pennsylvania primary election 2008
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Clinton picks up delegates in Pennsylvania primary
Tue, Apr 22, 2008 (6:27 p.m.) Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton cut into Sen. Barack Obama’s delegate lead in early returns from Pennsylvania’s Democratic primary.
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Tue, Apr 22, 2008 (6:27 p.m.) Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton cut into Sen. Barack Obama’s delegate lead in early returns from Pennsylvania’s Democratic primary.
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Clinton wins Pennsylvania primary
Tue, Apr 22, 2008 (6:27 p.m.) Hillary Rodham Clinton has won the Pennsylvania primary, defeating Barack Obama and staving off elimination in a riveting race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
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Tue, Apr 22, 2008 (6:27 p.m.) Hillary Rodham Clinton has won the Pennsylvania primary, defeating Barack Obama and staving off elimination in a riveting race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
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Clinton defeats Obama in Pennsylvania primary
Tue, Apr 22, 2008 (6:27 p.m.) Hillary Rodham Clinton won the Pennsylvania primary Tuesday night, defeating Barack Obama and staving off elimination in a riveting race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
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Tue, Apr 22, 2008 (6:27 p.m.) Hillary Rodham Clinton won the Pennsylvania primary Tuesday night, defeating Barack Obama and staving off elimination in a riveting race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
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Clinton wins Pennsylvania primary
Surge of voters turn out in Pa. for Hillary, Barack. PHILADELPHIA — Election officials reported a huge turnout around the state for Tuesday’s high-stakes Pennsylvania Democratic primary.
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Surge of voters turn out in Pa. for Hillary, Barack. PHILADELPHIA — Election officials reported a huge turnout around the state for Tuesday’s high-stakes Pennsylvania Democratic primary.
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United States presidential election, 2008 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Article exploring the issues, candidates, and electoral college map for the 2008 United States presidential election.
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Article exploring the issues, candidates, and electoral college map for the 2008 United States presidential election.
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Pennsylvania Democratic primary, 2008 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 2008 Pennsylvania Democratic primary will take place on April 22, 2008. … primaries, 2008 | Pennsylvania elections, 2008 | American election stubs …
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The 2008 Pennsylvania Democratic primary will take place on April 22, 2008. … primaries, 2008 | Pennsylvania elections, 2008 | American election stubs …
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Statewide opinion polling for the Democratic Party presidential primaries, 2008 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Format: Primary see: Pennsylvania Democratic primary, 2008. Date: April 22, 2008 … United States presidential election, 2008 …
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Format: Primary see: Pennsylvania Democratic primary, 2008. Date: April 22, 2008 … United States presidential election, 2008 …
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Pennsylvania state elections, 2008 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
… primary to Jim Eisenhower, who lost to Corbett in general election.[27] … American Research Group: “March 28, 2008 - Pennsylvania Democratic Primary Preference” …
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… primary to Jim Eisenhower, who lost to Corbett in general election.[27] … American Research Group: “March 28, 2008 - Pennsylvania Democratic Primary Preference” …
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Q & A
Will Hillary’s support fail to hold on until April 22 in Pennsylvania? More
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primaryRasmussen poll shows her having 10% more support for her than Obama. Which may increase as long as the Wright issue is being talked about.But will her support be as strong when the time comes to vote?Where is White America? Can you clarify? I haven’t been there before that I know of, do they have delegates there?
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primaryRasmussen poll shows her having 10% more support for her than Obama. Which may increase as long as the Wright issue is being talked about.But will her support be as strong when the time comes to vote?Where is White America? Can you clarify? I haven’t been there before that I know of, do they have delegates there?oh yeah, you can count on it.go hillary!
Did you see this? More
Obama has cut Clinton’s lead in Pennsylvania.http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primary
Obama has cut Clinton’s lead in Pennsylvania.http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primaryyes, i knew obama would close in on hillary once he really started campaigning.i believe that in order to catch up to obama, hillary needs to win 65% of the votes in all the remaining states. It would be great if obama were to actually win PA but if it is really close, it is still very bad for Clinton.
With all the hatred expressed toward Sen. Obama why does he keep closing in on Hillary in Pa.? More
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primaryKirk I could link you to dozens of”he’s a racist”he’s a terrorist”questions right here-look.LOL! I always enjoy the Hillary people saying polls don’t matter when they are losing and then jump on them when they are. So sad.Thanks for your comments Dani-
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primaryKirk I could link you to dozens of”he’s a racist”he’s a terrorist”questions right here-look.LOL! I always enjoy the Hillary people saying polls don’t matter when they are losing and then jump on them when they are. So sad.Thanks for your comments Dani-When Hillary the Happy Hunter with Grandpa started throwing down shots and waxing eloquently about her good ole days down on the pond…. people saw through that latest spin immediately. Then she got overly excited about Bittergate and ran that into the ground nonstop.People get very tired of her pettiness. The Supreme Court just upheld the death penalty by injection. Texas is set to execute 6 people.Wouldn’t you like to hear Hillary’s take in that instead? That’s the kind of question I had hoped to hear in that soap opera they called a debate.
