Posts Tagged ‘politics’

In VA-35, Both Campaigns Predict Tight Race

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

The race to replace 35th District Delegate and Democratic Attorney General candidate Steve Shannon is within a 2-point margin – or at least it was two weeks ago, according to polls conducted for Republican candidate Jim Hyland.

Hyland’s margin, described by his campaign manager Kevin Conroy as “within the margin of error,” reflects a tightening of the race since a July benchmark poll, when pollsters Barry Zeplowitz and Bill Lee of TelOpinion Research indicated in a confidential memo posted on Hyland’s website that Hyland held a 7-point lead 43 percent to 36 percent lead, with 21 percent undecided. The memo did not indicate the size of the sample or whether “likely voter” filters were used.

Read more at Collins on Politics

Limbaugh Has “Zero” Chance Of Owning NFL Team, Says Media Matters Official

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

By Ravi Bhatia, Talk Radio News Service

Senior Fellow for Media Matters Eric Boehlert said that Rush Limbaugh, the conservative talk show radio host, has virtually no chance of the National Football League accepting his bid to purchase the St. Louis Rams, citing the league’s efforts to avoid controversy and Limbaugh’s “incredibly long track record” of “hateful, inflammatory rhetoric about African-Americans.”

“The comments this week from the commissioner, some of the owners, the players, the union reps… make it pretty clear that Limbaugh’s chances are basically zero at this point,” Boehlert said.

In 2003, Limbaugh tendered his resignation from ESPN’S Sunday NFL Countdown pregame show for saying NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb was not as the good as the media made him seem. “The media has been very desirous that a black quarterback do well,” he said in the pre-game show.

“Every couple of years [Limbaugh] sort of ventures out of his protective right-wing radio bubble into the mainstream culture, and the reaction is immediate and unambiguous,” Boehlert said. “Mainstream pop culture, in this case sports, does not want anything to do with Rush Limbaugh.”

Boehlert added that he was unsure if politics and sports can co-exist.

“Having an owner who spends his day talking about the president as a communist or a racist or hates white people … doesn’t go over well in a professional sports community,” he said. “Larger sports culture … has no patience whatsoever with mixing politics and sports. Sports fans don’t want anything to do with politics, they want to leave that stuff outside.”

Money & Politics Culture In Washington Needs To Be Tackled

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

By Kayleigh Harvey – Talk Radio News Service

Fred Wertheimer, President and CEO of Democracy 21, made this comment today at a discussion on “Ethics in the Obama Administration – Are Washington’s Rules Changing?”

 
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Inaugural Radio Row: Former Texas Democratic Party Chairman Molly Beth Malcolm

Monday, January 19th, 2009

International Affairs Correspondent Blanquita Cullum interviews the former Texas Democratic Party Chairman Molly Beth Malcolm about Obama’s future, Texas, and female participation in politics. (11:55)

 
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Inaugural Radio Row: Author Christine Pelosi

Monday, January 19th, 2009

International Affairs Correspondent Blanquita Cullum interviews Christine Pelosi about her book Campaign Boot Camp: Basic Training for Future Leaders, family life and politics. (6:34)

 
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Barack Obama on National Service at Columbia University on 9/11

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Democratic candidate for president Barack Obama joined Republican candidate John McCain at Columbia University during a non-partisan discussion on post-9/11 America and the importance of national service.

Here are Senator Obama’s remarks:

 
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John McCain on National Service at Columbia University on 9/11

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Republican candidate for president John McCain spoke at a non-partisan forum sponsored by ServiceNation at Columbia University in New York City on the seventh anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. The discussion focused on what each candidate would have done in the wake of the attacks, as well as how each candidate proposes to increase levels of national service.

These are excerpts from Senator McCain’s remarks:

 
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McCain and Obama Speak at Columbia University

Friday, September 12th, 2008

On the seventh anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, presidential nominees Senator John McCain (R-AZ) and Senator Barack Obama (D-IL), spoke at the ServiceNation Presidential Candidates Forum in New York. This event was held to open the two-day ServiceNation Summit, which aims to promote a culture of service in the United States. The two candidates spoke about their views on what service and civic engagement are.

The event was held at Columbia University, in New York. According to the Columbia Spectator, the student newspaper, only 100 seats were allocated for students. The rest were reserved for donors and dignitaries. Several students told Talk Radio News that the seats were dolled out in a lottery system. Columbia accommodated student overflow seating outside the Low library (picture above). University officials had no comment.

The Governor of New York, David Paterson, introduced the event, speaking on the importance of service. He mentioned how fortunate the United States is that both presidential candidates know the great importance of civic engagement.

The moderators, Richard Stengel of Time and Judy Woodruff of ‘the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer’, asked Sen. McCain and Sen. Obama similar questions on the issue of service and their views on it. The two candidates largely agreed on all issues, differing mainly on the role of government in promoting service.

Both Mr. McCain and Mr. Obama expressed what 9/11 meant for them and the rest of the United States: they stressed the unity that the terrorist attacks brought, with Obama commenting that 9/11 demonstrated America’s ability to “come together.” The candidates also agreed that 9/11 had been a perfect time to lead change in government and encourage a greater culture of service, by tapping into the spirit of volunteerism that was created.

Both candidates stressed the need to reform Washington. Obama remarked that “we are not on the right track”, and McCain drew attention to the fact that 84% of Americans believe that the country is heading in the wrong direction; he declared that his long career in Washington made him especially able to “fix it.”

The importance of military service to the two candidates was clear throughout the discussions, though both stressed the importance of civilian service also. Obama stressed the need for a foreign service, for example, to help in war-torn regions such as Iraq and Afghanistan by improving health and infrastructure.

The difference between McCain and Obama, however, was clear in their opinions on the role of government in encouraging service. McCain emphasised the strength of faith based organisations and private companies in the response to Hurricane Katrina, referring to his own theory of government that the government should not do what the private sector is capable of doing already. Obama, on the other hand said that “government should expand,”, for example by creating a Clean Energy Corps to mobilise civilians in the bid to make energy cleaner.

Still, both candidates insisted that the issue of service was non-partisan and of vital importance: Obama said that one of his primary objectives, and one of the main reasons why he is running for president, is that he wants to lift up opportunities for service in the United States.

Jim Kolbe on Gay Rights and Sarah Palin

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Former Congressman Jim Kolbe (AZ) comments on different issues concerning the McCain campaign and issues facing homosexuals in general.

Joe Scarborough on Radio Row

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Former Congressional Representative and talk show personality Joe Scarborough discusses recent comments from Rep Robert Wexler (D-FL) and a statement from the Obama campaign, where Pat Buchanan, a political commentator, was called a Nazi Sympathizer.