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President Map – Election Results 2008 – The New York Times

Posted by jhr4us on February 23, 2009

 

President Map

 

365 Obama Electoral Votes Projected Winner

0 undecided

173 McCain Electoral Votes

 
270 needed to win

Popular vote: 66,862,039

Popular vote: 58,319,442

  • * One electoral vote in Nebraska remains undecided. The state allocates its electoral votes on the basis of the results in each Congressional district. Only 569 votes separate John McCain and Barack Obama in unofficial returns from the 2nd District.

President Map – Election Results 2008 – The New York Times

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, Obama, President | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off on President Map – Election Results 2008 – The New York Times

Presidential Election Guide 2008 – Election Guide 2008 – The New York Times

Posted by jhr4us on February 23, 2009

 

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Presidential Election Guide 2008 – Election Guide 2008 – The New York Times

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, McCain, Obama, President | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off on Presidential Election Guide 2008 – Election Guide 2008 – The New York Times

Banking on Becoming President | OpenSecrets

Posted by jhr4us on July 30, 2008

 

Banking on Becoming President

You can find this info at Open Secrets; http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/index.php

The presidential field has dwindled significantly, but not before the candidates raised more than half a billion dollars in 2007. By some predictions, the eventual nominees will need to raise $500 million apiece to compete—a record sum. To find out where all this money is coming from, click on the candidates’ names below and explore the options to the left. The candidates now file campaign finance reports monthly. The reports for July are due August 20th.

Democratic Candidates Candidate  Home State  Jun’08 Raised  Jun’08 Spent  Total Raised   Total Spent   Cash on Hand Debts

                              Obama, Barack         IL            $51,818,371    $23,295,381    $339,216,317  $267,545,993 $71,670,324     $890,921

Republican Candidates  Candidate  Home State  Jun’08 Raised  Jun’08 Spent  Total Raised    Total Spent   Cash on Hand Debts

                                 McCain, John        AZ          $25,871,877     $26,196,488    $145,466,201   $109,829,375 $35,636,825    $1,453,172

Other candidates who have competed in the race

                  Candidate          Party    Home State   Total Raised

                   Barr, Bob             L              GA              $383,653
                   Biden, Joe          D              DE              $11,957,572
               Brownback, Sam     R               KS              $4,242,816
               Clinton, Hillary        D              NY              $233,007,664
                 Dodd, Chris           D              CT              $17,742,068
               Edwards, John        D              NC              $51,690,164
                Gilmore, Jim           R             VA               $392,795
               Giuliani, Rudy          R             NY                $58,672,422
               Gravel, Mike            D             AK                $590,044
             Huckabee, Mike        R              AR               $16,075,487
            Hunter, Duncan         R              CA               $2,650,336
              Keyes, Alan             R              MD               $356,208
           Kucinich, Dennis        D             OH               $4,519,628
               Nader, Ralph           I &
nbsp;   &nbsp
;        DC               $1,365,413
                 Paul, Ron              R             TX               $34,518,355
             Richardson, Bill         D            NM               $23,051,269
              Romney, Mitt          R             MA               $107,070,664
             Tancredo, Tom         R             CO                $8,279,342
           Thompson, Fred         R             TN                $23,448,481
         Thompson, Tommy       R             WI                $1,213,254
              Vilsack, Tom            D             IA                $2,079,875

Feel free to distribute or cite this material, but please credit the Center for Responsive Politics. For permission to reprint for commercial uses, such as textbooks, contact the Center.

Banking on Becoming President | OpenSecrets

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, Financing, Fundraisers | Leave a Comment »

Clinton Aide: Hillary Is Not Seeking The Vice Presidency

Posted by jhr4us on July 29, 2008

Breaking News and Opinion on The Huffington Post

 

Clinton Aide: Hillary Is Not Seeking The Vice Presidency

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Robert S. McElvaine

BIO

Robert S. McElvaine: America’s 40 Years War at an End

How fitting–even how poetic–it is that Barack Obama has clinched the Democratic presidential nomination during the week in which we mark the fortieth anniversary of the death of Robert F. Kennedy. This harmonic convergence has deep significance. These events may come to be seen as the bookends of the second American civil war, a war that has divided the nation and been a dominant force in our politics for four decades.

Read Post | Comments (196)

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Kathleen Reardon

BIO

A Mystery Meeting — A Moment In History

Kathleen Reardon, 06.05.2008

None of us knows what Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton spoke about Thursday night, but there is a feeling in the air that perhaps ignorance, arrogance, and cheap put-downs will cease to amuse — cease to raise ratings.

Read Post | Comments (39)

Seth Grahame-Smith

BIO

6 Other Things that Aren’t “Change We Can Believe In”

Seth Grahame-Smith, 06.05.2008

McCain’s “green speech” was one of the funniest half-hours of television since Arrested Development was canceled, and had all the energy and eloquence of Frankenstein on barbiturates.

Read Post | Comments (68)

Drew Westen

BIO

What Voters Saw Tuesday Night

Drew Westen, 06.05.2008

Our brains are equipped to tell the difference between real and genuine smiles, and McCain has such a poor poker face that he would be well advised just to tell the truth from here on out in his campaign.

Read Post | Comments (155)

Andy Stern

BIO

SEIU: Building Political Strength to Change Workers’ Lives

Andy Stern, 06.05.2008

Barack Obama spoke to the SEIU the morning after he clinched the nomination. He spoke to us because he’s one of us, and has spent his entire adult life standing with working families.

Read Post | Comments

Jim Wallis

BIO

A Transformational Moment

Jim Wallis, 06.05.2008

Young people see Obama’s success as natural — he’s an inspirational leader who happens to be black. For my generation, this is a moment that we didn’t think would come in our lifetimes.

