2008 Presidential Campaign Blog

Blogs


  • 2024 Presidential Campaign Blog

    2020 Presidential Campaign Blog

    2016 Presidential Campaign Blog

    2012 Presidential Campaign Blog

    2008 Presidential Campaign Blog

    2004 Presidential Campaign Blog

Ad


Subscribe to this blog's feed

Ad


Statement from the Republican National Convention On Senator Obama's Visit Today To St. Paul

STATEMENT FROM 2008 REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION SPOKESMAN MATT BURNS ON SEN. OBAMA'S VISIT TODAY TO SAINT PAUL, MINN.:

"The Xcel Energy Center hasn't hosted anyone who skates and flips as much as Senator Obama since the U.S. Figure Skating Championships were in town and the Minnesota Wild were eliminated from the hockey playoffs. We look forward to Senator McCain's visit to Saint Paul in September, where he will accept our party's nomination and offer a more substantive vision for leading America forward than the spectacle witnessed tonight."

Posted by Mike on June 03, 2008 | Permalink

Barack Obama Xcel Energy Center St. Paul Rally Preview

 

Xcel Energy Center

Xcel Energy Center

Posted by Mike on June 02, 2008 | Permalink

Tags: "Barack Obama" "Xcel Energy Center" "St. Paul"

Nearly $200 Million Spent On Presidential Campaign TV Ads To Date

NEARLY $200 MILLION SPENT ON PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN TV ADS TO DATE

MADISON, WI – Almost $200 million has been spent on television advertising so far during this presidential election year, with the overwhelming amount of recent spending coming from the race for the Democratic nomination. In total, Democratic candidates for president have spent close to $135 million on campaign advertising, while Republican candidates have spent some $57 million. Hillary Clinton has spent over $46 million on campaign advertising, while Barack Obama has spent approximately $75 million on ads.

Source: University of Wisconsin Advertising Project

Posted by Mike on June 02, 2008 | Permalink

Tags: "Campaign" "TV Ads"

Transcript: Hillary Clinton Delivers Remarks at San Juan, Puerto Rico Celebration Event

Transcript: Hillary Clinton Delivers Remarks at San Juan, Puerto Rico Celebration Event

Hillary Clinton delivered the following remarks at a victory celebration in San Juan, Puerto Rico tonight:

Thank you so much. I have four words for you: Te quiero Puerto Rico!

Never before have these beautiful islands had such an important voice in a presidential election. And I have thoroughly enjoyed my time here. I cannot thank you all enough. Bill and Chelsea and I are so grateful to the bottom of our hearts for your generosity and your kindness, and I hope that we have helped to draw attention to the concerns of Puerto Rico and we have also helped to spotlight the beauty and the spirit of this wonderful place.

I am grateful for this show of overwhelming support. I came to Puerto Rico to listen to your voices because your voices deserve to be heard. And I hear you, and I see you, and I will always stand up for you.

I also want to recognize Senator Obama and his supporters. Our two campaigns have turned out record numbers of new voters, determined to chart a new course for America. Now, this primary election has been hard fought because there is so much at stake and we must elect a Democratic president.

I am I am overwhelmed by this vote today and I cannot complete this journey without your help. We have two contests left in South Dakota and Montana, and you can make the difference by visiting hillaryclinton.com and helping us make sure we go strong. Every contribution will help us make our case to the voters who are going to be heading to the polls.

And I want you to know that this election is really about your future. You voted even though some tried to tell you that your votes wouldn't count. You voted for the person you believe will be the stronger nominee and the strongest president. And you are not alone. You are joining millions of people across the United States, more than 17.6 million, plus the votes that we've received today. People who don't always make the headlines; who don't always feel like your voices are being heard.

I think about these people all the time, because that's who I care most about. The nurse on her second shift who still can't pay her credit card bills; the worker who can't afford the gas on the way to work, the waitress on her feet without health care. The small business owners saddled with rising energy bills; the college student who can't afford to continue college; the farmer, the teacher, the trucker, the soldier, the veteran. The people yearning for a president who will rebuild the economy and a Commander-in-Chief who will restore our leadership and moral authority in the world.

I know that people face tough times. But what I’ve been impressed by is the resourcefulness and resilience that the people here and across the United States use to face whatever challenges they confront, because they believe they can keep working for a better tomorrow. The American Dream may bend under the weight of challenges we failed to meet and presidents who have failed to lead. It may bend, but it will never break, because that's what keeps so many of us going; the thought of a better life tomorrow and a better future for our children.

