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Seattle Times (Free subscription) | 6 hours ago
Virginia's Republican chairman said Tuesday that his remark tying Democrat Barack Obama to Osama bin Laden during the presidential campaign was stupid, but he refused to apologize.
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kansascity.com (Free subscription) | 6 hours ago
Virginia's Republican chairman said Tuesday that his remark tying Democrat Barack Obama to Osama bin Laden during the presidential campaign was stupid, but he refused to apologize.
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Miami Herald (Free subscription) | 6 hours ago
Virginia's Republican chairman said Tuesday that his remark tying Democrat Barack Obama to Osama bin Laden during the presidential campaign was stupid, but he refused to apologize.
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Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Free subscription) | 6 hours ago
RICHMOND, Va. -- Virginia's Republican chairman said Tuesday that his remark tying Democrat Barack Obama to Osama bin Laden during the presidential campaign was stupid, but he refused to apologize.
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ABC 7 News - Latest Headlines (Free subscription) | 5 hours ago
Virginia"s Republican chairman said Tuesday that his remark tying Democrat Barack Obama to Osama bin Laden during the presidential campaign was stupid... but he refused to apologize. from ABC 7 News
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The Huffington Post (Free subscription) | 5 hours ago
RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia's Republican chairman said Tuesday that his remark tying Democrat Barack Obama to Osama bin Laden during the presidential campaign was stupid, but he refused to apologize. During the campaign, GOP head Jeff Frederick told a small group of Republican volunteers that "both Barack Obama and Osama bin Laden have friends that have bombed the Pentagon."...
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Examiner (Free subscription) | 6 hours ago
Virginia's Republican chairman said Tuesday that his remark tying Democrat Barack Obama to Osama bin Laden during the presidential campaign was stupid, but he refused to apologize.
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Bradenton.com: Politics (Free subscription) | 5 hours ago
Virginia's Republican chairman said Tuesday that his remark tying Democrat Barack Obama to Osama bin Laden during the presidential campaign was stupid, but he refused to apologize.
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Global Paradigms (Free subscription) | 27/11/2008
Business Times - 28 Nov 2008 By recruiting Clinton era economists, he may be signalling that he does not plan to move towards a New New Deal By LEON HADAR WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT SOME pundits have been drawing parallels between the coming presidency of Democrat Barack Obama and that of Franklin Delano Roosevelt who was elected to four terms in office - serving from 1933 to 1945...
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DBKP (Free subscription) | 26/11/2008
The controversy over Barack Obama's birth certificate and place of birth has highlighted the stunning info that there's no Federal official in charge of vetting Presidential candidates to verify whether a candidate is a natural born citizen, and if elected, there's only speculation as to what measures could be taken.
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Ridenbaugh Press (Free subscription) | 25/11/2008
Very possibly someone else somewhere has made note of it, but we can’t recall seeing it anywhere, and merits some mention here regardless: Turns out that the percentage of the vote Democrat Barack Obama received this month in Washington (57.6%) and in Oregon (56.8%) was the highest any presidential candidate has received since Lyndon Johnson (whose [...]
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On Deadline (Free subscription) | 01/12/2008
President Bush made some interesting comments about his readiness to command the country in wartime and his regrets about the intelligence that his administration relied on before the invasion of Iraq. He also said the 2008 election, which delivered the White House to Democrat Barack Obama, "was a repudiation of Republicans." Here's an excerpt from the interview with Charles Gibson...
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Reuters (Free subscription) | yesterday
DULUTH, Georgia (Reuters) - The U.S. state of Georgia votes in a run-off election for U.S. Senate on Tuesday that will help decide whether Democrats gain a big enough majority in the chamber to ram through legislation virtually at will.
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Rod 2.0:Beta (Free subscription) | 2 hours ago
The Republican pushed an immigration reform bill that was unpopular with many in his party, and his seat was widely seen as vulnerable in two years. However, Martinez rejected suggestions he faced difficult re-election prospects in a state won last month by Democrat Barack Obama.
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MSNBC.com (Free subscription) | yesterday
11:43 a.m. ET TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Sen. Mel Martinez of Florida, who has struggled to boost his approval ratings because of close ties to President George W. Bush, announced Tuesday he will not seek a second term in 2010. His seat was widely seen as vulnerable in two years, but Martinez, a Republican, rejected suggestions he faced difficult re-election prospects in a state won last month by Democrat...