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BusinessWeek May 31, 2004 Magnusson & Dunham |
Ralph The Spoiler, 2004 Edition Could Nader siphon decisive votes from Kerry in swing states? Quite possibly. |
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. |
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. |
ifeminists June 2, 2004 Carey Roberts |
White Males: Hot Demographic For The 2004 Elections If the Democrats really want to attract the white male vote, they will need to overcome two major hurdles. |
BusinessWeek November 1, 2004 Rick Dunham |
The Election: Watch These Indicators Confused by conflicting polls? Here are some leading indicators that cut through poll fatigue and gauge the candidates' real chances. |
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. |
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. |
Reason February 2001 Cathy Young |
Venus at the Ballot Box Women may lean toward the "Mommy State," but their politics are more complex than pundits recognize... |
BusinessWeek November 8, 2004 Paul Magnusson |
Will All Those New Voters Show Up? Democrats have more registrations. But the GOP is planning a massive final push. |
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. |
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 September 13, 2004 Dwyer & Walczak |
The Invisible Campaign Bush vs. Kerry: For both campaigns, it's all about the turnout. |
Inc. January 2004 Elizabeth Wasserman |
Backing Away from Free Trade Why Democrats have strayed from Bill Clinton's policies on trade. |
BusinessWeek September 13, 2004 Dwyer, Woellert & Starr |
Squeezing Out Every Last Florida Vote The voter mobilization campaign in Florida -- and across the U.S. -- will grow more intense as Nov. 2 draws near. Both sides know victory depends on it. |
Salon.com November 27, 2000 Jim Hightower |
How Florida Democrats torpedoed Gore If the vice president had locked up his party's traditional base in the Sunshine State, the election wouldn't be tied up in the courts... |
BusinessWeek August 16, 2004 Dunham & Miller |
Doing The Swing-State Shuffle Bush and Kerry tailor their appeals to the economies of states they're wooing. |
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. |
ifeminists November 17, 2004 Carey Roberts |
Election Results Bode Poorly for the Rad-Fem Movement The Sisterhood in America finds itself on the losing side of its own issues, is witnessing the widescale erosion of its voting base, and must now resort to dis-information tactics to staunch the exodus. |
ifeminists July 28, 2004 Carey Roberts |
Kerry Embraces the Radical Feminist Agenda A look at the Democratic presidential candidate's website reveals that Kerry believes that women will fall for all manner of obsequious pandering. |
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. |
Salon.com November 9, 2002 Eric Boehlert |
Did blacks stay home? The Democrats' devastating losses Tuesday may be linked to disenchantment among African-American voters. |
Salon.com October 31, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Bush battles for California The candidates duel in Leno-land as the Golden State slips back into play... Pollsters get their signals scrambled... and Nader gets a big shove... |
ifeminists November 10, 2004 Carey Roberts |
NASCAR Dads and Soccer Moms Join Forces, But at What Cost? The 2004 Democratic platform flatly ignored the issues of men, while kow-towing to such feminist demands as protecting abortion rights and remedying the so-called gender "wage gap." |
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. |
BusinessWeek October 20, 2003 Alexandra Starr |
South Carolina Shakeout For Democratic Presidential contenders, the future may be decided there. |
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 September 25, 2006 Richard S. Dunham |
Shop At Target? You're A Swing Voter Political campaigns are using consumer preferences to predict voting patterns. |
BusinessWeek February 16, 2004 Paul Magnusson |
Will Youth Rock The Vote This Year? Newly eligible voters are rarely roused by elections. But young-people power is real. |
BusinessWeek September 13, 2004 Richard S. Dunham |
What's Scaring Bush In These Swing States Efforts to garner an electoral majority have been complicated by a series of local obstacles in key battlegrounds. The challenges range from wobbly state economies to demographic shifts and not-in-my-backyard environmental fights. |
Salon.com November 10, 2000 David Horowitz |
The coup Al Gore's reckless attempt to subvert the election shows he is not fit to be president... |
Salon.com June 7, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Corzine cashes in, and wins The New Jersey millionaire scores a nomination while RepublicanJack E. Robinson gets on base in his race against Ted Kennedy. |
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. |
Salon.com December 19, 2000 Tamala M. Edwards |
O brother, where art thou? Al Gore received a record turnout of black voters, but Gore insiders say the vice president went out of his way to avoid seeming too close to this key constituency... |
BusinessWeek April 5, 2004 Richard S. Dunham |
Bush: A Question Of Credibility Will Richard Clarke's revelations do much damage to The President? |
Salon.com November 9, 2000 John Lantigua |
Go figure How did a liberal, Jewish district end up casting a disproportionate share of votes for ultraconservative Pat Buchanan? |
Reason March 2001 Cathy Young |
Many Americas Don't confuse the electoral vote map with the territory... |
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. |
Salon.com June 19, 2000 Jesse Drucker |
Hillary and the court How an upcoming ruling on partial-birth abortion could send shockwaves through the New York Senate race. |
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 |
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 June 4, 2007 Richard S. Dunham |
Execs On The Sidelines With no clear front-runner, few bosses are betting on GOP hopefuls. |
BusinessWeek September 27, 2004 Alexandra Starr |
Democrats: A Hill Too Far? Not so long ago, Democrats were bragging that they could win back the Senate this November -- and it didn't seem like bravado. Now, two seats short of a Senate majority, the party faces a risk of backsliding. |
BusinessWeek May 6, 2010 Mike Dorning |
The College Job Market: Tough on Democrats Graduates of the Classes of 2009 and 2010 are hard up for work, and that's eroding their support for Obama and the party. |
InternetNews November 1, 2004 Roy Mark |
Tech Lacks Traction in Presidential Race Pollsters, politicians and pundits have made it well known that the 2004 presidential race is tight for many reasons. But one thing is for certain: Technology policy is not one of them. |
BusinessWeek August 2, 2004 Paula Dwyer |
The Amazing Money Machine Defying doomsayers, the Dems -- by some measures -- are outraising the Republicans. And nothing has succeeded for Kerry like the Internet. |
BusinessWeek April 12, 2004 Paula Dwyer |
The New Fat Cats Meet the fund-raisers who are finessing the campaign-finance law -- and raising more dough than ever |
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 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 |
Salon.com October 23, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Bush wars: The movie Democrats slam Bush in a new video, while Gore raids Dallas to boost his base... Papers make their picks, voters doubt theirs and Nader rises from the left... |
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? |