2008 presidential candidates
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Both Presidential candidates have strong records of support for law enforcement; however, the best way to help fight crime and assuage the economic crisis may be found in other policies. On the Armed Services Committee, McCain has called for more defense spending and insisted military interventions be designed to achieve victory; he criticized the Clinton administration for using air power alone and ruling out ground troops in Bosnia and for not using "all necessary force" in Kosovo.
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ECONOMIC ADVISERS TO 2008 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES PARTICIPATE IN A DEBATE AT THE NATIONAL PRESS CLUB SPONSORED BY THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION...
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The White House may be the most expensive piece of real estate in Washington. Its current occupant, George Bush, paid $350 million last year for a fou...
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Democratic presidential contender John Edwards was in a tough spot.
Participating in a CNN debate on "faith and values," Edwards was confronted with...
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Housing Policy
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After two weeks of parties, balloons and fireworks -- and hours and hours of speeches -- the presidential race comes down to this: 58 more days.
In that time, Republican John McCain and Democrat Barack Obama will meet for three debates, their running mates for one.
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To: POLITICAL EDITORS
Contact: Adam Smith of Public Campaign, +1-202-293-0222
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IN HIS BIOGRAPHY of Hillary Clinton, Carl Bernstein writes of when Alan Simpson, a Republican senator from Wyoming and a man of great repute, paid a v...
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Janesville -- With one eye on Wisconsin and perhaps another on Ohio, Democrat Barack Obama brought a feisty and populist tone to his first full day of campaigning here, railing against the "growing inequality" of the global economy, telling an audience of autoworkers that he launched his career "in the shadow of a closed steel mill on the south side of Chicago.
In a speech at Janesville's GM assembly plant, Obama mixed pointed attacks on rival Hillary Rodham Clinton with economic plans and ideas he hopes will resonate with working people, including a key part of Clinton's voting coalition -- blue-collar Democrats.