Did you see this poll? More
Rasmussen’s latest poll shows Clinton with only a 3 point over Obama.http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primary
Rasmussen’s latest poll shows Clinton with only a 3 point over Obama.http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primaryWhen I looked at that poll this morning, it was 9 points. Up from 6 a few days ago. Are you sure you have the right numbers. I hope your numbers are right, but that is not what I read.OK, went there again, and you are right, that is what the poll shows now. Weird how fast things change. Well, the only poll that matters is Tuesday, but it looks like he could actually pull off a victory if these numbers are truly indicative of how people plan to vote, but the polls have been wrong a lot this year, so I won’t get too excited.
Hillary’s Lead has Shrunk to just 3 Percent–Do You Think This is True? More
I’m not a Hillary fan–but I wonder is she will win by 3, 6 or even 10 points–how reliable are the polls?http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primary
I’m not a Hillary fan–but I wonder is she will win by 3, 6 or even 10 points–how reliable are the polls?http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primaryI’m not a Hillary fan–but I wonder is she will win by 3, 6 or even 10 points–how reliable are the polls?—————————————-They’re not.Since January, the polls had Hillary losing New Hampshire, Nevada, California, New Jersey, Massachusettes……It’s really just wishful thinking on the media’s part.
If Clinton convinces superdelegates to give her the nomination, why would blacks stay on a Democrat plantation More
???http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primaryHere’s a simple litmus test for African-Americans and others: Think of what you STAND for. Do you want higher taxes or more”services”(some of which will be efficient but most will be inefficient and leave you with less choices/flexibility/time) or lower taxes? Do you believe Social Security cannot be fixed or that there is a better way and, in fact, there are numerous other public- and private-sector examples of Social Security ALTNERATIVE-program successes?Examine yourself. If you find yourself gravitating toward a candidate (or away from a candidate) just because they have a (D) or an (R) after their name, you may not be looking at the issues closely enough. Granted, on many issues, there are deep philosophical (some would say ideological) divides in the platforms of each party.Peter, what the *heck* are you talking about? Here’s just one example of the lunacy of your article:”Clinton, despite some notable blunders (especially welfare reform), impressed blacks with his policies…”Oh yeah? Welfare reform was a brilliant Congressional effort; Congress presented it three times to Clinton in order to stop”lifetime welfare”. Clinton only signed the third bill in order to get reelected in’96. Thus, it was a political strategy that turned out to be a needed improvement.
???http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/pennsylvania/pennsylvania_democratic_presidential_primaryHere’s a simple litmus test for African-Americans and others: Think of what you STAND for. Do you want higher taxes or more”services”(some of which will be efficient but most will be inefficient and leave you with less choices/flexibility/time) or lower taxes? Do you believe Social Security cannot be fixed or that there is a better way and, in fact, there are numerous other public- and private-sector examples of Social Security ALTNERATIVE-program successes?Examine yourself. If you find yourself gravitating toward a candidate (or away from a candidate) just because they have a (D) or an (R) after their name, you may not be looking at the issues closely enough. Granted, on many issues, there are deep philosophical (some would say ideological) divides in the platforms of each party.Peter, what the *heck* are you talking about? Here’s just one example of the lunacy of your article:”Clinton, despite some notable blunders (especially welfare reform), impressed blacks with his policies…”Oh yeah? Welfare reform was a brilliant Congressional effort; Congress presented it three times to Clinton in order to stop”lifetime welfare”. Clinton only signed the third bill in order to get reelected in’96. Thus, it was a political strategy that turned out to be a needed improvement.kamal karna roy, the reverend dr, story , may be u know yet, how about by end election of u s President 08 ? More