Read Post | Comments (22)

Chris Kelly

BIO

Why Hillary Waits

Chris Kelly, 06.05.2008

I guess it’s a little graceless for Hillary to declare that the loser gets four days to let reality to settle in, but remember, this isn’t about her. It’s about the cause to which she’s dedicated her entire adult life: Making Us Sick of Her.

Read Post | Comments (350)

Huff TV

BIO

Arianna On CNN: Discusses Role Of Sexism In Democratic Race

Huff TV, 06.05.2008

Read Post | Comments

Keli Goff

BIO

Obama has Made History but Can He Change it?

Keli Goff, 06.05.2008

I’m not going to say that if he becomes president all of Black America’s ills will magically disappear, but I will say that his nomination changes something.

Read Post | Comments (108)

Al Giordano

BIO

No More Drama

Al Giordano, 06.05.2008

The Obama campaign is the first mass multi-racial collaboration in the U.S. since the Southern Civil Rights movement, and a critical mass of progressive Americans are learning political discipline again.

Read Post | Comments (65)

Arianna Huffington

BIO

Announcing HuffPost Green: Our New Eco-News and Opinion Section

Arianna Huffington, 06.04.2008

Our new HuffPost Green section features up-to-the-minute news stories, blog posts, video, and community forums. But don’t expect too much finger-wagging. We’re not interested in being greener-than-thou — just greener today than yesterday.

Read Post | Comments (102)

Andy Borowitz

BIO

Bill Clinton Updates Facebook Profile

Andy Borowitz, 06.05.2008

Visitors to Mr. Clinton’s profile page at Facebook noticed that minutes after Mrs. Clinton suspended her campaign, President Clinton updated his status from “Married” to “It’s Complicated.”

Read Post | Comments

David Weinberger

BIO

Let’s See the VP Sausage Being Made

David Weinberger, 06.05.2008

Instead of having potential VPs enter through the back door of some undisclosed location, how about if we get to see some of the discussions?

Read Post | Comments (20)

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Did Hillary Clinton’s Media Missteps Help Doom Her Campaign?

Eric Deggans, 06.05.2008

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Bobby and Barack

Tom Hayden, 06.05.2008

ACLU Fights For Justice At Guantanamo

Anthony D. Romero, 06.05.2008

The Shameful Irony of McCain’s New Orleans Speech

Greg Saunders, 06.04.2008

Even In Defeat, It’s All About Her

Bob Cesca, 06.04.2008

Politics on the Couch: Splitting

Justin Frank, 06.05.2008

I Am Not a Bargaining Chip, I Am a Democrat

Hilary Rosen, 06.04.2008

Asking and Telling Sam Nunn

Steve Clemons, 06.05.2008

Why Bobby Rocks A New Generation

Irshad Manji, 06.05.2008

The Costs of Health Care Are Burying American Families

Marian Wright Edelman, 06.05.2008

Clinton To Obama: If You Don’t Want Me, You’re Gonna Have To Tell Me

Jane Hamsher, 06.04.2008

Obama, The New Majority, And The Race (Card) Ahead

Jeff Chang, 06.04.2008

Reading The Pictures: The Clinch

Michael Shaw, 06.04.2008

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Barack Obama: Recycling Cans And Making Change

Tony Sachs, 06.06.2008

Elections and the Death Cult

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Obama can reach Hillary’s female loyalists

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Oil’s Largest One Day Gain On Record. Thankyou Mr. Bernanke

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Interview With Al Franken

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Cheney Makes Incest Joke About West Virginians – Politics on The Huffington Post

 

Cheney Makes Incest Joke About West Virginians

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Huffington Post   |   June 2, 2008 04:59 PM


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***UPDATE*** Akers reports that Cheney has now apologized for his West Virginia incest joke:

Vice President Dick Cheney has apologized through his spokeswoman for making an offhand joke during a speech at the National Press Club Monday stereotyping West Virginia as a state prone to incest.Cheney spokeswoman Lea Anne McBride tells us, “The Vice President’s offhand comment was not meant to hurt anyone. On reflection, he concluded that it was an inappropriate attempt at humor that he should not have made. The Vice President apologizes to the people of West Virginia for the inappropriate remark.”

Mary Ann Akers of the Washington Post asks if West Virginia was just handed to the Democrats when Dick Cheney made an incest joke at West Virginians’ expense:

Cheney was at the Press Club to congratulate this year’s winners of the Gerald R. Ford Journalism Prize for Distinguished Reporting on the Presidency. During a question-and-answer session toward the end of the luncheon, someone asked the vice president about his wife Lynne Cheney’s revelation on MSNBC last year that “Dick and Barack Obama are eighth cousins.”The questioner jokingly asked the vice president if he and Obama were going to have a family reunion, to which Cheney replied he would “have no objections” though he said he doubted Obama would want one – “certainly not before November.”

Then came the offensive punch line. Cheney explained that during the course of researching his family lineage for Lynne’s memoir “Blue Skies, No Fences” last year, he learned there were Cheneys on both his father’s and his mother’s side of the family. There was a Richard Cheney on his mother’s side, the vice president said.

“So I had Cheneys on both sides of the family and we don’t even live in West Virginia,” Cheney quipped.

Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia was not amused:

“That a man who has ascended to the seat of Vice President of the United States would openly display such contempt and astounding ignorance toward his own countrymen is an insult to all Americans. Now that he or the Administration he represents no longer needs their vote, Mr. Cheney apparently feels that he is now free to mock and belittle the people of West Virginia. With his trademark arrogance, the Vice President even added ‘You can say those things when you’re not running for re-election.'””This pitiful comment is not entirely surprising when you consider the source. Vice President Cheney’s words reflect the attitude of an administration and a party that says what they must to get elected and then turns their backs on those they promised to represent.”