I believe that the people of the United States need a champion in the White House, someone who will be a president in their corner and on their side. I believe you are voting because you want a president who will stand up for universal health care. Who will stand up for action to address the housing crisis, who will stand up for better jobs to protect Social Security. You want to cut through the speeches and the sound-bites to real solutions.

And so today you've come out strong. You have defied the skeptics. More people across the country have voted for our campaign, more people have voted for us than for any candidate in the history of presidential primaries.

We are winning the popular vote. Now, there can be no doubt, the people have spoken and you have chosen your candidate. And it's important where we have won. We are winning these votes in swing states and among the very swing voters that Democrats must win to take back the White House and put this country back on the path to prosperity. Together, we've won the battleground states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Arkansas, West Virginia, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, Nevada, and, yes, Michigan and Florida.

And I hope by my second term, regardless of what the people of Puerto Rico decide about the status option you prefer, you too will be able to vote for the next president of the United States.

So, when the voting concludes on Tuesday, neither Senator Obama nor I will have the number of delegates to be the nominee. I will lead the popular vote. He will maintain a slight lead in the delegate count. The decision will fall on the shoulders of those leaders in our party empowered by the rules to vote at the Democratic Convention.

I do not envy the decision you must make, but a decision has to be made, and in the final assessment, I ask you to consider these questions: Which candidate best represents the will of the people who voted in this historic primary? Which candidate is best able to lead to us victory in November? And which candidate is best able to lead our nation as our president in the face of unprecedented challenges at home and abroad?

I am in this race because I believe I am that candidate, and I will be that president. We are winning the popular vote because we have stood for the core principle of our party, a party that believes in universal health care - no one left out. A party that believes hard working, middle-class families deserve a fair shot at the American Dream, a party that believes we must bring our troops home from Iraq safely, responsibly, and honorably. A party that cherishes every child, values every family, and counts every single vote.

We are winning against John McCain and beating him in the key states. We have what it takes to get the 270 electoral votes necessary to win the White House. And the majority of voters know who is ready on Day One to serve as our president. A president who will bring strength, knowledge, and experience to the White House to solve our toughest problems. A president who knows firsthand the challenges of the job, as well as its power to make a positive difference in people's lives.

That’s why I’m in this race. Ultimately it's not about Senator Obama or me. It’s about you – your hopes, your interests, your futures. It’s about the direction we choose as a nation. With two wars abroad and an economic crisis at home, we have to get this right. Our country cannot afford four more years of more of the same.

So, today Puerto Ricans across this beautiful place that I have come to enjoy so much made your voices heard and your votes counted, and for that, I want to thank my co-chairs, Senate President Kenneth McClintock and Puerto Rico Democratic Chair Roberto Prats, political directors Rafi Rodriguez Aguayo and Representative Jorge Colberg, Elections Representatives, Representative “Junior” Gonzalez and Rene Estades. Jose Hernandez Mayoral, Former Governor Carlos Romero, Miguel Lausell, Virgilio Ramos, and Luisette Cabanas. And special thank you to coordinator Ramon Luis Lugo, deputy coordinator Francisco Domenech, and advisor Jeffrey Farrow.

And I want to thank all of my volunteers, my staff, my supporters; everyone who waved at us as we caravanned all day yesterday. And I want to reiterate what I have said across Puerto Rico, together, in my first term, we will finally enable the status question to be resolved, based on the principles that government should be representative at all levels, and the people of Puerto Rico deserve the opportunity to choose from among all of the options.

Together we will work to ensure that Puerto Rico is treated equally when it comes to Medicare and Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program, tax breaks for creating jobs, and more. I will be your champion. And I want to thank all of my friends in our labor unions, all of them who have done so much for us. It has been a joy to work with every single union that has been here supporting me. We would not be here without you tonight. And I want to say a special word of thanks to the Hispanic community, not just in Puerto Rico, but across the United States. I am so honored you have stood by me throughout this campaign. I am grateful for your love, your friendship, and your support.

What we have seen in this campaign and what we have always known is that Hispanic Americans, Latinos from every part of Latin America, care deeply about the future of the United States. You contribute so much to the greatness of this country, to business and academia, to labor, to the professions, to entertainment, to sports, to every part of society. And you have also contributed greatly to expanding the horizons and the diversity of our country. I am so grateful to you, and I am so proud of the support you have given me.

