Articles Posted by Paul8148
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United States Senate For the third straight week, the US Senate race in New Hampshire is statistically a dead heat. According to Lesperance, “This week Republican Scott Brown leads Democrat Senator Jeanne Shaheen 48% to 46.9%. However, this is well within the 2.98% margin of error. So the Senate race is just too close to call.” 2.8% of respondents would prefer another candidate and 2.3% are unsure.
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Overall Georgia Senate Primary Runoff Results
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Visit the County Reporting Status page to determine when a county has submitted its latest report. County Results Other Links Statewide Map Candidate Votes Percent Tammy D. Blair (Party Preference: DEM) 163,992 5.2% John A. Pérez (Party Preference: DEM) 685,026 21.6% Betty T. Yee (Party Preference: DEM) 679,144 21.4% David Evans (Party Preference: REP) 685,686 21.6% Ashley Swearengin (Party Preference: REP) 785,846 24.7% Laura Wells (Party Preference: GRN) 178,214 5.6%
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Office of the Secretary of State 2014 Republican Party Primary Runoff Election Night Returns
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CRAIGHEAD COUNTY, AR -- Voters in Craighead County headed to the polls Tuesday night to pick a new state senator. Republican John Cooper finished with a sizeable lead over his Democratic rival, Steve Rockwell. Unofficially, Cooper claimed 57 percent of the vote with 4,314 votes, with Rockwell taking 43 percent (3,227).
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State Senate District 16 - Districtwide Results0.0% ( 0 of 480 ) precincts partially reporting as of July 23, 2013, 4:31 p.m
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Voters in four counties will be going back to the polls Tuesday to finally settle the contentious and closely watched 16th Senate District special election battle. They're choosing between Republican farmer Andy Vidak and Democrat Leticia Perez, a Kern County supervisor, to replace former state Sen. Michael Rubio, who resigned in February to take a job with Chevron. Print Only 115 votes kept Vidak from winning the seat outright in the May primary election. In fact, Perez conceded the race the day after Election Day.
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Political Insiders 12/10/12
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Scores of people waited in line at the county courthouse here this morning to become some of the first of more than 1.2 million registered voters statewide to cast ballots in the Nov. 6 general election.
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president and U.S. Senate in a dead heat in battleground Ohio. For the record, Republican Mitt Romney holds a “lead” of 0.22 percentage point over President Barack Obama. That’s a mere 2 votes out of more than 1,730 cast for president in the mail poll. By comparison, Sen. Sherrod Brown has a landslide going over GOP state Treasurer Josh Mandel with a margin of 0.87 point. That’s a whopping 15-ballot bulge
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Four years ago, President Obama became the first Democrat since 1964 to win Indiana. He looks unlikely to repeat that feat.
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The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Sunday shows Mitt Romney attracting 46% of the vote, while President Obama earns support from 44%. Five percent (5%) prefer some other candidate, and four percent (4%) more are undecided.
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We pundits have been busy crunching the results in last Tuesday's Wisconsin recall election and have noted that the public-employee unions sustained a huge defeat. Some have also looked west, to California, where San Diego and San Jose voters Tuesday voted 66 and 69 percent to cut back public-employee pensions. Those cities voted 63 and 69 percent for Barack Obama in 2008.
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Numbers 50 Total Delegates 3 RNC, 21 CD and 26 AL Important Dates Delegate Qualifying: by 1/13/2011 Primary: 3/13/2012 Selection Method Primary Delegates Bound (unless either released or by a 2/3 vote of all members of the delegation similarly pledged). o 47 Bound o 3 Unbound Selection Details AL – Delegate allocation: proportional w/ 20% threshold; winner-take-all if candidate receives 50% statewide primary vote Delegate election: Directly on primary ballot. CD – Delegate allocation: 2 delegates to plurality candidate with remaining delegate to 2nd place (w/ 20% threshold); winner-take-all if candidate receives 50% in CD during primary Delegate election: Directly...
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One of these former teens will probably win the GOP's White House nomination in 2012. Since the press will inevitably rifle through their histories with astonishing thirst and thoroughness, we may as well take this early campaign moment to glimpse them at their most innocent, ungainly, ambitious, preppy, or long-haired, before the serious digging begins (or, for the better-known candidates, before it begins anew). The following is a compilation of their high school yearbook photos. We've included nearly every declared, likely, and strongly possible 2012 Republican presidential primary candidate, along with awards and activities listed for their respective senior years....
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Is The Electrol College Fair
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President Barack Obama is set to announce a government-directed plan for economic development in the Middle East that emphasizes the role of Western multinational organizations, but that also sidelines the role of companies, ignores the new democracy in Iraq and downplays regional cultural, tribal and religious practices. “We’re going out of a decade of great tension and division, and now, having wound-down the Iraq war and having taken out Osama bin Laden, we’re turning the page to a positive future for the United State in the region,” said a senior administration official during a 25-minute press briefing on Wednesday that...
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Jim Costa (Dem) 33,936 49.5% Andy Vidak (Rep) 34,584 50.5% Kamala D. Harris (Dem) 3,581,250 45.6% Steve Cooley (Rep) 3,625,308 46.1% Jerry McNerney (Dem) 88,328 47.7% David Harmer (Rep) 87,780 47.4%
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Jim Costa (Dem) 33,936 49.5% Andy Vidak (Rep) 34,584 50.5% Kamala D. Harris (Dem) 3,581,250 45.6% Steve Cooley (Rep) 3,625,308 46.1% Jerry McNerney (Dem) 88,328 47.7% David Harmer (Rep) 87,780 47.4%
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Kamala D. Harris (Dem) 3,485,926 45.7% Steve Cooley (Rep) 3,502,021 46.0% Diane Beall Templin (AI) 132,359 1.7% Peter Allen (Grn) 195,330 2.5% Timothy J. Hannan (Lib) 191,207 2.5% Robert J. Evans (P&F) 122,708 1.6%
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