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Cheney Makes Incest Joke About West Virginians – Politics on The Huffington Post

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, Hillary, HuffPo, Politics | Leave a Comment »

First Read: Looking back at today

Posted by jhr4us on June 28, 2008

 

——————————————————— First Read: The day in politics by NBC News for NBC News ——————————————————— LOOKING BACK AT TODAY. All About the Unity: “Unity is not only a beautiful place; it’s also a wonderful feeling, isn’t it?” Hillary Clinton said on stage with Barack Obama for the first time since conceding the Democratic nomination. “What we build in Unity will end on the steps of the Capitol when Barack Obama takes the oath of office as our next president.” http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/27/1172417.aspx Maxed Out: A day after Obama wrote a $4,600 check to Hillary Clinton, First Read has learned Bill and Hillary Clinton have returned the favor, donating the maximum to the Illinois senator’s campaign. http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/27/1172716.aspx The Unity Continues… Obama incorporated former Clinton policy director Neera Tanden into the campaign. Tanden did not exactly have kind words for Obama on the economy or health care when she ran Clinton’s shop. http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/27/1172782.aspx McCain weighed in on this Democratic show of unity. “Well, I understand it,” McCain said, adding, “I do think we are able to attract some of Sen. Clinton’s supporters, not so much because of any reason than that they think that I may serve America best.” http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/27/1172397.aspx McCain was up with an ad running in 11 battleground states. It focuses on energy, but also reiterates a patriotic theme that has emerged this week, “Country First.” http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/27/1172036.aspx After Clinton’s loss, is the influence of EMILY’s List waning? http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/27/1172456.aspx McCain brought his energy message to a General Motors plant Friday, touting green technology and new energy sources while rejecting changes to free trade agreements or a bailout for the auto industry. http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/27/1172650.aspx For more: The latest edition of First Read is available now at http://www.FirstRead.MSNBC.com ! ========================================= This e-mail is never sent unsolicited. You have received this MSNBC First Read Newsletter newsletter because you subscribed to it or, someone forwarded it to you. To remove yourself from the list (or to add yourself to the list if this message was forwarded to you) simply go to http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7422971/, select unsubscribe, enter the email address receiving this message, and click the Go button. Microsoft Corporation – One Microsoft Way – Redmond, WA 98052 MSN PRIVACY STATEMENT http://privacy.msn.com

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, Clintons, First Read, Looking Back at Today, McCain, Neera Tanden (Director), Obama, Politics | Leave a Comment »

snopes.com: John McCain on the Democratic Party

Posted by jhr4us on June 28, 2008

 

snopes.com: John McCain on the Democratic Party

 

Grand Old Party

      Claim:   Senator John McCain once said that “the Democratic Party is a
      fine party, and I have no problems with it.”

      Status:   True.

      Example:   [Collected via e-mail, January 2008]

            I received the following quote, is it truly McCain’s:

            “I believe my party has gone astray. I think the Democratic Party is
            a fine party, and I have no problems with it, in their views and
            their philosophy.” — John McCain

      Origins:   Given that it often seems as if members and proponents of
      either of the two major political parties in the U.S. never express
      anything but criticism and disdain for the other party (particularly
      during presidential campaigns), it’s a bit unusual to see a prominent
      politician evince even modest acceptance or approval of a rival party’s
      outlook — especially when that politician is one of the leading candidates
      for a presidential nomination. But that’s the case with this quote from
      John McCain, the four-term senator from Arizona who is one of the leading
      contenders for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination.

      A bit of context makes this statement a little less surprising, however.
      Senator McCain has long been regarded as something of a political maverick
      who travels the campaign trail in a bus called the “Straight Talk Express”
      and has expressed sharp disagreement with Republican principles and Bush
      administration policies on several occasions, and the quote reproduced
      above was something he said back in 2004 during a legislative seminar
      hosted by a Democratic congressman from Massachusetts at a time when
      rumors were circulating that McCain might actually be tabbed for the
      vice-presidential slot on a ticket with Democratic senator John Kerry
      (also from Massachusetts).

      Here’s how the Boston Herald reported his statement:
      Sen. John McCain unleashed an attack on his own party, saying the GOP is
      “astray” on key issues and criticizing President Bush on the war in Iraq.

      “I
      believe my party has gone astray,” McCain said, criticizing GOP stands on
      environmental and minority issues.

      “I think the Democratic Party is a fine party, and I have no problems with
      it, in their views and their philosophy,” he said. “But I also feel the
      Republican Party can be brought back to the principles I articulated
      before.”

      The maverick senator made the remarks at a legislative seminar hosted by
      U.S. Rep. Martin T. Meehan (D-Lowell) as he again ruled out running on a
      ticket with Democrat John F. Kerry.

      The Arizona Republican took on President Bush for failing to prepare
      Americans for a long involvement in Iraq, saying, “You can’t fly in on an
      aircraft carrier and declare victory and have the deaths continue. You
      can’t do that.”

      McCain said the U.S. should seek more U.N. involvement in Iraq. “Many
      people in this room question, legitimately, whether we should have gone in
      or not,” he said, adding that that debate “will be part of this
      presidential campaign.”
      When questioned about his statement during an appearance with host Chris
      Matthews on MSNBC’s Hardball a few days later, Senator McCain said he felt
      that the Herald had presented his words out of context:
      MATTHEWS: Senator McCain, here’s what you said about the Republican Party
      in the Boston Herald: “I believe my party has gone astray. I think the
      Democratic Party is a fine party, and I have no problems with it, in their
      views and their philosophy.” Did the Herald get you right?

      MCCAIN: No.

