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Reason November 2000 Charles Paul Freund |
The New Presidential Identity Nobody ever accused American presidential politics of suffering from too much dignity, but the 2000 election has been a singularly post-labial affair... |
BusinessWeek October 20, 2003 Alexandra Starr |
South Carolina Shakeout For Democratic Presidential contenders, the future may be decided there. |
BusinessWeek July 21, 2003 Richard S. Dunham |
Who's Winning the Invisible Primary? Keep your eye on three indicators -- organization, fund-raising, and buzz -- for the probable Dem nominee. |
BusinessWeek November 24, 2003 Dunham et al. |
The General Stumbles The early buzz around Wesley Clark's candidacy has faded. Can he still prevail? |
BusinessWeek February 16, 2004 Richard S. Dunham |
Why The Dean Bubble Popped Like the dot-coms, the candidate fell victim to hype and a bad business model |
BusinessWeek July 19, 2004 Richard S. Dunham |
Now It's Showtime For John Kerry He has money and a popular veep pick, but he still hasn't wowed voters. |
Salon.com August 10, 2001 Jake Tapper |
Kerry's nation Can Sen. John Kerry, derided by his critics as an arrogant press hog, do in 2004 what his fellow liberal Al Gore couldn't do? |
Inc. January 2004 Elizabeth Wasserman |
Backing Away from Free Trade Why Democrats have strayed from Bill Clinton's policies on trade. |
BusinessWeek December 29, 2003 Alexandra Starr |
Candid Candidates A review of USA Today columnist Walter Shapiro's witty and insightful One-Car Caravan: On the Road with the 2004 Democrats Before America Tunes In |
CIO January 15, 2004 |
Where the Candidates Stand - position of 2004 US presidential candidates regarding information technology The president of the United States should understand IT and why it's important to running the country. Let's see if these men and women do. The positions of 2004 US presidential candidates regarding information technology |
BusinessWeek September 29, 2003 Walczak & Dunham |
The Candidate from Central Casting But Wesley Clark's outsider status is a mixed blessing |
Wired January 2004 Gary Wolf |
How the Internet Invented Howard Dean Forget fundraising (though his opponents sure can't). The real reason the Doctor is in: He listens to the technology -- and the people who use it. |
BusinessWeek February 23, 2004 Richard S. Dunham |
How The Dems Could Win By borrowing ideas from the book The Two Americas, the democrats may be able to end America's 50-50 political divide. |
Reason November 2006 David Mark |
Attack Ads Are Good for You! In praise of negative campaigning. |
BusinessWeek February 14, 2005 Richard S. Dunham |
The 2008 Dem Hopefuls Are At It Already Why Clinton, Kerry, and others are starting so soon for the next Presidential run. |
Salon.com August 18, 2000 Jake Tapper |
"Gore is in the right place" Democratic strategist Tad Devine previews Al Gore's nomination speech and defends his candidate, who's been lagging behind George W. Bush in polls. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2012 Marisa Plumb |
Dream Jobs 2012: P2P Politics Ever since the Obama campaign, former AOL executive Jascha Franklin-Hodge has been using the Web to improve political campaigning |
Reason October 2004 Cathy Young |
Beyond Belief The idea that U.S. politicians should keep their religious faith private may seem outrageously intolerant. But is it not equally outrageous that a secularist figure cannot express his views honestly without committing career suicide? |
Pharmaceutical Executive October 1, 2011 |
The Permanent Campaign The product launch has been transformed from a concentrated, all-out military assault to the subtle, persuasive art of electioneering. |
Salon.com August 17, 2000 David Horowitz |
Why Gore can't win He's in a box: If he moves left, he loses the center, but by tacking right, he loses his base. And he can't lie his way out as smoothly as Clinton did. |
Reason June 2007 Gillespie et al. |
Presidential Scouting Reports A libertarian fan's guide to the World Series of politics |
CIO January 15, 2004 Grant Gross |
Dean Profits from Web Campaign Even if former Vermont governor Dr. Howard Dean fails to seize the Democratic nomination this summer, his use of the Internet has added a new rule for political campaigns: Make sure your candidate's website drives supporters to meet each other -- and to a "click to donate" button. |
PC Magazine April 4, 2007 Aaron Dalton |
The Digital Road to the White House Running a successful presidential campaign in 2008 means harnessing the power of Web 2.0 and avoiding a YouTube gaffe. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 28, 2015 Dina Gerdeman |
Ground Game, Air Wars, and Other Marketing Lessons From Presidential Elections In the last few presidential elections, personal selling -- not mass advertising -- has tipped the difference for Democrats. But that's not always the case. |
CIO June 1, 2004 Elana Varon |
IT on the Campaign Trail The 2004 presidential race may well hinge on which party most effectively exploits data mining tools to get out the vote. |
Reason May 2007 David Weigel |