the reverend dr kamal karna k roy _republica or a national story or international story of jeungle democracy?see belowNewsNation Investigations Education Photos&Video World Technology KidsPost Discussions Metro Entertainment Religion Corrections Business Health Post Magazine Archives PoliticsPolitics Blogs House/Senate Votes White House Congress 2008 Campaign In Depth Polls In the Loop DC | MD | VA OpinionsOpinions Home Toles Cartoons On Faith Blogs Telnaes Animations PostGlobal Feedback Outlook Discussion Groups LocalMetro News Weather Local Explorer Jobs Education Traffic Community Guides Cars DC | MD | VACrime The Extras Real Estate Columns/Blogs Obituaries Local Business Yellow Pages SportsRedskins D.C. United Columns/Blogs NFL Nationals Capitals College Basketball NHL Wizards High Schools Local Colleges NBA Arts&LivingStyle Movies Travel Fashion&Beauty Horoscopes Smart Living Television Books Home&Garden Comics Entertainment News Food&Dining Museums Theater&Dance Crosswords City GuideFind Restaurants Find Local Events Find Movies Visitors Guide Find Bars&Clubs Going Out Gurus JobsSearch JobsCarsBuy a Car Sell a Car Experts&Advice Dealer Specials Coupons Real EstateBuy a Home Sell a Home Property Values RentalsFind a Rental Rent Your Place ShoppingShop New Deals&Discounts Shopper Blog Shop Used Sell Your Stuff PetsSEARCH: washingtonpost.com Web | Search Archiveswashingtonpost.com>Politics>Elections Your Comments On…Wall Street Crisis Forces Candidates to Shift Their FocusThe contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination raced to inject themselves into the debate over the credit and housing crisis yesterday, slamming the Bush administration’s failure to do more to avoid a crisis as the economy once again surged to the forefront of the campaign.- By Jonathan Weisman and Shailagh MurrayCommentsLISANROY wrote:AuthorAndrew RomanoEmail | Bio CategoriesThe FilterTop of the WeekOnscenerAd HawkExpertinentEarly StatesNewsbytePolitechStumper TVSuper TuesdaySam BrownbackRudy GiulianiMike HuckabeeDuncan HunterJohn McCainRon PaulMitt RomneyTom TancredoFred ThompsonJoe BidenHillary ClintonChris DoddJohn EdwardsMike GravelDennis KucinichBarack ObamaBill RichardsonAl GoreMike BloombergRalph NaderGeorge W. Bush——————————————————————————–Checkpoint BaghdadCountdown to BeijingLevel UpI, BreederThe Gold DiggerLab NotesThe All-Starr BlogSoldier’s HomeStumperWhy it Matters——————————————————————————–LinksThe CaucusThe FixOnPoliticsHotline BlogCampaign JunkieFirst ReadPollsterTech PresidentPrezVidWonketteMarc AmbinderBen SmithJonathan MartinThe StumpThe PlankPaul KrugmanEzra KleinKevin DrumAtriosDaily KosHuffington PostTalking Points MemoThe CornerRedstateInstapunditCaptain’s QuartersMichelle MalkinHugh HewittPowerlineFeatured PostingsClinton’s Loony Veepstakes Logic3:49 PM, March 10, 2008 | Comments (159)So, you know how Hillary Clinton and Co. are suddenly all about a joint ticket with Barack Obama? First there was Clinton herself saying”that may be where this is headed”and”that might be possible someday .”Then Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell hopped…——————————————————————————–Expertinent: Why the Obama”Brand”Is Working10:35 AM, February 27, 2008 | Comments (92)A Glimmer of Hope for the General Election3:43 PM, February 26, 2008 | Comments (25)ArchivesSee All from FebruaryPreviousFebruary 2008NextSun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat1 23 4 5 6 7 8 910 11 12 13 14 15 1617 18 19 20 21 22 2324 25 26 27 28 29——————————————————————————–LATEST POSTS FROM THE RUCKUSThe Moderate Voice: Florida Primary Re-Vote Nix Increases Clinton DifficultiesTalk Left: Hillary Promises to Help Puerto Ricans Decide on Statehood or IndependenceTalk Left: Obama Withdraws Support for Marijuana DecriminalizationTalk Left: Texas Refuses to Double-Check Caucus SignaturesThe Moderate Voice: The Way We Were-And AreFACTCHECK.ORG LATEST FACTCHECKSHillary’s Adventures AbroadJudgment Day in WisconsinDid Clinton Darken Obama’s Skin?The Facts About’NAFTA-Gate”Dump Dennis?’LATEST NEWSWEEK BLOG POSTSLevel Up’s Top Four Gaming Tidbits for Mar 18th, 2008March Through Madness: Vintage Whines(Multicolored) Diamonds Are a Girl’s . . .Separate ChecksVintage WhinesCAMPAIGN 2008 INTERACTIVEPrimary MapTrack results and the election calendar——————————————————————————–SPONSORED LINKSThe Real Barack ObamaThe truth behind the canditate -”Barack Obama Exposed”- Free!www.HumanEvents.comHillary for PresidentHelp Make History! Paid for by Hillary Clinton for President.www.HillaryClinton.comClinton Wins PA Primary?Tell us what you think through a robust online polling tool.www.bullitics.comFull PostPosted Friday, February 15, 2008 10:11 AMObama’s Tipping Point? Not Yet.Andrew RomanoNew Supporter: Obama with Lewis. Photo: John Amis/AP.On Wednesday I wrote that”depending how March 4 shakes out, [the Potomac Primary] results–and the likely Obama wins in Wisconsin and Hawaii–may help determine the Democratic nominee by the ides of March.”My thinking went like this: After eight (and maybe 10 straight wins), the Illinois senator will lead at that point by more than 100 pledged delegates–but it won’t be enough to reach magic number (2,025) by the end of primary season in June. Looking ahead, the 400 uncommitted Democratic superdelegates–the only people with the power to put either Clinton or Obama over the top–will have a choice: 1) prolong the contest through the convention, ensuring a messy, divisive battle involving Florida, Michigan and back room wheeling and dealing or 2) move en masse to the”people’s choice”and get busy uniting the party for November.But is Obama’s tipping point coming sooner than even I expected? Yesterday afternoon, the New York Times (among others) reported that Rep. John Lewis, an elder statesman from the civil rights era and one of Hillary Clinton’s most prominent black supporters, is suddenly planning to cast his vote as a superdelegate for Obama in”hopes of preventing a fight at the Democratic convention.”