      MATTHEWS: You didn’t say that?

      MCCAIN: I said that, but let me put it in the proper context. I was
      speaking to some constituents of Congressman Marty Meehan. The question
      [was]: Why don’t you run as Senator Kerry’s running mate? I am a Teddy
      Roosevelt Republican and [an] Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt
      Republican. I will not leave my party.

      Now I think that the Democratic Party is a fine party. I still think we
      need a two-party system in this country. I don’t want to be a Democrat.
      I’m proud of my party and its heritage. That article in the Boston Herald
      was the most taken out of context, several quotes, some of which you’ll
      probably give me …

      MATTHEWS: No, I think we’ve had enough here.

      MCCAIN: It was incredible. I mean, I said I don’t want to leave my party.
      I love my party. I think it’s gone astray. Sure I think it’s gone astray
      on climate change, pork barrel spending. Take a look at this highway bill
      that they just [ran] through the House. They’re trying to attack the
      energy bill, the pork barrel energy bill, on this problem of taxation of
      corporation overseas. I mean, the deficit is now $7 trillion. I think that
      that is a party gone astray.
      Last updated:   1 February 2008

      The URL for this page is http://www.snopes.com/politics/quotes/mccain.asp          

         Sources:
      &nb
sp;     Straub, Noelle.   “Maverick McCain Blasts GOP, Bush.”
    
        Boston Herald.   2 April 2004.
            Hardball [MSNBC].   5 April 2004.

snopes.com: John McCain’s Sons

 

My Three Sons

      Claim:   E-mail describes the military pedigrees of Senator John McCain’s
      sons.

      Status:   True.

      Examples:

            [Collected on the Internet, April 2008]

            One evening last July, Senator John McCain of Arizona arrived at the
            New Hampshire home of Erin Flanagan for sandwiches, chocolate-chip
            cookies and heartfelt talk about Iraq. They had met at a
            presidential debate, when she asked the candidates what they would
            do to bring home American like her brother, who had been killed in
            action a few months earlier.

            Mr. McCain did not bring cameras or a retinue. Instead, he brought
            his youngest son, James McCain, 19, then a private first class in
            the Marine Corps about to leave for Iraq.

            No one mentioned the obvious: in just days, Jimmy McCain could face
            similar perils.

            I can’t imagine what it must have been like for them as they were
            coming to meet with a family that …” Ms. Flanagan recalled,
            choking up. “We lost a dear one,” she finished.

            Mr. McCain, now the presumptive Republican nominee, has staked his
            candidacy on the promise that American troops can bring stability to
            Iraq. What he almost never says is that one of them is his own son.

            In his 71 years, Mr. McCain has confronted war as a pilot, a
            prisoner and a United States senator, but never before as a father.
            His son’s departure for Iraq brought him the same worry that every
            military parent feels, friends say, while the young marine’s
            experiences there have given him a sustained grunt’s-eye view of the
            action and private confirmation for his argument that United States
            strategy in Iraq is working.

            Jimmy McCain enlisted at age 17, then told his parents by phone
            afterward, said Lance Cpl. Casey Gardiner, a friend from boot camp.

            Jimmy McCain returned from Iraq in February.

            Mr. McCain has largely been silent about his son, now a lance
            corporal, to protect him from becoming a prize target and avoid
            exploiting his service for political gain, according to friends.

            As Mr. McCain enters the general election, some say that his son’s
            service will underscore the sincerity of his stance on the war. “He
            has, to use a gambler’s term, skin in the game,” said Bob Kerrey,
            the former Democratic senator and longtime friend of Mr. McCain.
            “It’s among the most important things that people want to know about
            John McCain in trying to decide whether or not to trust him.”
             

            [Collected on the Internet, May 2008]

            Mr. McCain, now the presumptive Republican nominee, has staked his
            candidacy on the promise that American troops can bring stability to
            Iraq. What he almost never says is that one of them is his own son,
            who spent seven months patrolling Anbar Province and learned of his
            father’s New Hampshire victory in January while he was digging a
            stuck military vehicle out of the mud.

            Two of Jimmy’s three older brothers went into the military. Doug
            McCain, 48, was a Navy pilot. Jack McCain, 21, is to graduate from
            the Naval Academy next year, raising the chances that his father, if
            elected, could become the first president since Dwight D. Eisenhower
            with a son at war.

      Origins:   Keeping track of the children of
      Senator John McCain of Arizona, the presumptive Republican nominee for the
      2008 presidential election, is a bit complicated, as his offspring (both
      those he fathered and those he adopted) span two marriages and several
      decades.

      Senator McCain has two sons (Doug and Andy) whom his first wife (Carol)
      brought to their marriage and whom he adopted when they were young. He and
      Carol also had a daughter (Sidney) together. From his marriage to his
      second wife (Cindy), Senator McCain has two more sons (Jimmy and Jack) and
      another daughter (Meghan), and t
he couple also have an adoptive daughter
      from Bangladesh (Bri
dget).

      Doug McCain, 48, is John McCain’s oldest child. He is a former U.S. Navy
      pilot (like his father) who currently works as a commercial pilot for
      American Airlines.

      Jack McCain, 21, currently attends the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis.

      Jimmy McCain, 19, is a member of the U.S. Marine Corps and has been
      stationed in Iraq.

      As the New York Times noted, Senator McCain generally avoids mention of
      his sons’ military service on the campaign trail:
      John McCain is loath to invoke their names when he defends his foreign
      policy positions, even once when Jimmy was sitting in the audience before
      deployment.