I also wish to thank my family for their incredible love and support, Bill and Chelsea, my mother, my brothers, Hugh and Tony, my sister-in-laws, Maria and Megan, and all who are helping here in Puerto Rico and South Dakota and Montana. Because we are in this to choose a candidate who we know will not only stand up for us but unite us. We will be strengthened by the enthusiasm of the millions of people who have voted and volunteered in all of these contests. We are propelled by this unique moment in history.

The campaign has been an extraordinary journey, and I am grateful for every day of it; every single day something happens which reinforces my commitment and lifts my spirits. It might be a young child who is introduced and says, “I want to grow up to be president.” It might be a young mother who says, “I have no health insurance. I hope you will help me.” It might be an older man, who says, “I am a veteran, but I cannot get the help I deserve.”

Every story like that reinforces my commitment to what we are doing together. People deserve better from their government. The people of Puerto Rico deserve better from the federal government. So, I call on you to travel this final stretch with me, to join me as we take America back and lead our country with confidence and optimism into this new century.

Let’s keep fighting for our dream. Let’s keep fighting for what we believe. Let’s keep fighting for one another. Let’s keep fighting for America. America is worth fighting for. Thank you, and God bless you and God bless America.

Posted by Mike on June 01, 2008 | Permalink

Tags: "Hillary Clinton"

New Ad Highlights Hillary’s Historic Popular Vote Total

New Ad Highlights Hillary’s Historic Popular Vote Total

With two days to go until the South Dakota and Montana primaries, the Clinton campaign today unveiled a new television ad, “17 Million.”

The 30-second spot highlights Hillary’s lead in the popular vote. Over 17 million Americans have voted for Hillary Clinton, earning her more votes than anyone in the history of Democratic primaries.
 
The ad will begin airing statewide in Montana and South Dakota tomorrow morning.

Following is the complete script of the ad:

“17 MILLION”
TV: 30 

Tuesday, it’s up you.

You can join over 17 million people who’ve voted for a leader to fix the
economy.

[17 million]….for a Commander in Chief to bring our troops home from Iraq

17 million who want to beat John McCain.

17 million Americans have voted for Hillary Clinton...more than for any
primary candidate in history.

Some say there isn’t a single reason for Hillary to be the Democratic
nominee.

They’re right.

There are over 17 million of them.


HRC:  “I’m Hillary Clinton and I approved this message.”

Posted by Mike on June 01, 2008 | Permalink

Tags: "Hillary Clinton" "TV Ad"

DNC's Rules and Bylaws Committee Reaches Agreement On Seating Florida And Michigan Delegations

DNC's Rules and Bylaws Committee Reaches Agreement on Seating Florida and Michigan Delegations

Washington, DC--Today, Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean and Rules and Bylaws Committee Co-Chairs Alexis Herman and Jim Roosevelt issued the following joint statement:

"Today, after careful consideration and debate, the Democratic National Committee's Rules and Bylaws Committee reached an agreement on the two challenges before the Committee on seating delegations from Florida and Michigan.  The Committee voted to seat the full Florida delegation with a half-vote each.  The RBC accepted the Michigan Leadership Plan as presented today by the Michigan Democratic Party with the exception that each delegate receives a half vote.  In addition, the Committee agreed that delegates from both states should be slated under Rules 5, 6, 7, and 12, outlining the candidate's right of approval.  With this decision, the revised total of delegate votes needed to secure the nomination is 2,118.

"This decision was not made easily or lightly but after listening to oral arguments made by the complainants, State Parties, and both presidential campaigns, we believe this to be the most fair and equitable solution allowed within the rules.  The Committee arrived at its decision with three basic principles in mind: One, that we must be fair to the voters in both states. Two, that we must be fair to both campaigns who abided by the rules in good faith and three, that we must be fair to the 48 states that followed the rules. 

"We believe today's decision is a step forward in unifying our Party as we work together to put a Democrat back in the White House so we can bring the Iraq War to a responsible end and get our economy back on track.  We want to thank all of today's presenters, members of the public - both those here today and the many others who have made their voices heard throughout the process, and supporters of both campaigns."

