Similar Articles |
|
Reason November 2006 David Weigel |
Penn Statists In Pennsylvania's Senate race, both sides are running for the middle. |
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 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. |
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. |
Reason June 2007 Gillespie et al. |
Presidential Scouting Reports A libertarian fan's guide to the World Series of politics |
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 September 13, 2004 Dwyer & Walczak |
The Invisible Campaign Bush vs. Kerry: For both campaigns, it's all about the turnout. |
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. |
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. |
Salon.com August 7, 2000 David Horowitz |
Why Bush will win With a unified base, Bush is moving to the center, while Gore continues to alienate his base with the selection of Sen. Joe Lieberman as his running mate. |
Salon.com December 8, 2000 Anthony York |
Eliminating fraud -- or Democrats? Florida's controversial crusade to purge its voter rolls has revived an old partisan debate: Can states crack down on fraud without hurting eligible voters? |
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. |
BusinessWeek October 21, 2010 |
Races to Watch on Election Night The eight races that will keep you on the edge of your seat. |
Geotimes October 2004 Dere, Martin & Wallace |
Energy Issues Take Center Stage in Senate Races Earth science issues, such as the future of Yucca Mountain or petroleum drilling in Alaska, may not take center stage in the minds of many voters, but they do figure into some prominent U.S. Senate races this year. |
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. |
Reason March 2008 David Weigel |
Whatever Happened to Tax Cuts? In the GOP, free markets are losing to Huckanomics. |
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 February 2007 David Weigel |
Peace on the Border Why anti-immigration conservatives in the U.S. fell flat in 2006. |
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 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. |
HBS Working Knowledge May 21, 2008 John Quelch |
Going Negative in Political Advertising Negative ads ask us to vote against someone rather than for someone, an approach that sometimes works in political advertising. |
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 October 2006 David Weigel |
They Don't Know Jack The Abramoff scandal thrills Washington but bores voters. |
Wired September 2004 Stewart & Thompson |
The New American Idol The New American Idol, Arnold Schwarzenegger... 6 Ways to Reboot the Electoral System... |
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 June 5, 2000 Andy Sullivan |
Ralph "The Body" Nader? Jesse Ventura's ad man talks about how he would sell his next prospective client -- the Green Party presidential candidate. |
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. |
Reason May 2006 Kerry Howley |
Soundbite: In Defense of Attack Ads When he was editor in chief of Campaigns and Elections, David Mark watched vicious attack ads take down many aspiring pols. In this interview, Mark talks about how negativity is a distinctly positive feature of U.S. elections. |
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 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. |
Reason May 2004 Charles Paul Freund |
Backstage Passes What it takes to run for president in the age of media intimacy. |
Reason April 2009 Matt Welch |
The Liberaltarian Jackalope The liberal-libertarian rapprochement is probably dead on arrival. |
BusinessWeek April 21, 2010 Barrett & Salant |
Campaign Spending: Why Companies Are Holding Fire The high court ruling on corporate campaign spending hasn't been a game-changer. Yet. |
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... |
BusinessWeek May 6, 2010 Patrick O'Connor |
Key Primary Races Worth Watching A primer on some of the most important battles. |
BusinessWeek July 8, 2010 Elgin & Palmeri |
Steve Peace: California Revolutionary The man who is changing the way California -- and possibly the rest of the country -- elects its leaders is a political maverick with an eccentric legacy in both Sacramento and Hollywood. |
Salon.com May 10, 2001 Jake Tapper |
Holding court Bush unveils the beginning of his legacy -- the people he wants to shape the law. But Democrats are plotting to keep a say in the nominations... |
BusinessWeek November 20, 2006 Dunham & Javers |
The Politics Of Change As power shifts on Capitol Hill, business faces a new reality |
BusinessWeek October 20, 2003 Alexandra Starr |
South Carolina Shakeout For Democratic Presidential contenders, the future may be decided there. |
Salon.com December 6, 2002 Bill Clinton |
Clinton: Democrats "were missing in action" In a major political address this week, former President Bill Clinton bluntly dissected the Democrats' recent electoral losses. Moving to the left, he said, is not a solution -- but fighting back is. |
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." |
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 |
Salon.com December 19, 2000 Anthony York |
Hillary's book deal blues The Congressional Accountability Project asks Sen.-elect Clinton to give up her $8 million advance and just collect royalties... |
Salon.com June 6, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Bush reads from the Clinton script Candidates are all quiet on the Western front, and Ventura gets bitten by the drama bug. |
Salon.com December 16, 2000 Anthony York |
Will Republicans be Bush's worst enemies? From John McCain to Tom DeLay, members of his own party could make the most trouble for the president-elect... |
Reason July 2007 David Weigel |
Hawks and Hogs Why no one dares attack the waste in U.S. defense spending. |
Salon.com June 5, 2000 Anthony York |
But does he wear boxers or briefs? George W. Bush takes a page from President Clinton's playbook and woos the youth vote. |
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. |
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. |
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. |