“In recent days, there is a sense of movement and a sense of spirit,” said Lewis. “Something is happening in America, and people are prepared and ready to make that great leap.” Hungry for news on a slow day, the media responded with typical breathlessness.”Floodgates could open,”wrote Time’s Mark Halperin, a reliable peddler of Beltway CW.”If Lewis breaks away, take whatever you thought Clinton’s chances of winning the nomination before and divide that number by as much as two — those would be the odds of her winning now.”Whoa, nelly. Not so fast. Sure, Lewis’s”defection”is significant–but in a limited sense. For one thing, it’s not really a defection; instead, Lewis is still endorsing Clinton (for the time being) but promising to cast his superdelegate vote at the convention with his Atlanta-area district, which voted three-to-one for Obama–if it comes to that. Lewis’s confusing stance symbolizes a very specific political challenge facing black elected superdelegates–and black elected superdelegates only. If Obama maintains his lead among pledged delegates, members of the Congressional Black Caucus who have endorsed Clinton will face enormous pressure to switch sides. Like Lewis, many represent districts where Obama earned 85 to 90 percent support among black voters–meaning to defy their constituents and cast a vote that lots of people would see as stealing the election from the first black president would be tantamount to political suicide.AdvertisementOver the past few weeks, there’s been a slow drift of superdelegate support from Clinton to Obama. Not counting Lewis, Obama has gained 12 superdelegates since Feb. 5, while Clinton has lost a net of three. But until we start seeing a greater number of pols making the leap to Obama without such political pressure, I think it’s a bit early to say the floodgates have opened. It may happen; it may not. But any potential tipping point is still a ways away.Featured, Barack ObamaPermalink: http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/stumper/archive/2008/02/15/obama-s-tipping-point-not-yet.aspxSphere It!Digg It!NewsvineDel.icio.usFacebookType SizePrint Email RSS Social NetworksPermalink: http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/stumper/archive/2008/02/15/obama-s-tipping-point-not-yet.aspxTrackBack URL: http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/stumper/trackback.aspx?PostID=183355Sphere It!Digg It!NewsvineDel.icio.usFacebookThanks for sharing your feedback! If your feedback doesn’t appear right away, please be patient as it may take a few minutes to publish - or longer if the blogger is moderating comments.DiscussEnter Your CommentSubmit Member Comments Posted By: CANDIDATE_REPUBLICAN (March 18, 2008 at 6:46 AM)the rev dr kamal karna k roy aka joseph geronimo jr , a republiican hopeful , f e commission washinton dc complained to we the people through news media, although has had hate and negligent attitude towads member of the weaker community,viz the rev dr kamal karna karuna roy, a mobile clergy on vow of poverty, I R S rule, and honestly a u s american poor and member of have_nots in u s america, and a member of the disadvantage people in u s of america, wished to get slightly richer as the holder of federal job, full time contractual for 4 years, which could be renewable with polical and people’s conditions , w e f 1.20. 2009, The u s born american with other qualifications could apply for the job, which job is almost highest paid in federal jobs , and usa is a equal opportunity employer. Bute there are more than one entity to put selection *** election harder or illegal. There has been published reports in u s news media, viz new york times news daily published from city of new york that John Mccain would be nominee of gop for u s presidential election through hundres oflegal compliances etc etc. I was confirmed in my knowledge that GOP national committee , washington dc with assistance of 436 + defendants would discriminate againt kamal karna k roy for getting the federal of of u s president on equal epportunity in employment for u s citizen, as mccain gets preference than patriot,, clergy, management specialist and author of many books and publication, and the author book named”JUNGLE DEMOCRACIES ALL OVER THE GLOBE INCLUDING THE U S A, CAT AND MOUSE DOCTRINES OF OPPRESSIONS OB WEAKER PEOPLE Opinions Your Comments On…Offense TakenIn this campaign, there is no room for remarks of any sort on any subject.- By Michael KinsleyCommentsscschmidt wrote:Michael Kinsley’s article,”Offense Taken”is way off base. The example that he cited are based on relationships, yes- whether they be a cousin or a hairdresser. However, the GREAT BIG DIFFERENCE is that when someone goes out of their way to verbally expound the degree of influence that someone has on you as well as when you tout this person as a role model or”mentor”- well now this is VERY dofferent. By doing this, you indeed are connecting yourself to this person in every way since you indicated that their beliefs were used to mentor and foster your own beliefs. When you look up to someone as a mentor or role model, you are believing in the basic principles of theirs. Obama’s open statements to th ereverend being his spiritual mentor and best friend makes his beliefs as suspect as the reverend’s. In addition, Obama can now denounce all he