Posted by Mike on May 31, 2008 | Permalink

Tags: Delegations, DNC, Florida, Michigan, Rules and Bylaws Committee

Statement from The Clinton Campaign On RBC Decision On Seating Florida And Michigan Delegates

Statement from The Clinton Campaign
Harold Ickes and Tina Flournoy made the following statement this evening:

Today’s results are a victory for the people of Florida who will have a voice in selecting our Party’s nominee and will see its delegates seated at our party’s convention.  The decision by the Rules and Bylaws Committee honors the votes that were cast by the people of Florida and allocates the delegates accordingly.

We strongly object to the Committee’s decision to undercut its own rules in seating Michigan’s delegates without reflecting the votes of the people of Michigan.
 
The Committee awarded to Senator Obama not only the delegates won by Uncommitted, but four of the delegates won by Senator Clinton. This decision violates the bedrock principles of our democracy and our Party.
 
We reserve the right to challenge this decision before the Credentials Committee and appeal for a fair allocation of Michigan’s delegates that actually reflect the votes as they were cast.

Posted by Mike on May 31, 2008 | Permalink

Tags: "Hillary Clinton" "RBC"

DNC Chairman Howard Dean's Remarks to the RBC Meeting

DNC Chairman Howard Dean's Remarks to the RBC Meeting

Washington, DC--Below are DNC Chairman Howard Dean's remarks to the Rules and Bylaws Committee meeting on May 31, 2008, as prepared for delivery:
 
"Thank you all for coming.
 
"This has been an extraordinary primary season. And we know it will be an historic election.
 
"The Democratic Party is going to nominate either the first woman or the first African American to be our party's nominee.   I believe that the person we choose will be elected president in November.
 
"Our party is so fortunate to have had such a strong field of Democratic candidates in this race.  I want to thank all of our candidates and especially the two outstanding individuals who are now in the race: Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.
 
"I know it has been a long and hard fought race.  Throughout the course of this campaign you two have helped transform our party. 
 
"You have proven that when we show up and talk about our values, Democrats can win everywhere.  You have helped to make our party stronger.  So thank you and thanks to your hardworking campaigns.
 
"While I will not try to gloss over the challenges of this extended primary I do want to take a step back and look at what our hard work has helped to accomplish. 
 
"From Mississippi to Montana, Ohio to Oregon.  Americans -- women, men, Hispanics, African Americans, Asian Americans, Native Americans, young people, veterans, homemakers, educators, health care workers, students, retirees,  Democrats, Independents and even Republicans, of all shapes and sizes have come out to support our two outstanding candidates and the values we share.
 
"Over 35 million people have come out to support our candidates all across our country.
 
"In state after state women represented well over half of Democratic voters, sometimes 60 percent. 
 
"Young voters have tripled and in some cases quadrupled previous turnout - in fact 58 percent of voters under 30 now identify as a Democrat or lean Democratic, while only 33 percent associate with Republicans.
 
"Consider that in Ohio, twice as many people participated in the Democratic primary as in the Republican primary--2.2 million for Democrats compared to 1 million for Republicans--and thousands of Ohio Republicans switched parties to vote for a Democrat.
 
"In fact, in seven counties in Ohio--Putnam, Brown, Shelby, Belmont, Warren, Delaware, and Clarmont--the vote totals for our two Democratic candidates in the 2008 primary exceeded the votes for John Kerry in the general election in each of those counties.
 
"In Texas this year, more people voted in the Democratic primary than voted in the 2004 general election on the Democratic side in the state.
 
"So while I know it has been a long, tough campaign, it also made our candidates and our party stronger.
 
"And while the punditocracy in the media tried to tell the American people what to think and what to do, you stood up and spoke loudly to have your voices heard.  And you made us all listen.  And the race continues to the final contests in Puerto Rico, and on Tuesday in South Dakota and Montana.
 
"To each and every one of you who has voted and who will yet vote, I say not only thank you, but remind you that our work is just beginning.  We need your help.  We need you to stay involved in this election and get involved in the other races that are going on in your community and your state. 
 
"We need you to knock on doors, make calls, to talk to your neighbors about what's at stake in this election.  Together, state by state, door by door, vote by vote, we are going to take our country back and we cannot do it without you.
 
"I also want to thank all of you who showed up here on a Saturday to attend the Rules Committee meeting, those of you who are here inside the hall, watching from home or outside.  Cynics will look at today's proceedings and look only for conflict, they will not recognize your tremendous commitment to our country. 
 
"They will not realize that your energy, your passion for your candidates and your enthusiasm, demonstrate that our party is strong enough to have disagreements. 
 