More Money, No Problem The death of taxpayer-financed campaigns: Taking the money out of campaigns is supposed to clean up politics; the fact that 2008 might become the first $1 billon presidential campaign is considered a sign of a broken democracy. |
Fast Company October 2003 Linda Tischler |
Joe Trippi's Killer App Howard Dean's campaign manager has used the Internet to turn an obscure ex-governor into a real presidential contender. It's anything but politics as usual. Will it work? |
BusinessWeek May 31, 2004 Magnusson & Dunham |
Ralph The Spoiler, 2004 Edition Could Nader siphon decisive votes from Kerry in swing states? Quite possibly. |
BusinessWeek January 26, 2004 Howard Gleckman |
Why the Democrats Can't Win On Taxes Only hikes can fund plans for health care, education -- and yes, breaks for workers. |
BusinessWeek August 16, 2004 Walczak & Dunham |
Behind The Numbers: A Hidden Bounce For Kerry Undecided voters seem more impressed than ever with the Democratic presidential hopeful. |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Stephen Baker |
Click The Vote In the age of Internet politics, the Web can make or break a candidate |
Reason June 2008 Gene Healy |
The Cult of the Presidency Who can we blame for the radical expansion of executive power? Look no further than you and me. |
BusinessWeek February 23, 2004 Richard S. Dunham |
For The Dems, "Fired Up" Won't Cut It Democrats are committed to winning in November. Polls show that most unaligned voters like Bush personally, but have serious policy disagreements with him. |
Salon.com July 20, 2000 Joshua Micah Marshall |
Gore's obvious choice Memo to Al: Never mind what everyone's trying to tell you. Your ideal running mate is Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry |
BusinessWeek November 17, 2003 Howard Gleckman |
As Growth Sizzles, What's A Dem To Do? Presidential hopefuls will try to ignite middle class rage over breaks for the wealthy. |
ifeminists October 27, 2004 Carey Roberts |
Girlie-Man, Next Leader of the Free World? If elected President, is this a man who will command respect from our allies and adversaries? This man John Kerry curtsies and bows to anyone wearing a skirt. And now he aspires to be the next leader of the most powerful nation on earth? |
BusinessWeek February 23, 2004 Dwyer & Woellert |
Cash And Kerry: Will There Be Enough? Some deep-pocketed new donors may give him a fighting chance against Bush's massive war chest |
InternetNews May 7, 2007 Roy Mark |
CNN to Make Debate Video Available to Public CNN will offer complete footage at conclusion of each debate. |
Managed Care September 2003 Michael Chiusano |
Too Early To Write Obituary For Patients' Bill of Rights Back from obscurity, the Patients' Bill of Rights is poised to become an issue in the presidential election -- depending on whom you ask. |
National Defense October 2004 Sandra I. Erwin |
Candidates Imprecise On Pentagon Spending Neither President George W. Bush nor his opponent, Sen. John F. Kerry, has dwelt to any great degree on the nuts and bolts of military spending. |
BusinessWeek May 17, 2004 Richard Dunham |
Bush And Kerry: A Tale Of Two Economies U.S. voters face the starkest policy choices in 20 years. |
Inc. January 2008 Clay Risen |
Political Animals This year, several campaigns are relying on entrepreneurs to play key roles, from campaign manager to battleground-state fundraiser. What do the entrepreneurs bring to these campaigns, and what do they get out of the brush with big-time politics? Here's a look at eight business owners in the arena. |
Reason April 2009 Matt Welch |
The Liberaltarian Jackalope The liberal-libertarian rapprochement is probably dead on arrival. |
BusinessWeek December 22, 2003 Walczak & Starr |
Commentary: Don't Get Too Cocky, Dr. Dean The ex-gov has a long way to go -- expanding his base and calming fears of a rout |
Salon.com October 27, 2000 Jake Tapper |
Gore goes Green Worried about a Nader surge that threatens his presidential bid, the vice president stumps on the environment... |
Reason December 2005 Jesse Walker |
From Barry's Boys to the Deaniacs Book Reviews: America's Right Turn: How Conservatives Used New and Alternative Media to Take Power, by Richard Viguerie and David Franke... The Revolution Will Not Be Televised: Democracy, the Internet, and the Overthrow of Everything, by Joe Trippi... |
Fast Company Mark Sullivan |
This New Site May Finally Make The Smartphone A Must-Have Tool For Voting Change Politics helps voters "engage directly with the candidates in the lead-up to the election, and shift influence in elections from parties and paid ads, to individuals' trusted personal networks," according to the group's blog. |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 Richard S. Dunham |
Do The Democrats Need Dixie? To win the White House, the party may focus on the Midwest and Southwest |
ifeminists November 3, 2004 Carey Roberts |
All Hail to the Panderer-in-Chief Pandering, of course, is the stock-in-trade of any political campaign. Still, it was impressive to watch the two presidential candidates pulling out all the stops to woo the female vote. |
Reason December 2000 Nick Gillespie |
The AWOL Electorate What we can learn from "vanishing voters": the country's general and substantial lack of interest in who becomes our next president. |