      On a stop in South Carolina, as a mother who lost her son in Iraq began to
      suggest that John McCain understood her plight because of Jimmy, the
      senator gently motioned for her to stop.
      However, Senator McCain did bring along his son Jimmy when he was invited
      to dinner at the home of Erin Flanagan, a woman who had posed a question
      about the Iraq war to the senator at a July 2007 Republican presidential
      candidates’ debate in New Hampshire:
      A key moment came at a Republican debate in New Hampshire when Erin
      Flanagan told the candidates about her brother, 1st Lt. Michael Joseph
      Cleary, who was killed in action in Iraq eight days before he was supposed
      to come home. Flanagan pleadingly asked what McCain would do to bring the
      parties together and “bring this conflict to a point in which we can
      safely bring our troops home.”

      McCain rose from his stool and walked forward. “This war was very badly
      mismanaged for a long time,” he said gently. “And Americans have made
      great sacrifices, some of which were unnecessary because of this
      management of the war.

      “I believe we have a fine general. I believe we have a strategy which can
      succeed, so that the sacrifice of your brother would not be in vain, that
      a whole 20 million or 30 million people would have a chance to live a free
      life in an open society, and practice their religion, no matter what those
      differences are,” he said. “And I believe that if we fail, it will become
      a center of terrorism, and we will ask more young Americans to sacrifice,
      as your brother did.”
      Last updated:   12 June 2008

      The URL for this page is
      http://www.snopes.com/politics/mccain/mccainsons.asp     

         Sources:
            Steinhauer, Jennifer.   “McCain’s Children Avoid the Limelight.”
            The Boston Globe.   27 December 2007.
            Zuckman, Jill.   “The Inside Story on McCain’s Comeback.”
            Chicago Tribune.   4 February 2008.

Getting to Know John McCain

      Claim:   Article by Karl Rove provides background on Senator John McCain.

      Status:   Undetermined.

      Example:   [Rove, April 2008]

            Getting to Know John McCain

            It came to me while I was having dinner with Doris Day. No, not that
            Doris Day. The Doris Day who is married to Col. Bud Day,
            Congressional Medal of Honor
            recipient, fighter pilot, Vietnam POW and roommate of John McCain at
            the Hanoi Hilton.

            As we ate near the Days’ home in Florida recently, I heard things
            about Sen. McCain that were deeply moving and politically troubling.
            Moving because they told me things about him the American people
            need to know. And troubling because it is clear that Mr. McCain is
            one of the most private individuals to run for president in history.

            When it comes to choosing a president, the American people want to
            know more about a candidate than policy positions. They want to know
            about character, the values ingrained in his heart. For Mr. McCain,
            that means they will want to know more about him personally than he
            has been willing to reveal.

            Mr. Day relayed to me one of the stories Americans should hear. It
            involves what happened to him after escaping from a North Vietnamese
            prison during the war. When he was recaptured, a Vietnamese captor
            broke his arm and said, “I told you I would make you a cripple.”

            [Rest of article here.]

      Origins:   Research in progress.

      Last updated:   25 June 2008

      The URL for this page is
      http://www.snopes.com/politics/mccain/gettingtoknow.asp

       

         Sources:
            Rove, Karl.   “Getting to Know John McCain.”
            The Wall Street Journal.&
nbsp;  30 April 2008   (p. A17).

 

Cindy McCain

  &nb
sp;   Claim:   E-mail lists facts about Senator John McCain’s wife, Cindy
      McCain.

      Status:   True.

      Example:   [Collected via e-mail, April 2008]

            Getting to know Cindy McCain

            First Lady

            There was an article recently in the Wall Street Journal on Cindy
            McCain, John’s wife. All I ever saw was this attractive woman
            standing beside John. I was surprised how talented and involved with
            world problems she is. This is a summary of the article. She
            graduated from Southern Cal and was a special-needs teacher.

            After her Dad died she became involved with his beer distributing
            firm and is now the chairwoman. Sales have doubled since she has
            taken over from her father.

            They have a marriage prenuptial agreement, her assets remain
            separate.

            She is involved around the world clearing land mines – travels to
            these countries on a detonation team and service on their board.

            They have a 19 year old serving in Iraq, another son in the Naval
            Academy, a daughter recently graduated from Columbia Univ., an
            adopted daughter in high school, and a son who is the finance guy at
            the beer firm.

            Raised kids in Phoenix, Az rather than Washington DC. (better
            atmosphere) He commuted.

            In 1991, Mrs. McCain came across a girl in an orphanage in
            Bangladesh. Mother Teresa implored Mrs. McCain to take the baby with
            severe cleft palate. She did so without first telling her husband.
            The couple adopted the girl who has had a dozen operations to repair
            her cleft palate and other medical problems.

            They have a Family Foundation for children’s causes.

            She’s active with “Halo Trust” – to clear land mines, provide water
            and food in war ravaged and developing countries.

            She will join an overseas mission of “Operation Smile”, a charity
            for corrective surgery on children’s faces. She has had two back
            surgeries and became addicted to pain killers. She talks openly
            about it which she says is part of the recovery process.

            I’m surprised the media is so quiet about her attributes. They have
            tired to discredit John MCCain because of his wife’s wealth — looks
            as if she knows how to put money and time to use in many good
            causes. What a novel thought to have such a fine person as “First
            Spouse” She sounds more capable than Hillary or Obama. We would
            really get two for the price of one. A person with business and
            international experience. John did work for the firm for awhile when
            he left the Navy. She, however, has the real business experience.
            Very interesting.

      Origins:   Scrutiny of the character of the wives of political candidates
      is nothing new — it has been an integral part of American politics for a
      very long time. The April 2008 e-mail presented above is a summary of
      information about Cindy Hensley McCain, wife of Senator John McCain, the
      Republican Party’s 2008 Presidential nominee, as gleaned from a 17 April
      2008 Wall Street Journal article.

