1992 presidential election

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6.783 documents for 1992 presidential election
  • James E. Logothetis could see where the New Jersey diner was headed, and it wasn't anywhere near the chicken croquettes and roast beef that he had been cooking for years in the kitchen of the Candlewyck Diner. The old diner menus are 50 years old ... people won't eat that anymore," Logothetis said. Even his father, Emanuel, who had opened the East Rutherford landmark in 1969 with a brother, was in agreement. And the decor that they had been so proud to display when Bill Clinton visited during the 1992 presidential election was starting to look its age.

  • The 6th Congressional District comprises all of Marin and part of Sonoma County. Its registration is some 53 percent Democrat, 23 percent Republican and 19 percent "decline to state." Incumbent Lynn Woolsey, 70, is running to retain her seat in Congress, which she has occupied for 16 years. Her opponent is retired "CaI State Long Beach professor and Rohnert Park resident Mike Halliwell, 65. The 6th Assembly District covers all of Marin and a portion of Sonoma County. Its registration is 53 percent Democrat, 22 percent Republican and 20 percent "decline to state." Incumbent Jared Huffman is being challenged by Republican software executive Paul Lavery of Novato, who says he has resided in the 6th District since 2003. He has a BA from American University in Washington, D.C., and an MBA fr...

    ... and lost in the 2006 Republican primary election for this seat He's back, this time as the parry no... Governor Zell Miller, but following the 1992 presidential election he "realized that his core b...

  • Remember the 1992 presidential election when economics emerged as a major issue, thanks in part to Independent candidate H. Ross Perot's crusade for a balanced federal budget? The billionaire's campaign helped give former President William J. Clinton an electoral edge over Bush's father, then-incumbent President George Herbert Walker Bush. The Urban League movement, however, would prefer a more comprehensive effort that incorporates an extension of unemployment benefits, increased food stamps and greater investment in summer jobs for at-risk youth. According to a recent analysis by Moody.com's Chief Economist Mark Zandi, extending unemployment insurance and increasing food stamp payments would generate $1.64 and $1.73 per dollar investment, respectively. That compares to $1.26 per dolla...

  • Sweatshopped American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees labor boss Gerald McEntee, who played kingmaker in the 1992 presidential election race by elevating a then-obscure Arkansas governor to the Democrat nomination for president, stayed inside the "family" and pushed forward the endorsement of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton in late October. Brownback, according to Kansas state party officials, isn't in any serious danger of not being reelected, but his support of immigration reform didn't sit well with some grassroots conservative folk on the other side of the issue.

  • Maine's top election official predicted a record turnout today as presidential stand-ins, congressional candidates and referendum activists made one last push Monday for voters' support. More Mainers are likely to cast ballots this year than in the 1992 presidential election - when the record was set, Secretary of State Dan Gwadosky said. That year, 73 percent of Maine's voting- age population of 929,809 cast ballots. This year, more than 1 million Mainers are old enough to vote.

  • It may not be the economy, stupid. Then again, James Carville's famous maxim about the 1992 presidential campaign might well be valid in 2012. But it's quite possible that on Election Day, voters' most urgent concerns -- economic or not -- will be driven by overseas events that neither President Obama nor his Republican opponent can predict or control.

  • PROVO -- It's no secret William Jefferson Clinton is unpopular in Provo, the most conservative city in America based on at least one national study. Clinton, remember, actually finished third in Utah in the 1992 presidential election, behind President George H.W. Bush and Ross Perot.

  • The outcome of the 1992 presidential election will influence the future of small businesses hit hard by the recession. Bill Clinton's policies are more favorable that those of Pres Bush. Health care costs and the Americans with Disabilities Act bear heavily upon small businesses.

  • In the 1992 presidential election, Bill Clinton's cunning campaign strategist James Carville summed up the pivotal issue with the now immortal words, "It's the economy, stupid. Mr. Carville's admonition, which was emblazoned on the walls of Mr. Clinton's fabled campaign "war room," could well apply to this year's congressional

  • It's the economy" - the refrain in the 1992 presidential election - appears to be making a comeback in 2008. According to a majority of readers, the economy and taxes will be the defining issue of the 2008 presidential campaign. The results of this week's poll were:



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