wants to but how could he be a parishioner for 17 years and listen to these types of statements if as Obama NOW states are”outrageous”?I think that we need to realy questiob Obama’s truthfullness or question his judgement. In either case, the country should seriously reconsider any support for such a candidate. It is frightening that Obama’s paltform really emphasizes”change”and his real agenda would seem to indicate other.We need to change our support to Senator Clinton and assure her success in November.3/17/2008 9:05:12 PMRecommend (0) Report Abuse Discussion PolicyLISANROY wrote:amemended comments of dr kamal roy dt 3,17,2008LISANROY wrote:COMmENTS OF REV DR KAMAL KARNA Karuna ROY A REPUBLICAN CANIDATE AND HoPEFUL TO BE the NOMINEE OF GOP IN SCHEDULED ELECTION FOr NOV 4, 2008, IF BE HELD WITHOUT any COURT ORDER OF INJUNCTION to postpone corrpt election as PRAYED BY DR kamal k k ROY ALLEGING SKY_HIGH AND CLOUD_DARK CORRUPTIONS BY DEFENDANTS IN CIVIL ACTIONS FILED IN 20+ U S D COURT actions in 20+ different JURISDICTIONS with allegations against defendants for negligence to enforce laws not TO PUSH OUT ELECTORAL CONTESTANTS FROM WEAKER COMMUNITIES OF HAVE-nots3/17/2008 9:04:05 PMRecommend (0) Report Abuse Discussion Policyrmorris391 wrote:well this is”midly amusing”. While I am generally an advocate of Kinsley, and Slate magazine, as well as, Time magazine. I must take umbrage, with the sacastic tone of this tome. It is a thinly veiled attempt to incite debate over issues, and non-issues, which may be unrelated to the national campaign. While the Mainstream Media (MSM) has too much time on its hands, to consider a long winded campaign, the focus has shifted to non-political discourse, about intractable problems that confound american society. We have issues related to baseball players, after all, who alledgedly used illegal substances to puff up their biceps. Certainly, congress can devise a surge campaign to intervene with major league baseball, and save the poor players from the rich players. After all, the economic crisis in MLB is looming, and requires some”foreign ownership equity.”This is, afterall the land of”ownership.”At least that is what a young president Bush promised the american public. Once a new president is elected, a series of”signing agreements”can be implemented to remove my umbrages.3/17/2008 8:54:47 PMRecommend (0) Report Abuse Discussion PolicyLL22102 wrote:Man…. Youre in trouble… You used the N word.3/17/2008 8:51:00 PMRecommend (0) Report Abuse Discussion PolicyLISANROY wrote:COMENTS OF REV DR KAMAL KARNAK ROY A REPUBLICAN CANIDATE AND HPEFUL TO BE NOMINEE OF GOP IN SCHEDULED ELECTION FO NOV 4, 2008, IF BNE HELD WITHOUT COURT ORDER OF INJUNCTION PRAYED BY DR ROY ALLEGING SKY_HIGHJ ANMD CLOUD_DARK CORRUPTIONS BY DEFENDANTS IN CIVIL ACTIONS FILED IN 20+ U S D COURT JURISDICTIONS TO PUSH OUT ELECTORAL CONTESTANTS FROM WEAKER COMMUNITIES OF HAVE-nots in usa, viz rev dr kamal roy, an ondained clegy on vow of poverty declarations with i r s, i e dr roy is u s american poor and a member of weaker communities. Dr roy may not be a quiter from electoral race as a victim of corruptions and he will moe upto u s suprem court until jutie doo are opened to weaker people o uitably contest and may be win us presidency some day in decades ……as a woman is trying for presidency and 1/ 2african_american (black is thriving for presidency in 2008 , w theb hy not a member of have_not community successfuly capture u s presidency, but if the inequitable condition prevail then it may take a revolution or two to make way to succeed asis current jungle democratic condition all over the globe including in usa wherin democracy is defacto a powerplay of super rich, powerfuls, elites in society, human_gods , devils of democracy et al…pakistan poltical parties may keep president musarraf until his end of curren term without questioning his lawfulness in the post and judges who were terminated by musarrf shall not handle the agreement of political parties who came recently in power may create peace in the yet volatile state of pakistan. In view political environment is so clouded to peaceful solutions in groups of divisions and conflicts, a middle couse in between musarraf and political parties appear essential to keep peace in pakistan. opinion/comment repackaged by assistants to the rev kamal karna roy, a u s republican hopeful nd demanding to be nominated as mr clean republican nominee for u s president 2008 no election if be held on time rev lisa n r alston, chief campaign of dr roy for u s president 2008Your Comments On…Needed: Honesty on IraqWithout tying their hands, the candidates need to answer hard questions.start making similar demands.Ah, democracy in action.UPDATE, 11:51 p.m.: Searching my inbox, I noticed that the Obama campaign has announced seven superdelegate pickups since March 4. So there might be something to my”steady drip”theory. With seven weeks until Pennsylvania, a constant stream of superdelegate endorsements is a good way to create the impression of momentum–whether or not the supers in question decided to endorse today, yesterday or last month. Conversely, a sudden flood this week might’ve struck observers as a show of pre-March 4 support–and left them wondering whether Obama could keep attracting superdelegates after Clinton’s wins in Ohio and Texas. Now it *looks like* he is.Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama
the reverend dr kamal karna k roy _republica or a national story or international story of jeungle democracy?see belowNewsNation Investigations Education Photos&Video World Technology KidsPost Discussions Metro Entertainment Religion Corrections Business Health Post Magazine Archives PoliticsPolitics Blogs House/Senate Votes White House Congress 2008 Campaign In Depth Polls In the Loop DC | MD | VA OpinionsOpinions Home Toles Cartoons On Faith Blogs Telnaes Animations PostGlobal Feedback Outlook Discussion Groups LocalMetro News Weather Local Explorer Jobs Education Traffic Community Guides Cars DC | MD | VACrime The Extras Real Estate Columns/Blogs Obituaries Local Business Yellow Pages SportsRedskins D.C. United Columns/Blogs NFL Nationals Capitals College Basketball NHL Wizards High Schools Local Colleges NBA Arts&LivingStyle Movies Travel Fashion&Beauty Horoscopes Smart Living Television Books Home&Garden Comics Entertainment News Food&Dining Museums Theater&Dance Crosswords City GuideFind Restaurants Find Local Events Find Movies Visitors Guide Find Bars&Clubs Going Out Gurus JobsSearch JobsCarsBuy a Car Sell a Car Experts&Advice Dealer Specials Coupons Real EstateBuy a Home Sell a Home Property Values RentalsFind a Rental Rent Your Place ShoppingShop New Deals&Discounts Shopper Blog Shop Used Sell Your Stuff PetsSEARCH: washingtonpost.com Web | Search Archiveswashingtonpost.com>Politics>Elections Your Comments On…Wall Street Crisis Forces Candidates to Shift Their FocusThe contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination raced to inject themselves into the debate over the credit and housing crisis yesterday, slamming the Bush administration’s failure to do more to avoid a crisis as the economy once again surged to the forefront of the campaign.- By Jonathan Weisman and Shailagh MurrayCommentsLISANROY wrote:AuthorAndrew RomanoEmail | Bio CategoriesThe FilterTop of the WeekOnscenerAd HawkExpertinentEarly StatesNewsbytePolitechStumper TVSuper TuesdaySam BrownbackRudy GiulianiMike HuckabeeDuncan HunterJohn McCainRon PaulMitt RomneyTom TancredoFred ThompsonJoe BidenHillary ClintonChris DoddJohn EdwardsMike GravelDennis KucinichBarack ObamaBill RichardsonAl GoreMike BloombergRalph NaderGeorge W. Bush——————————————————————————–Checkpoint BaghdadCountdown to BeijingLevel UpI, BreederThe Gold DiggerLab NotesThe All-Starr BlogSoldier’s HomeStumperWhy it Matters——————————————————————————–LinksThe CaucusThe FixOnPoliticsHotline BlogCampaign JunkieFirst ReadPollsterTech PresidentPrezVidWonketteMarc AmbinderBen SmithJonathan MartinThe StumpThe PlankPaul KrugmanEzra KleinKevin DrumAtriosDaily KosHuffington PostTalking Points MemoThe CornerRedstateInstapunditCaptain’s QuartersMichelle MalkinHugh HewittPowerlineFeatured PostingsClinton’s Loony Veepstakes Logic3:49 PM, March 10, 2008 | Comments (159)So, you know how Hillary Clinton and Co. are suddenly all about a joint ticket with Barack Obama? First there was Clinton herself saying”that may be where this is headed”and”that might be possible someday .”Then Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell hopped…——————————————————————————–Expertinent: Why the Obama”Brand”Is Working10:35 AM, February 27, 2008 | Comments (92)A Glimmer of Hope for the General Election3:43 PM, February 26, 2008 | Comments (25)ArchivesSee All from FebruaryPreviousFebruary 2008NextSun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat1 23 4 5 6 7 8 910 11 12 13 14 15 1617 18 19 20 21 22 2324 25 26 27 28 29——————————————————————————–LATEST POSTS FROM THE RUCKUSThe Moderate Voice: Florida Primary Re-Vote Nix Increases Clinton DifficultiesTalk Left: Hillary Promises to Help Puerto Ricans Decide on Statehood or IndependenceTalk Left: Obama Withdraws Support for Marijuana DecriminalizationTalk Left: Texas Refuses to Double-Check Caucus SignaturesThe Moderate Voice: The Way We Were-And AreFACTCHECK.ORG LATEST FACTCHECKSHillary’s Adventures AbroadJudgment Day in WisconsinDid Clinton Darken Obama’s Skin?The Facts About’NAFTA-Gate”Dump Dennis?’LATEST NEWSWEEK BLOG POSTSLevel Up’s Top Four Gaming Tidbits for Mar 18th, 2008March Through Madness: Vintage Whines(Multicolored) Diamonds Are a Girl’s . . .Separate ChecksVintage WhinesCAMPAIGN 2008 INTERACTIVEPrimary MapTrack results and the election calendar——————————————————————————–SPONSORED LINKSThe Real Barack ObamaThe truth behind the canditate -”Barack Obama Exposed”- Free!www.HumanEvents.comHillary for PresidentHelp Make History! Paid for by Hillary Clinton for President.www.HillaryClinton.comClinton Wins PA Primary?Tell us what you think through a robust online polling tool.www.bullitics.comFull PostPosted Friday, February 15, 2008 10:11 AMObama’s Tipping Point? Not Yet.Andrew RomanoNew Supporter: Obama with Lewis. Photo: John Amis/AP.On Wednesday I wrote that”depending how March 4 shakes out, [the Potomac Primary] results–and the likely Obama wins in Wisconsin and Hawaii–may help determine the Democratic nominee by the ides of March.”My thinking went like this: After eight (and maybe 10 straight wins), the Illinois senator will lead at that point by more than 100 pledged