      Everything in the summary is accurate: Cindy McCain was the heiress to a
      beer distributor’s fortune, she is now active in that distributorship, she
      did make the Senator sign a pre-nup when he married her and has kept her
      finances separate from his, she did adopt (at Mother Theresa’s behest) a
      Bangladeshi girl in need of many surgeries to correct a cleft palate, she
      has established a family charity that benefits primarily children’s
      causes, and she is active both in mine-clearing and children’s dental
      restoration causes. While John and Cindy McCain have four children
      together (one adopted), the Senator also has another three children from
      his first marriage (two of whom are children his first wife brought to
      their marriage). The McCains have a commuter marriage in which he
      stays in Washington, she stays in Phoenix, but they vacation together
      twice a year. There is an 18-year age difference between them — they met
      when she was 24 and he was 42.

      In 1989, following two back surgeries, Cindy McCain became addicted to the
      painkillers Vicodin and Percocet. To keep up with her daily need of 10 to
      15 pills, she used other people’s names for prescriptions and stole drugs
      from the American Voluntary Medical Team, a mobile surgical unit she’d
  
    begun in 1988 to provide emergency medical services around the world. A
 &
nbsp;    1993 DEA audit of the amount of painkillers her charity had obtained
      quickly uncovered her thefts. She avoided prosecution for those crimes
      through an agreement with the Justice Department in which she submitted to
      drug testing, paid a fine, performed community service in a soup kitchen,
      and joined Narcotics Anonymous. She also closed her medical charity.

      Cindy McCain is Senator McCain’s second wife. His infidelities put strain
      on his first marriage, and he was divorced from Carol McCain, his wife of
      15 years, in 1980. (Carol McCain not only waited for five and a half years
      for her husband to return from Vietnam, but she also endured a horrific
      automobile accident during that period which broke both her legs and one
      arm and ruptured her spleen. She nearly lost her left leg, and surgeries
      left her four inches shorter than she was before her accident. The woman
      John McCain returned to was far different in appearance from the beautiful
      former model he’d left behind.)

      Cindy Lou Hensley and John McCain began dating in 1979. While the Wall
      Street Journal article used as the source for the e-mail’s information
      states “At the time, Sen. McCain was separated from his first wife,”
      numerous other sources assert he was still living with Carol McCain when
      he began seeing his future wife, Cindy. John and Cindy wed in 1980, one
      month after his divorce from Carol became final.

      In 2004, Cindy McCain had a stroke as a result of failing to continue her
      blood pressure medication. She made a full recovery, even running a
      marathon 8 months after being stricken.

      In the ramp-up towards the run for the Republican nomination, Senator
      McCain said to his wife, “I think you could bring style, grace, and
      elegance back to the White House.”

      Last updated:   5 May 2008

      The URL for this page is http://www.snopes.com/politics/mccain/cindy.asp

       

         Sources:
            Collins, Nancy.   “Cindy McCain: Myth vs. Reality.”
            Harper’s Bazaar.   April 2008.
            Grann, David.   “The Hero Myth.”
            The New Republic.   24 May 1999   (p. 24).
            Langley, Monica.   “Preference Aside, Cindy McCain Handles
        Limelight.”
            The Wall Street Journal.   17 April 2008   (p. A8).
            McCain, Cindy.   “Even My Husband Never Knew.”
            Newsweek.   9 April 2001   (p. 52).
            Associated Press.   “Senator’s Wife Admits Prescription Drug
        Addiction.”
            22 August 1994.
            St. Petersburg Times.   “Senator’s Wife Had It All, Including
        Addiction.”
            25 August 1994   (p A6).

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, Cindy McCain, Democratic Party, Getting to Know McCain, McCain, McCain on Democrats, Politics, Snopes.com | Leave a Comment »

Bush Threatens Housing Bill Veto

Posted by jhr4us on June 28, 2008

Bush Threatens Housing Bill Veto
The Bush administration is threatening to veto a major housing bill, but efforts by Senate Republicans to gut a controversial FHA refinancing program for troubled homeowners were soundly defeated, signaling that the Senate may pass the bill by a veto-proof majority. A Statement of Administrative Policy issued by the White House budget office says it supports provisions that modernize the Federal Housing Administration mortgage insurance programs and strengthen regulation of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banks. However, the administration “strongly opposes” the way a Senate bill taps Fannie and Freddie affordable housing funds to pay for the FHA foreclosure rescue program. The principal drafters of the omnibus housing bill, Sens. Christopher J. Dodd, D-Conn., and Richard C. Shelby, R-Ala., said they are disappointed by the administration’s veto threat and hope the White House “will reconsider its position.” An effort by Sen. Christopher S. Bond, R-Mo., to strike the foreclosure rescue program from the bill was defeated by 69-21 vote Thursday evening. The Senate also voted 70-11 to reject a motion by Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Ky., to send the bill back to committee to look into “allegations” that Countrywide Financial Corp. would receive more than $2.5 billion in benefits from the bill.

