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Science News March 15, 2008 Julie J. Rehmeyer |
Spoil-Proofing Elections The only way to ensure that the person the voters prefer walks away the winner, mathematicians say, is to fundamentally change voting procedures. |
Reason November 2004 |
Who's Getting Your Vote? A revealing poll of who is voting for whom this presidential election: Peter Bagge, editor and comic book author: Kerry or Badnarik... John Perry Barlow, songwriter for the Grateful Dead: Kerry... etc. |
Science News September 26, 2008 Heather Benjamin |
Physics For Future Presidents: The Science Behind The Headlines In this election year, Richard A. Muller has put together a guide for the country's incoming leader that shares statistics and corrects misunderstandings relating to terrorism, energy, nuclear weapons, space and global warming. |
Salon.com October 23, 2000 Janelle Brown |
Get Nader out of my in box! Is a vote for Ralph a vote for Bush? All I know is I'm going to go nuts if I see one more e-mail debating the question... |
Salon.com October 24, 2000 Joe Conason |
Nader's hollow promise The Green Party may be a few million dollars richer after Election Day, but what cold comfort that will be if Bush is our next president... |
Sports Central November 2, 2004 Mark Chalifoux |
Athletes' Endorsements Get No Votes Athletes abusing their positions to start promoting their candidate is a dangerous trend, and it will quickly turn into a slippery slope if it continues. People should vote based on what is best for them and their families, not on who they cheer for. |
Reason February 2001 Jesse Walker |
Campaign 2000's Real Civics Lesson How this race busts the four greatest election myths... |
Salon.com October 30, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Bush is bashed as a lightweight The Texas governor cools his heels in Austin as Gore runs a Michigan marathon... Clinton pounds the pulpit... Nader Democrats suggest a vote swap... |
Science News October 18, 2003 Ivars Peterson |
Election Reversals Strange things can happen in elections. Some of that strangeness arises out of inevitable quirks in election procedures, especially when more than two candidates are involved. |
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... |
Salon.com September 8, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Gore gains poll power The first post-Labor Day polls are out, and they're all good news for Al Gore. Three surveys show Gore slightly ahead of George W. Bush or tied with him.... Plus, execution pace in Texas slows before election day... Cheney missed voting in 14 out of last 16 elections since 1995... |
Salon.com November 15, 2000 Charles Taylor |
The world according to St. Ralph We can thank Nader and his supporters for the election mess -- and they're not even sorry... |
Salon.com November 5, 2000 Bruce Shapiro |
Don't blame Ralph If Gore fails, that failure will belong to him and the Democrats -- not to Nader or his supporters... |
Salon.com October 19, 2000 Margie Burns |
Ignore the undecided Voters who haven't made up their minds yet are a little like the O.J. jury -- they're clearly not paying attention and shouldn't be trusted with an important decision... |
Salon.com September 25, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
Politics after dark Do late-night talk show monologues influence elections? A condescending media has decided that they do. |
The Motley Fool October 31, 2006 Rich Duprey |
Diebold Votes for ATMs Self-service financial revenues continue to drive this ATM maker, despite voting machine concerns. Investors, take note. |
CIO January 15, 2003 Stephanie Overby |
The Ballots Are In Georgia became the first state to run an election exclusively with electronic voting machines, rolling out its new $54 million electronic voting system to every single county for the 2002 elections. |
Salon.com November 8, 2000 Anthony York |
President without a mandate Can George W. Bush govern effectively if he wins the White House without taking the popular vote? |
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 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... |
Salon.com November 8, 2000 Todd Gitlin |
Pride before the fall Ralph Nader told his supporters to cast a vote they could be proud of. How do you spell H-U-B-R-I-S? |
Salon.com October 28, 2000 Todd Gitlin |
Unsafe in any state Ralph Nader's campaign is reckless, its justifications specious and its consequences possibly irreparable. But it does allow fundamentalist leftists to keep living in their dream world... |
Salon.com October 23, 2000 Carina Chocano |