"We are strong enough to struggle, and disagree, be angry, disappointed and still come together at the end of the day and be united.  The reason we are able to do this is because all of us, together in our passion and our emotion realize that this race is not about me, it's not about Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, the RBC or the reporters who are here to cover the event.  It's about restoring our great country.  
 
"Over the course of the primary there have been some tough disagreements and some ugly moments in this campaign. On the blogosphere, and the airwaves.  Emotions have run high and heated discussions have led at times to blatantly racist comments and, blatantly sexist comments particularly by some members of the media.  We know that those comments have no place in our society and certainly no place in our party.
 
"It has got to stop. We have got to come together and unite our party.  Every one of us has the responsibility to help ensure that our party is united.
 
"Part of that healing will begin with the discussion you will have today about Michigan and Florida. 
 
"I want to thank the members of the DNC's Rules and Bylaws Committee, led so ably by Jim Roosevelt and Alexis Herman. Thank you for the countless hours of hard work you've put in to set forward rules that have guided this process and in ensuring a fair process.
 
"As you work to find a resolution, I ask that you keep three key principles in mind to guide your discussion and deliberation:

Respect the voters of Florida and Michigan - not only those who turned out to vote, but also those who did not,
Respect our two candidates and their campaigns who followed the rules this body set forward over two years ago, and,
Respect the 48 states who did not violate the rules.
"Understandably, the compromise that you discuss here today will not make anyone completely satisfied.     
 
"Years ago a 'Democratic rules discussion' was almost an invitation for a food fight in a crowded room like this of Democratic activists.  We've moved beyond that - your actions today will put our party on a course of unity - a unity that will be on display in less than 90 days when we all meet again in Denver to showcase our nominee, the talent of the Democratic Party up and down the ticket and the values we share.  This is the unity that will guide our work in the coming months as we work hard towards Election Day to show up and ask Americans to put their trust in Democrats to restore our country.  This is the unity that we will show America when we inaugurate a Democratic president in January 2009 and the beginning of restoring our great country."

Posted by Mike on May 31, 2008 | Permalink

Barack And Michelle Obama To Hold A Rally In St. Paul On Tuesday Night

BARACK AND MICHELLE OBAMA TO HOLD A RALLY IN ST. PAUL ON TUESDAY NIGHT
Event Will Be at The Site of the 2008 GOP Convention

Chicago, IL -- On Tuesday evening, June 3, 2008, United States Senator Barack Obama, who will be joined by his wife Michelle, will hold a rally at the site of the 2008 Republican Convention – the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minnesota, on the final election night of the Democratic primaries. Admission is on a first-come, first-serve basis.

Xcel Energy Center


Event Details:

RALLY WITH BARACK AND MICHELLE OBAMA

Tuesday, June 3

Xcel Energy Center
175 W. Kellogg Blvd.
St. Paul, MN 55102
 
Doors Open: 7:00 PM
Public Entrance: Gates 1 and 3

The event is free and open to the public.  Tickets are NOT required, but an RSVP is strongly encouraged.  Members of the public are invited to RSVP at https://my.barackobama.com/page/s/stpaulrally.

***For security reasons, do not bring bags.  Please limit personal items.  No signs or banners permitted.***

Further details to be announced as they become available.

Xcel Energy Center

 

Posted by Mike on May 31, 2008 | Permalink

Tags: "Barack Obama" "St. Paul" "Rally" "Xcel Energy Center"

Argus Leader: Clinton Is Top Candidate For Dems

Argus Leader: Clinton Is Top Candidate For Dems

Editorial Board
Argus Leader

https://www.argusleader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080530/VOICES01/805300306/-1/voices01

Excepts follow below:

For the first time in memory, every state will play a role in choosing a nominee for the nation's highest office.

Some of those parts are small, but not ours: as one of the last two primary elections, South Dakota Democrats suddenly and improbably find themselves in a starring role.

That's an unlikely turn of events, as our state has improbably become a battleground in the long, hard race between two Senators seeking a spot at the top of the Democratic ticket: Barack Obama of Illinois and Hillary Clinton of New York.

...

But Clinton is the strongest Democratic candidate for South Dakota.

Her mastery of complex policy detail is broad and deep, and her experience as a senator and former first lady matches that.

Measured against her opponent, Clinton is philosophically more moderate. That is likely a good thing for South Dakota.

Clinton's energy policy is forward thinking and wise. She advocates a broad federal research initiative to help solve our looming oil crisis. It's a plan that would join university researchers, private industry and individual inventors behind a common goal.