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, Bush, Countrywide, FHA, FHA foreclosure rescue, foreclosure rescue, housing bill, Mortgage, mortgage insurance, MSNBC, Politics, Republicans, Sen. Christopher S. Bond, veto, White House | Leave a Comment »

First Read: Moving to the center, moving to the right

Posted by jhr4us on June 28, 2008

 

——————————————————— First Read: The day in politics by NBC News for NBC News ——————————————————— FIRST THOUGHTS. *** Get Your Gun: Yesterday’s Supreme Court decision on the 2nd Amendment elevated an issue — guns — that hadn’t received that much attention until now. Remembering that the subject hurt Al Gore in 2000 and somewhat damaged Kerry’s image in 2004 (after his widely panned hunting excursion) will guns also be a problem for Obama? On the one hand, many of the swing states (actually check that, EVERY swing state) are places where the electorate tends to have pro-gun views and where the Mike Bloomberg position wouldn’t fly. On the other hand, as some have pointed out today, the Supreme Court ruling may actually help Obama because Republicans might no longer be able to argue that Democrats want to take your guns away. “The Supreme Court has said you can’t do that,” Democratic pollster Geoff Garin told the Washington Post. In addition, since Gore’s loss in 2000, many Dems have moved to the center on guns. Nothing was more emblematic of that than Obama’s statement on the court’s decision yesterday. “As president, I will uphold the constitutional rights of law-abiding gun-owners, hunters, and sportsmen. I know that what works in Chicago may not work in Cheyenne.” And then there’s the question of whether wedge issues like guns — or abortion or the death penalty or gay marriage — will resonate at all in what’s looking to be a change election. Also, McCain hasn’t been seen as the NRA’s best friend in Congress. So while the pro-gun crowd is very leery of Obama, they aren’t necessarily that fired up about McCain. *** Moving To The Center, Moving To The Right: Pegged to Obama’s statement on guns, there are quite a few press accounts today noting how the Illinois senator has moved to the center on several issues (guns, FISA, death penalty for child rapists). And the Republican National Committee is seizing on these moves to label him a “typical politician.” But what we find fascinating is that as Obama has moved to the center on some thorny subjects, McCain keeps on making overtures to the right. At his meeting yesterday with social conservatives in Ohio, according to participants, McCain said that he was open to learning more about their opposition to embryonic stem cell research (which he supports), that he would talk more openly about his opposition to gay marriage, and that he would listen seriously to their requests that he choose an anti-abortion running mate (bad news for Tom Ridge?). In modern politics, the formula has always been the same: You curry favor with your base in the primaries and then you tack to the center in the general election. McCain isn’t necessarily following this path. Then again, McCain didn’t win his nomination by running to the right, either. Nothing he’s done this campaign year has been conventional. *** A “Typical” Attack: Going back to the RNC labeling Obama a “typical politician,” it’s worth remembering that Clinton tried this, too. The problem with trying to use this line with Obama is that the historical nature of his candidacy makes it harder for the voter to think the word “typical” when they see him. (And, of course, Clinton had her own problems on this issue.) That said, Obama continues to fuel this line of attack by making conventional decisions like ducking the town hall idea, flipping on campaign finance, trying to straddle the fence on guns, etc. And unlike McCain, Obama doesn’t have years of good will with his brand; he only really has about 18 months. McCain has made a lot of subtle shifts away from his so-called maverick independent streak. But because his brand was cemented over years, he’s been given more of a benefit of the doubt with the public. Obama’s brand reservoir isn’t as deep, and he should be much more sensitive to this collecting narrative that he isn’t what he claims. For more: The latest edition of First Read is available now at http://www.FirstRead.MSNBC.com ! ========================================= This e-mail is never sent unsolicited. You have received this MSNBC First Read Newsletter newsletter because you subscribed to it or, someone forwarded it to you. To remove yourself from the list (or to add yourself to the list if this message was forwarded to you) simply go to http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7422971/, select unsubscribe, enter the email address receiving this message, and click the Go button. Microsoft Corporation – One Microsoft Way – Redmond, WA 98052 MSN PRIVACY STATEMENT http://privacy.msn.com

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, Bloomberg, Dems, First Read, First Thoughts, Gore, Kerry, McCain, MSNBC, Obama, Politics | Leave a Comment »

First Read: Looking Back at Today

Posted by jhr4us on June 26, 2008

 

——————————————————— First Read: The day in politics by NBC News for NBC News ——————————————————— LOOKING BACK AT TODAY. McCain called the ruling by the Supreme Court, reversing the DC gun ban, a “landmark victory.” Obama was more mixed on the Supreme Court’s first-ever opinion on the Second Amendment: “I have always believed that the Second Amendment protects the right of individuals to bear arms, but I also identify with the need for crime-ravaged communities to save their children from the violence that plagues our streets through common-sense, effective safety measures. The Supreme Court has now endorsed that view, and while it ruled that the D.C. gun ban went too far, Justice Scalia himself acknowledged that this right is not absolute and subject to reasonable regulations enacted by local communities to keep their streets safe.” http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/26/1169956.aspx The Bounce Goes On: A new Quinnipiac University/Wall Street Journal/WashingtonPost.com poll shows Obama leading McCain in four battleground states. In Colorado, Obama is up five points (49%-44%); in Michigan, he leads by six (48%-42%); in Minnesota, the edge is 17 points (54%-37%); and in Wisconsin, it’s 13 (52%-39%). http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/26/1169534.aspx Clinton received another warm welcome today from a group that supported her in strong numbers during her primary campaign, telling a room full of Latino elected officials that “we all have to be united.” http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/26/1170731.aspx She made similar unity comments to a nurse’s association. It was her first speech since she conceded. “I have served with Sen. Obama now for nearly four years in the Senate,” she said. “I campaigned with him for more than 16 months across our country. I debated with in more debates than I can remember. And I have seen his passion and determination and his grit and his grace.” http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/26/1169925.aspx Two days after Hillary Clinton’s husband raised eyebrows with a tepid endorsement of Obama, the spouse on the other side of the Democratic equation praised the former First Lady for bringing women’s issues to the forefront of this election’s debate. http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/26/1170763.aspx The AFL-CIO endorsed Obama. http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/26/1170083.aspx In Pittsburgh, PA, Obama held a competitiveness summit. Ingenuity, innovation, and alternative energy sources were the buzz words at the competitiveness summit Obama hosted here this morning to wrap up a three-week economic tour. http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/26/1170299.aspx On the veepstakes front, NBC’s Mike Viqueira reports on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi still touting Rep. Chet Edwards (D-TX). “He’s one of the finest people that I have ever served with,” she said. “I think he would be a great addition to the ticket.” http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/26/1170560.aspx Everybody’s Workin’ for the Weekend: McCain’s weekend schedule has been a little light. http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/26/1169561.aspx For more: The latest edition of First Read is available now at http://www.FirstRead.MSNBC.com ! ========================================= This e-mail is never sent unsolicited. You have received this MSNBC First Read Newsletter newsletter because you subscribed to it or, someone forwarded it to you. To remove yourself from the list (or to add yourself to the list if this message was forwarded to you) simply go to http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7422971/, select unsubscribe, enter the email address receiving this message, and click the Go button. Microsoft Corporation – One Microsoft Way – Redmond, WA 98052 MSN PRIVACY STATEMENT http://privacy.msn.com

