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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. |
Salon.com August 28, 2000 David Horowitz |
Persuading people you care Republicans need to take a lesson from Bill Clinton and wrap themselves in the flag of the "dispossessed." |
Reason April 2007 David Weigel |
The West Will Rise Again Is the South's hold over American politics on the wane? Book review: Whistling Past Dixie: How Democrats Can Win Without the South, by Thomas F. Schaller. |
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. |
Reason April 2009 Matt Welch |
The Liberaltarian Jackalope The liberal-libertarian rapprochement is probably dead on arrival. |
BusinessWeek July 22, 2010 Salant et al. |
The Republicans' Money Momentum The GOP is out-raising Democrats in races for open Senate and House seats, a sign of more trouble for Obama's party in November. |
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... |
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... |
Reason February 2003 John J. Pitney Jr. |
Gone With the Vote For the GOP in the South, Reconstruction isn't quite over. A half-century ago, Southern Democrats campaigned by opposing color-blind laws, stirring up racial fears, and silencing those who opposed them. They still do. |
Salon.com September 11, 2000 David Horowitz |
Stop being so paranoid, GOP Republicans should stop worrying so much about Bush's tough couple of weeks on the campaign trail. |
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 |
Reason November 2006 David Mark |
Attack Ads Are Good for You! In praise of negative campaigning. |
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 August 8, 2000 Bruce Shapiro |
The two faces of Joseph Lieberman His sometimes contradictory blend of liberalism and social conservatism has made him the top vote-grabber in modern Connecticut history. |
Reason November 2008 Veronique de Rugy |
Fear of a Unified Government What happens to federal spending when the Democrats control both Congress and the presidency? |
Reason March 2008 David Weigel |
Whatever Happened to Tax Cuts? In the GOP, free markets are losing to Huckanomics. |
BusinessWeek May 16, 2005 |
Who Are the Safety Net Swing Voters? The people Bush needs to get on his side are the folks who approve his overall performance but are leery of his Social Security reform. |
Salon.com August 8, 2000 Jake Tapper |
Regular Joe Gore's vice-presidential pick, Sen. Joseph Lieberman, has a reputation as a centrist respected by all -- and that's an image he's worked hard to cultivate. |
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. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics August 2007 John Keller |
Taking the Pulse of Defense Spending As the war in Iraq has become a political sore spot, we can expect the Pentagon's leaders to hunker down to the status quo on military spending at least through the presidential election in November |
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. |
Reason February 2001 Jesse Walker |
Campaign 2000's Real Civics Lesson How this race busts the four greatest election myths... |
Financial Advisor November 2007 Evan Simonoff |
Editor's Note - A Strange Election Awaits We are living through some very strange times in American politics. That was the message veteran political consultant Charlie Cook gave to attendees at the Financial Advisor Symposium. |
InternetNews October 23, 2008 Kenneth Corbin |
Report Says Leftward Tilt Online For Dems Election frenzy grips the Web, but several research firms identify a left-leaning tilt. |
Salon.com April 17, 2002 David Talbot |
Fight or flight? David Brock's expose of the Republican attack machine shows that Democrats have to get serious about fighting back. And that doesn't mean Al Gore's Florida-style fisticuffs... |
Reason November 2006 David Weigel |
Penn Statists In Pennsylvania's Senate race, both sides are running for the middle. |
Salon.com August 21, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Dead heat in presidential poll Gore gets a big convention bounce, the Democrats get religion, Al III gets busted, and Gingrich gets hitched. |
BusinessWeek September 13, 2004 Dwyer & Walczak |
The Invisible Campaign Bush vs. Kerry: For both campaigns, it's all about the turnout. |
BusinessWeek October 2, 2006 Dunham & Javers |
How Business Is Wooing Democrats The possibility the GOP could lose the House has companies scrambling to make nice. |
Reason June 2007 Gillespie et al. |
Presidential Scouting Reports A libertarian fan's guide to the World Series of politics |
Reason February 2009 Matt Welch |
Schwarzenegger's Failure If the California governor is the face of "moderate" Republicanism, the party is even more doomed than the 2008 elections suggest. |
Salon.com September 18, 2000 David Horowitz |
A miracle the press won't report The Democrats may appear to have the upper hand, but George W. Bush is forcing Al Gore into the tightest presidential race in recent history. |
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. |
Reason January 2009 Matt Welch |
Obama's Numbers The president-elect has promised to make his math add up. Therein lies a glimmer of possibility. |
Reason February 2004 Tim Cavanaugh |
Political Body Snatchers How can you tell the evil party from the stupid party? |
Managed Care November 2007 John Carroll |
Plans Unsettled By Prospect of Democrat in White House The health insurance industry might be able to help itself by coming up with ideas to influence the presidential debate. |
BusinessWeek October 20, 2003 Alexandra Starr |
South Carolina Shakeout For Democratic Presidential contenders, the future may be decided there. |
Reason January 2001 Michael W. Lynch |
Capital Letters: All Losers' Night In which our man in Washington desperately cruises for losers on Election Night and learns from experts how the new president should---must!---govern... |
Reason November 2008 Jim Henley |
Between Iraq and a Soft Place In Heads in the Sand: How the Republicans Screw Up Foreign Policy and Foreign Policy Screws Up the Democrats, by Matthew Yglesias, discusses the role Iraq played in Obama's success. |
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. |
InternetNews November 18, 2005 Roy Mark |
Getting Along Over Tech? Just think what a little bipartisanship could actually accomplish for technology policy in this country. |
Reason September 2006 Brian Doherty |
How Did You Vote During the War, Daddy? The war in Iraq is increasingly unpopular in America. However, public disenchantment with the war probably won't matter in November's congressional and Senate races. |
BusinessWeek January 13, 2011 |
The Daley Chronicle Bill Daley has worked as a "fixer" for high-profile bosses in business, politics, and the federal government. |
InternetNews March 14, 2008 |
House OKs Spy Bill, Rejects Telco Immunity The Democratic-led U.S. House of Representatives defied President George W. Bush on Friday and passed an anti-terrorism spy bill that permits lawsuits against phone companies. |
BusinessWeek November 24, 2003 Richard S. Dunham |
How The Parties Got That Way One marvel of American democracy is the durability of its founding principles. The same consistency doesn't apply to the nation's major political parties, as two companion volumes from Random House on the histories of the Democrats and the Republicans show. |
Reason July 2008 David Weigel |
Permanent rEVOLution By the end of the 2008 elections, as many as 40 self-proclaimed Ron Paul Republicans will have run for national office. They want to carve out a permanent place in Republican politics, regardless of whether the party wants them to be there. |
BusinessWeek February 24, 2010 Paula Dwyer |
How the Political Gridlock in Washington Might End Anger at Washington and midterm elections are driving both parties to recalibrate their self-interest. A tentative bipartisanship is emerging. |
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. |
Salon.com November 22, 2000 Andrew O'Hehir |
It's your party and you can cry if you want to Will Gore lose Florida? Who cares. The Democrats are beyond redemption... |
Managed Care June 2003 John Carroll |
Howard Dean, MD, Sees Universal Coverage as a Realistic Goal The former Vermont governor at first greeted managed care with good will. Now, however, he thinks it is shortsighted in its dealing with doctors. Unlike President Bush, he wouldn't call on it to rescue Medicare. |