Nader's groovy night out At his rally in Oakland, the audience is 99 percent white and mostly shod in Birkenstocks. Talk about an image problem... |
Salon.com September 19, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Pro-GOP ad prompts racism charge A group with no official tie to the GOP has drawn charges of race-baiting with its new ad... Gore may now be winning the image war... A close electoral vote forecast forces the candidates to woo smaller states... Bush goes on Oprah... |
InternetNews November 6, 2006 Michael Hickins |
E-Voting Concerns Take Non-Partisan Blush Republicans and Democrats are both making noises about faulty electronic voting machines. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 17, 2008 John A. Quelch |
If Marketing Experts Ran Elections Concepts that politicians can learn from consumer marketing. |
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. |
Salon.com November 16, 2000 Scott Rosenberg |
In machines we trust If Bush is right that human beings are incapable of counting votes, how can we rely on them to govern us? |
Salon.com November 13, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
The disappearing ballots of Duval County More than 22,000 were tossed out in this Republican stronghold, but most of them were cast in minority, Democratic neighborhoods, and the Gore camp is crying foul... |
BusinessWeek May 31, 2004 Richard S. Dunham |
A Presidential Free-For-All The book 1912 Wilson, Roosevelt, Taft & Debs -- The Election That Changed the Country chronicles the 1912 campaign and is more than a good story. For an election held nearly a century ago, it's surprisingly relevant today. |
Salon.com November 9, 2000 |
Political war breaks out in Florida Democrats, claiming 20,000 voters were disenfranchised, demand hand recount of votes in four counties. GOP slams Gore camp for "politicizing and distorting" the recount... |
Salon.com October 5, 2000 Kerry Lauerman |
Why not Ralph? The political climate seems perfect for a Nader candidacy, but the nation's scold hasn't been able to give voters a compelling reason to say yes... |
Mother Jones August 2000 Ken Silverstein |
Candidate Nader He may be the most intensely private man ever to seek public office. What makes Ralph run? |
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 October 23, 2006 Stephen H. Wildstrom |
Beware The High-Tech Ballot Untested technology and poor training can lead to election disaster. |
Salon.com July 13, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Nader's No. 2 She's no Bush fan, but Green Party veep candidate Winona LaDuke wouldn't necessarily mind if her "spoiler" ticket trips up Al Gore. |
Salon.com November 8, 2000 |
"We're in a constitutional crisis" With Florida a tossup and the appearance that Al Gore will win the popular vote but lose the electoral vote, experts square off... |
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. |
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 July 17, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Hillary denies "Jew bastard" slur "I have never said anything like that, ever," the first lady says. Plus, Presidential channel surfing... Outsiders strike back... |
Salon.com September 12, 2000 Joe Conason |
Keeping a lid on the spoilers Bush and Gore fear allowing third-party candidates into the debates because they might spark real discussions. |
Salon.com August 17, 2000 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Democracy for sale Bid for the vote of one U.S. citizen, now on eBay! |
Salon.com November 9, 2000 Bruce Shapiro |
Harsh lessons How the drug war cost Al Gore African-American votes in Florida... |
Salon.com November 1, 2000 Alicia Montgomery |
Nader airs a new parody And our ad critics are torn: Best campaign spot so far or a tired retread? |
AskMen.com Ross Bonander |
4 Steps: Voting The following four steps largely explain the administrative process of voting. |
Popular Mechanics October 22, 2008 Erik Sofge |
Internet Voting in Florida Raises Security Concerns: Geek the Vote Internet voting is hard to get right. Computer scientists have repeatedly warned of the dangers of transferring even the most heavily encrypted data online. |
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 |
Reason May 2002 Matt Welch |
Speaking Lies to Power Ralph Nader fudges the truth just like a real politician in Crashing the Party: How to Tell the Truth and Still Run for President... |
Salon.com November 13, 2000 Joe Conason |
Republican rules of order The Bush people say the law works this way -- except when they need it to work the other way around... |
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? |