...

Clinton has demonstrated a real commitment to Native American issues and will have visited several South Dakota reservations before the race is over. Clinton is precisely correct when she says that people outside the region have a poor understanding of the troubling trends on our reservations. Federal attention could help. That includes but is not limited to higher-ranking posts in the federal bureaucracy.

Her truly universal health care plan would be welcomed by thousands of South Dakotans. Even on reservations, where health care is nominally universal already, such a plan would be welcome. The federal government would never be allowed to subject everyday Americans to the kind of care Native Americans living on reservations routinely receive.
...

Her resilience and determination never should be questioned. She has met or overcome every challenge or roadblock in her way, and there have been many. Her determination to carry the nomination process through to its real conclusion has perhaps earned her a grudging respect from those who would never support her.

Clinton might not win this race. In fact, it's a long shot. But whatever some might say, the race is not over, and her name is on the ballot. Win or lose, she's also the best Democratic candidate for South Dakota.

Posted by Mike on May 30, 2008 | Permalink

« Previous | Next »

2008 Candidates

  • General
    Barack Obama McCain Palin
  • Republicans
    John McCain Mitt Romney Rudy Giuliani Fred Thompson Mike Huckabee Ron Paul Duncan Hunter Tom Tancredo Sam Brownback Tommy Thompson Jim Gilmore
  • Democrats
    Barack Obama Joe Biden Hillary Clinton John Edwards Chris Dodd Bill Richardson Dennis Kucinich Mike Gravel Tom Vilsack

Categories

  • 2008 DNC Convention (43)
  • 2008 GOP Convention (137)
  • 2008 Poll (7)
  • 2008 Presidential Campaign (100)
  • 2012 (2)
  • Alan Keyes (4)
  • Barack Obama (374)
  • Bill Frist (4)
  • Bill Richardson (104)
  • Bob Barr (3)
  • Books (2)
  • Chris Dodd (90)
  • Chuck Hagel (3)
  • Coins (10)
  • Debates (145)
  • Democratic National Committee (27)
  • Dennis Kucinich (13)
  • Duncan Hunter (22)
  • Electoral College (4)
  • Evan Bayh (3)
  • Film (1)
  • Fred Thompson (81)
  • George Pataki (1)
  • Gerald Ford (2)
  • Hillary Clinton (333)
  • Howard Dean (2)
  • Inauguration (18)
  • Iowa (1)
  • Iowa 2008 (47)
  • Jim Gilmore (13)
  • Joe Biden (77)
  • John Cox (4)
  • John Edwards (169)
  • John Kerry (7)
  • John McCain (648)
  • Mark Warner (2)
  • Mike Gravel (3)
  • Mike Huckabee (93)
  • Minnesota Politics (154)
  • Mitt Romney (324)
  • Newt Gingrich (1)
  • Podcasting (2)
  • Presidential Campaign 2000 TV Ads (1)
  • Presidential Campaign History (207)
  • Presidential Campaign TV Ads (379)
  • Ralph Nader (5)
  • Religion (1)
  • Republican National Committee (38)
  • Ron Paul (50)
  • Rudy Giuliani (194)
  • Russ Feingold (1)
  • Sam Brownback (45)
  • Tom Tancredo (20)
  • Tom Vilsack (21)
  • Tommy Thompson (34)
  • Web Sites (57)
  • Web/Tech (10)
  • Weblogs (1)
  • Wes Clark (2)
  • White House (4)
  • Wisconsin (5)
See More

Recent Posts

  • New 2012 Presidential Campaign Blog Feed
  • Mike Huckabee Wins Values Voter Summit Straw Poll
  • 56th Inauguration Features NASA Astronauts, Lunar Rover, Panoramic Photos and Live Twitter
  • President Obama's Inaugural Address Speech Text
  • Change has come to WhiteHouse.gov, The New White House Website Is Live
  • Live Streaming Video Of The Inauguration Of Barack Obama
  • Presidential Inaugural Committee Releases Planned Order of Inaugural Parade
  • The Presidential Inaugural Committee (PIC) Unveils Interactive Web Tools To Bring Neighborhoods Together For The Neighborhood Inaugural Ball
  • Microsoft Silverlight Selected By Presidential Inaugural Committee To Enable Online Video Streaming Of Inauguration Events
  • President Obama to Christen New Cadillac Presidential Limousine

Ad