Word: clinton
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...initially supported Hillary Clinton?No. I worked with Senator Clinton on prison reform, on poverty initiatives, on education. She helped me get a couple hundred million dollars put back in the education budget. She did what any good senator with a big name would do - we called her, she showed up. She cut the commercials, she's good, she's a good senator. She could've been a good vice president - still could. President Bill Clinton would be great to run a poverty initiative. If he would focus on fighting poverty worldwide and in America, he'd be good. They...
...When was the first time you voted? In a general election or otherwise?I think it was '92 with [Bill] Clinton. [Laughs] I was about 70 when I voted for the first time, but I've been voting every election since. But I wasn't a big voter. I was into my charity work, I run all these charities and I'm on the board of a ton of other charities, but I didn't start that until later...
...system “work?” Despite the quadrennial complaint that the current nominating process is too long, too expensive and too negative, the 2008 presidential campaign is producing credible nominees who will offer American voters clear distinctions.Unlike recent elections, the choice between John McCain and Hillary Clinton or John McCain and Barack Obama will not leave voters feeling they have to choose between the lesser of two evils. These match-ups provide Americans with clear choices on the war in Iraq, health care, cures for the economy and judicial appointments.On the Republican side, the nominating process produced...
...race. The online survey, administered to 2,452 young people around the country, found that 70 percent of youth between the ages of 18 and 24 who plan to vote for a Democratic candidate in the November general election prefer Obama, whereas 30 percent favor New York Sen. Hillary Clinton. The margin has dramatically increased since an October IOP poll, in which Democratic primary voters between the ages of 18 and 24 gave Obama a slight advantage over Clinton: 38 percent to 33 percent. President of Harvard Students for Barack Obama Nathaniel J. Lubin ’09 said that...
...nuts to be portrayed as aiding and abetting such an odious crowd. But bribing Kim is the only realistic strategy. When the next Administration takes over in January, with its own North Korea policy, it's going to come to the same conclusion, whether the President is named Obama, Clinton or McCain...