delegates–but it won’t be enough to reach magic number (2,025) by the end of primary season in June. Looking ahead, the 400 uncommitted Democratic superdelegates–the only people with the power to put either Clinton or Obama over the top–will have a choice: 1) prolong the contest through the convention, ensuring a messy, divisive battle involving Florida, Michigan and back room wheeling and dealing or 2) move en masse to the”people’s choice”and get busy uniting the party for November.But is Obama’s tipping point coming sooner than even I expected? Yesterday afternoon, the New York Times (among others) reported that Rep. John Lewis, an elder statesman from the civil rights era and one of Hillary Clinton’s most prominent black supporters, is suddenly planning to cast his vote as a superdelegate for Obama in”hopes of preventing a fight at the Democratic convention.”“In recent days, there is a sense of movement and a sense of spirit,” said Lewis. “Something is happening in America, and people are prepared and ready to make that great leap.” Hungry for news on a slow day, the media responded with typical breathlessness.”Floodgates could open,”wrote Time’s Mark Halperin, a reliable peddler of Beltway CW.”If Lewis breaks away, take whatever you thought Clinton’s chances of winning the nomination before and divide that number by as much as two — those would be the odds of her winning now.”Whoa, nelly. Not so fast. Sure, Lewis’s”defection”is significant–but in a limited sense. For one thing, it’s not really a defection; instead, Lewis is still endorsing Clinton (for the time being) but promising to cast his superdelegate vote at the convention with his Atlanta-area district, which voted three-to-one for Obama–if it comes to that. Lewis’s confusing stance symbolizes a very specific political challenge facing black elected superdelegates–and black elected superdelegates only. If Obama maintains his lead among pledged delegates, members of the Congressional Black Caucus who have endorsed Clinton will face enormous pressure to switch sides. Like Lewis, many represent districts where Obama earned 85 to 90 percent support among black voters–meaning to defy their constituents and cast a vote that lots of people would see as stealing the election from the first black president would be tantamount to political suicide.AdvertisementOver the past few weeks, there’s been a slow drift of superdelegate support from Clinton to Obama. Not counting Lewis, Obama has gained 12 superdelegates since Feb. 5, while Clinton has lost a net of three. But until we start seeing a greater number of pols making the leap to Obama without such political pressure, I think it’s a bit early to say the floodgates have opened. It may happen; it may not. But any potential tipping point is still a ways away.Featured, Barack ObamaPermalink: http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/stumper/archive/2008/02/15/obama-s-tipping-point-not-yet.aspxSphere It!Digg It!NewsvineDel.icio.usFacebookType SizePrint Email RSS Social NetworksPermalink: http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/stumper/archive/2008/02/15/obama-s-tipping-point-not-yet.aspxTrackBack URL: http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/stumper/trackback.aspx?PostID=183355Sphere It!Digg It!NewsvineDel.icio.usFacebookThanks for sharing your feedback! If your feedback doesn’t appear right away, please be patient as it may take a few minutes to publish - or longer if the blogger is moderating comments.DiscussEnter Your CommentSubmit Member Comments Posted By: CANDIDATE_REPUBLICAN (March 18, 2008 at 6:46 AM)the rev dr kamal karna k roy aka joseph geronimo jr , a republiican hopeful , f e commission washinton dc complained to we the people through news media, although has had hate and negligent attitude towads member of the weaker community,viz the rev dr kamal karna karuna roy, a mobile clergy on vow of poverty, I R S rule, and honestly a u s american poor and member of have_nots in u s america, and a member of the disadvantage people in u s of america, wished to get slightly richer as the holder of federal job, full time contractual for 4 years, which could be renewable with polical and people’s conditions , w e f 1.20. 2009, The u s born american with other qualifications could apply for the job, which job is almost highest paid in federal jobs , and usa is a equal opportunity employer. Bute there are more than one entity to put selection *** election harder or illegal. There has been published reports in u s news media, viz new york times news daily published from city of new york that John Mccain would be nominee of gop for u s presidential election through hundres oflegal compliances etc etc. I was confirmed in my knowledge that GOP national committee , washington dc with assistance of 436 + defendants would discriminate againt kamal karna k roy for getting the federal of of u s president on equal epportunity in employment for u s citizen, as mccain gets preference than patriot,, clergy, management specialist and author of many books and publication, and the author book named”JUNGLE DEMOCRACIES ALL OVER THE GLOBE INCLUDING THE U S A, CAT AND MOUSE DOCTRINES OF OPPRESSIONS OB WEAKER PEOPLEI don’t know what you are asking, but Mitt Romney is the answer.
