary heard opponents discussing a Bill mistress, and her camp hasn’t denied it, The Hill reports. More »

    • Clinton Leads in Primary Cash

      Clinton Leads in Primary Cash

      (Newser) - The $35 million Hillary Clinton has on hand for her primary campaign edges out the $32 million in Barack Obama’s coffers, according to financial reports acquired by the AP. But both have almost three times the money of any other campaign—Rudy Giuliani leads Republicans with just $11.6 million, less than third-place Democrat John Edwards. More »

    • Rudy, McCain Swinging at Mitt

      Rudy, McCain Swinging at Mitt

      (Newser) - The gloves are off in the Republican presidential race, with the McCain and Giuliani campaigns forming a tacit alliance to take down Mitt Romney, the Politico observes. McCain said today that, unlike Romney, “I’m not going to con you,” while Giuliani ruthlessly derided Romney for saying a president should “sit down with your attorneys” before deciding to attack Iran. More »

    • Clinton Up by 21 Points in NH

      Clinton Up by 21 Points in NH

      (Newser) - Hillary's up by 21 points over Obama in New Hampshire, a new poll says, and Mitt's got a 6% edge on Giuliani. More than half of state Dems say Hillary has the best shot at beating a Republican in 2008, but roles reverse on the GOP side: "While Mitt Romney is ahead in the horserace, many voters think the betting money should be on Rudy Giuliani next November," says a pollster. More »

    • Black Women Face Tough Choice

      Black Women Face Tough Choice

      (Newser) - South Carolina’s real Democratic debate is going down in the hair salon, where the New York Times informally polled black women on their split allegiances to Hillary and Obama. Maternal fondness for Barack may work against him—one won’t vote for him because “I fear that they just would kill him.” Black women are a crucial 29% of the state's primary voters. More »

    • Button Down Meets Blue Collar in Iowa

      Button Down Meets Blue Collar in Iowa

      (Newser) - Advantage, Obama: He's already winning blue collar hearts in Iowa before Hillary shows up for her caucus drive. He can also talk agriculture and education with ease because Iowa's troubles resemble Illinois'. And vets he meets there resemble his grandad, a WWII soldier from Kansas. Yet the big city lawmaker still needs reminders of Iowa life: "Hogs matter to Iowans!" is scrawled across an article in his office. More »

    • Hillary Does About-Face on Iran

      Hillary Does About-Face on Iran

      (Newser) - Hillary Clinton told a voter in an apple orchard yesterday that she would negotiate with Iran “with no conditions”—the very statement for which she took Barack Obama to the woodshed in July, calling him "naive." The difference? Her campaign tells the AP she doesn't agree with Obama that the US "should precommit to meeting directly with Ahmadinejad.” More »

    • Bill’s Scads of Donations May Backfire on Hill

      Bill’s Scads of Donations May Backfire on Hill

      (Newser) - Former President Clinton rakes in cash for his foundation, while a future President Clinton would have to deal with the appearance of influence-buying. Bill’s foundation isn’t required to divulge donors, and there's no apparent limit on a first spouse’s fundraising, but Salon reports many Clinton Foundation givers among Hillary’s elite—and says suspicions of impropriety are inevitable. More »

    • Rudy, Mitt Trade Kerry Insults

      Rudy, Mitt Trade Kerry Insults

      (Newser) - Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney couldn't seem to get out of the ring yesterday, even though their tussle at Tuesday's debate was over. The campaigns  kept it going with press-release jabs, each rehashing his opponent's debate language on Iran and each comparing the other to John Kerry, notes Election Central’s Greg Sargent. Team Rudy hit first, blasting Romney for saying he’d check with lawyers about approval for air strikes:  “Another Massachusetts politician also wanted a national security test.” More »

    • Clinton Promises Centrist Presidency

      Clinton Promises Centrist Presidency

      (Newser) - Hillary Clinton fought back today against opponents who call her a polarizing force, telling the Washington Post she's uniquely equipped to forge a centrist coalition. “You can't just wake up and say, ‘Let's all just hold hands.’” But, “You've got to demonstrate that you're not going to be deterred by (partisanship).” More »

    • Solid Fred Joins Heated Debate

      Solid Fred Joins Heated Debate

      (Newser) - In the first debate of his nascent quest for the White House, Fred Thompson stuck to a traditional Republican agenda as the gloves of rivals Mitt Romney and Rudolph Giuliani came off in some of the sharpest clashes so far. The LA Times reports that Thompson, a former senator, appeared visibly nervous but grew in confidence as the debate went on. More »

    • Hillary Offers 401(k)s for All

      Hillary Offers 401(k)s for All

      (Newser) - Today Hillary unveiled a new plan, vowing to help Americans retire by matching $1,000 of their savings with federal funds. She says feds can match 50-100% of the first $1,000 saved in a 401(k)-style account, depending on one's income. She plans to pay the $20-$25 billion tab by freezing the estate tax, but the New York Times warns that today's lawmakers would nix such a move. More »

    • Hillary Captures Base Critical to Primaries

      Hillary Captures Base Critical to Primaries

      (Newser) - While cautioning that it's still early, the LA Times reports that Hillary Clinton’s frontrunner status owes largely to her dominance among groups that are stalwarts in the Democratic nominating process. Barack Obama rules among the young and affluent, but likely primary voters are women, seniors, and blue-collar voters—all Hillary-friendly demographics. More »

Stories 61 - 80 of 276

New York State Flag
Giuliani and Bloomberg show their support   (Getty Images)
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., smiles as New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, right, and Deputy Mayor Daniel Doctoroff, back left, look on during the NYC2012 bid news conference in Singapore...   (Associated Press)
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