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Obama, Clinton hone critique of McCain
Obama, Wright, and the Black Church Pt. 3
THE EMPIRE STRIKES BARACK
Jon Stewart Analyzes Obama, Clinton &...
Obama/Clinton Chief Strategist Duel: Axelrod...
Obama, Wright, and the Black Church Pt. 3
More at http://therealnews.com/c.php?c=080501YT Farrakhan, AIDS, and Rev. Wright
Saturday May 10th, 2008
Prof. Dwight Hopkins of the University of Chicago talks to Paul Jay about Rev. Wright's statements about Farrakhan and AIDS, and the effect his comments have had on Senator Obama's presidential campaign.
THE EMPIRE STRIKES BARACK
The second installment in The Obamacles: a unique chronicling of the 2008 presidential election. ...Obama Hillary Clinton Reverend Wright 2008 election John McCain Star Wars
Jon Stewart Analyzes Obama, Clinton & McCain For Larry King
Stewart gives his take on each of the presidential candidates. Listen and smile!...jon stewart obama clinton mccain primary optimism comedy president election commentary Larry King
Obama/Clinton Chief Strategist Duel: Axelrod vs Garin
NBC Meet The Press: One of the more devastating results for Clinton was that a majority of all registered voters now see her as dishonest and untrustworthy. According to the poll, just four in 10 (41 percent) registered voters view the New York senator as honest and trustworthy, while 51 percent think the opposite. This compares with solid majorities of voters who see Obama and McCain as honest and trustworthy (both polled 61 percent). The results suggest that Clinton was damaged more by being caught in a tall tale about landing in Bosnia under sniper fire than Obama has been by his recent controversies, including the firestorm of criticism provoked by the Illinois senator's remarks that blue-collar voters "cling" to religion, guns and other issues because of their bitterness. In addition, over half (53 percent) of voters say they believe Obama shares their values, more than those who say the same thing about Clinton (47 percent) or McCain (45 percent). After nearly two decades building relationships with a generation of Democrats, Mrs. Clinton has recently suffered a steady erosion of support for her presidential campaign from the party stalwarts who once formed the basis of her perceived juggernaut of "inevitability." "There is a lot of Clinton fatigue in the party and in the country today, and many people are reacting to that," said Tom Daschle , a former Democratic leader in the Senate, who is supporting Mr. Obama.
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