Penn. Election, could Obama win? More
The first post-Wright post-Race Speech post-Richardson poll shows that Obama has pulled to within 10% of Clinton in Penn (up from being something like 22% behind in the midst of the wright) And there’s more potential good news coming..http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/pa/pennsylvania_democratic_primary-240.htmlplus those are polls of likely voters, and it looks like there is a huge swell of new Dems in Pen who got registered for this primary, which prolly are not factored into the polls yet and are widely figured by experts to favor Obama..Plus, there’s like almost a million more Dems in Penn that republicans, wouldn’t even the loser of the primary in that state be able to beat McCain?http://blog.pennlive.com/pennsyltucky/2008/03/record_4_million_pa_dems_regis.htmlcould obama really win this bitch? or atleast make it close?www.jihadchat.com?? lol, hows that foil hat fit?
The first post-Wright post-Race Speech post-Richardson poll shows that Obama has pulled to within 10% of Clinton in Penn (up from being something like 22% behind in the midst of the wright) And there’s more potential good news coming..http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/pa/pennsylvania_democratic_primary-240.htmlplus those are polls of likely voters, and it looks like there is a huge swell of new Dems in Pen who got registered for this primary, which prolly are not factored into the polls yet and are widely figured by experts to favor Obama..Plus, there’s like almost a million more Dems in Penn that republicans, wouldn’t even the loser of the primary in that state be able to beat McCain?http://blog.pennlive.com/pennsyltucky/2008/03/record_4_million_pa_dems_regis.htmlcould obama really win this bitch? or atleast make it close?www.jihadchat.com?? lol, hows that foil hat fit?He could win, yes. But it’s a longshot.For example, he went from down 15% in TX to down 3.5% by election day. And in OH, he went from down 20% to down 10% on election day. He is usually very good at closing gaps in the last month, but no matter what, if Hillary wins, she’ll have a big confetti shower again or something of that sort. Some big positive momentum to celebrate a win, but she’ll still be way behind in the delegates. She needs a 66-33 win to net some major delegates.Hillary will probably win by about 10-15%, IMO.
If Obama loses Pennsylvannia can he win in the general election? More
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/pa/pennsylvania_democratic_primary-240.html
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/pa/pennsylvania_democratic_primary-240.htmlNo. The Hillary supporter hate Obama and a lot of them will vote republican for McCain as protest votes if he gets the nomination. Also the democratic voters in Michigan and Florida who were disinfranchised by the DNC will be ticked off that their votes for Hillary weren’t counted…or even that their”other”votes weren’t counted and a lot of them will vote republican for McCain as protest votes.So McCain will be around in Nov. to pick up the pieces from the democratic 50/50 split and the disenfranchisement of the democratic voters of TWO WHOLE STATES.Also McCain answers questions until ALL of the reporters are done asking. Obama stopped after EIGHT questions recently and gave a weak reason as”being late”. He is dodging on specifics of his plans.Obama is giving vague plans with no SPECIFICS. So his supporters are buying into his vague plans by PROJECTING their wishes onto him without finding out the SPECIFICS of his plans. Once they find out some of the specifics, they may lose some of their idolatry of Obama as a media darling. Even the media is losing some of their idolatry of Obama.
Why are the last remaining states so keen on picking Clinton? Is it buyer’s remorse for Obama? More
Pennsylvania: 52% Clinton, 36% Obamahttp://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/pa/pennsylvania_democratic_primary-240.htmlWest Virginia: 55% Clinton, 27% Obamahttp://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/west_virginia/west_virginia_democratic_presidential_primaryKentucky: 58% Clinton, 29% Obamahttp://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/ky/kentucky_democratic_primary-638.htmlVince you’re dead. Go away.No polling yet from those other states except North Carolina.
Pennsylvania: 52% Clinton, 36% Obamahttp://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/pa/pennsylvania_democratic_primary-240.htmlWest Virginia: 55% Clinton, 27% Obamahttp://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/west_virginia/west_virginia_democratic_presidential_primaryKentucky: 58% Clinton, 29% Obamahttp://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/ky/kentucky_democratic_primary-638.htmlVince you’re dead. Go away.No polling yet from those other states except North Carolina.Why should she stop and Obama walk away with it? PA is a large voting state and as the keystone state of the original 13 colonies and the first capital of the United States, we have a deep tradition of sticking by our choice and fighting for our state and country. We have many veterans here and you cannot stop us for fighting for what we believe in. Hillary grew up here and she is one of us. She will fight to the end and never give up in what she believes in and other states who want to be counted know what she is made of. Don’t count your chickens before they hatch. The polls are not always right as they are only as good as the people who are able to access them and some out there voting cannot be part of polls. Chill out and let it happen. These are all great states and know what they want.




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