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, First Read, Looking Back at Today, McCain, MSNBC, Obama, Politics, Washington Post | Leave a Comment »

First Read: Too much Clinton-Obama hype?

Posted by jhr4us on June 26, 2008

 

——————————————————— First Read: The day in politics by NBC News for NBC News ——————————————————— FIRST THOUGHTS. *** Too Much Clinton-Obama Hype? Tonight, Obama huddles in DC with Hillary Clinton and some of her top fundraisers, who are expected to cut checks for the presumptive Democratic nominee. And tomorrow, of course, is the much-awaited joint rally in — of all places — Unity, NH. But is there a more over-hyped story than this Obama-Clinton event on Friday? Seriously, does Obama need the Clintons as much the media claims? Or does Obama need to get this Clinton situation behind simply so the press stops covering the story? Considering the bounce Obama’s getting in some polls, it’s clear that the unity issues in the party with Clinton and Obama are all inside the Amtrak corridor and nowhere else. Also, after reading today’s New York Times piece on Clinton and Obama — which notes that some in Hillary Land are upset that Obama hasn’t written Clinton a $2,300 check, that his campaign isn’t hiring more of her staff, and that uber-lawyer Bob Barnett is negotiating things like Hillary’s role at the convention — ask yourself this: Do you think Obama’s folks would be able to make similar complaints/demands, without getting laughed at, had the roles been reversed? Four years ago, remember, the Kerry campaign hired very few Howard Dean people, and no one batted an eyelash. Is this just another example of how Clinton folks continue to shape the campaign narrative, thanks to their personal relationships with media members inside the Amtrak corridor? *** Hitting Obama And Gordon Smith? McCain senior adviser Steve Schmidt started the morning off — at 6:45 am ET! — with a memo contrasting McCain and Obama on the issue of bipartisanship. “There has never been a time when Barack Obama has bucked the party line to lead on an issue of national importance,” Schmidt wrote. “He has never been a part of a bipartisan group that came together to solve a controversial issue. He has never put his career on the line for a cause greater than himself. We don’t need to trade Republican partisanship for Democratic partisanship. We need to put our country first and put our politics second. That is what John McCain has done his whole life, and that is what he will do as president.” While it’s not a memo that says it’s designed to be a response to Oregon Sen. Gordon Smith’s (R) ad touting his work with Obama across the aisle, it certainly reads that way. Smith did not do McCain any favors with this TV ad, as it ends up rebutting McCain’s frequent attacks on Obama that his bipartisan rhetoric is just that — rhetoric with few actions to back it up. And now Smith’s actions are getting national attention and serve as too easy of a rebuttal to Schmidt’s memo. Smith’s decision in Oregon (a supposed swing state, folks, not just some deep blue state) also counters the national GOP committees here in DC that have been trying to paint Obama as out of touch. The Washington Post reports that House GOP strategists are now backing off their attempts to demonize Obama; clearly some GOP senators running for re-election aren’t ready to run against Obama, and that leaves McCain going it alone. Not helpful to the McCain cause. *** The Obama Map: Obama manager David Plouffe gave the DC chattering class a lot to chew on yesterday with a PowerPoint presentation on where they see the state of the race. Perhaps the item that will get the most weekend attention will be the non-traditional battleground red states Obama’s pledging to contest seriously — including Alaska, Georgia, Indiana, Montana, North Carolina, and North Dakota. What makes tossing these six states into the supposed battleground category is that all of them are states where McCain will not return the fire. For Obama, four of the six are actually fairly cheap states to target, with only Georgia and North Carolina being truly expensive. It’s not dissimilar to what Bush did with California in 2000, when he spent real money and campaign time to see if he could dare Gore to follow suit. Gore didn’t and the Bush strategy almost cost him the presidency. As for McCain, the campaign clearly has no choice but to call Obama’s bluff in these six states. Obama has the money to mess around; the question is whether Republicans in these states will not hit the panic button and cause McCain extra headaches. California Democrats let Gore call the bluff without too much criticism. Will Indiana Republicans or Georgia Republicans or North Carolina Republicans give McCain similar slack? For more: The latest edition of First Read is available now at http://www.FirstRead.MSNBC.com ! ========================================= This e-mail is never sent unsolicited. You have received this MSNBC First Read Newsletter newsletter because you subscribed to it or, someone forwarded it to you. To remove yourself from the list (or to add yourself to the list if this message was forwarded to you) simply go to http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7422971/, select unsubscribe, enter the email address receiving this message, and click the Go button. Microsoft Corporation – One Microsoft Way – Redmond, WA 98052 MSN PRIVACY STATEMENT http://privacy.msn.com

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, Clintons, First Read, First Thoughts, Fundraisers, Hillary, McCain, MSNBC, Obama, Politics | Leave a Comment »