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January 27, 2013, 2:30 pm
By
Alexander Bolton
The senator and former Florida governor are bumping elbows on immigration and education reform.
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Archived under:
Campaign, Senate, Presidential races
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January 25, 2013, 4:18 pm
By
Cameron Joseph
Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus was formally reelected for another two-year term on Friday at the RNC's annual winter meeting in Charlotte, N.C. Priebus's reelection had been all but certain since December, when he announced he had the backing of 150 of the committee's 168 members. Some committee members who were Ron Paul supporters sought to oust him, but he easily beat back the challenge, even wooing some Paulites from the Nevada state GOP to formally nominate him for the position. The chairman has had great success at turning around the committee's fundraising, though in its other job, voter turnout, the RNC badly lagged Democrats in 2012. He acknowledged that problem — and said the party needs to make great strides in technology as well as put a much stronger emphasis on outreach to communities that have in recent years been written off, like younger voters and minorities. "We're still in the middle of a comprehensive review, but there is one clear, overriding lesson from November: We didn’t have enough voters. I'm no math whiz; I'm an attorney. But I don't need a calculator to know we need to win more votes. We have to find more supporters. We have to go places we haven’t been, and we have to invite new people to join us," he said. "And we want to be Republicans for everybody. We have to take our message of opportunity where it’s not being heard. We have to build better relationships in minority communities, urban centers and college towns. We need a permanent, growing presence."
Archived under:
Presidential races
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January 24, 2013, 2:13 pm
By
Alexandra Jaffe
The head of the conservative group says the N.J. governor "lost an opportunity" to establish his credentials on fiscal reform.
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Archived under:
Presidential races
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January 24, 2013, 9:50 am
By
Cameron Joseph
Republicans in the Virginia state Senate are moving forward with a plan that would give the GOP presidential nominee a big boost at winning most of the state's electoral votes even if the Democratic candidate won the statewide vote. The bill, which was passed out of a state Senate subcommittee on a tied 3-3 vote, with one Republican voting against it, would allocate the state's electoral votes based on who wins each congressional district. It is likely to pass out of the full committee, which would send it to a full Senate vote.
Because Virginia Republicans had the upper hand in redistricting the state's congressional map, they hold eight of the state's 11 congressional districts. If this law had been in place for the last election, Mitt Romney would have won nine or 10 of the state's 13 electoral votes despite losing the statewide vote to President Obama by 4 percentage points. There are a number of states Obama won that are controlled by Republican governors and legislatures that drew congressional maps very favorable to the GOP, and if all passed similar laws Romney would have likely won the presidency despite losing the popular vote by a considerable margin. Republicans in other states including Wisconsin and Pennsylvania have discussed such plans, which have been endorsed by Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus, but it's unclear whether any are likely to pass.
It's also far from certain that the Virginia bill is likely to pass into law: The state Senate is split 20-20, so if even one Republican defects the plan would likely be doomed, and one already did during the subcommittee vote.
But Republicans are also pushing for a re-redistricting of the state Senate that would give them the upper hand at winning the chamber, in which case they could do what they want — though Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) was critical of the legislative tactics they used to pass that plan because they waited until a Democrat was absent to vote on it.
Archived under:
Presidential races
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January 23, 2013, 10:05 am
By
Alexandra Jaffe
A new poll shows Clinton better poised than Biden to take the 2016 Democratic nomination.
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Archived under:
Presidential races, Polls
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January 22, 2013, 7:14 pm
By
Amie Parnes
"I haven't made that decision and I don't have to make that decision for a while," Vice President Biden said.
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Archived under:
Campaign, News, Presidential races, Video, In the News, Campaign
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January 22, 2013, 6:03 pm
By
Alexandra Jaffe
A group that combats the influence of outside money on politics is calling for President Obama to dismantle Organizing for Action, the new manifestation of Obama's campaign arm that will advocate for and organize around Obama's second-term agenda.
Democracy 21 President Fred Wertheimer warned in a statement that OFA follows the slippery slope of other, similar nonprofits, in that it could provide outside interests unprecedented influence on the White House.
"President Obama should shut down Organizing for Action now before it creates the appearance of influence buying and/or scandals for the second term of his Administration," he writes.
Former Obama campaign aides announced last Friday that the president's campaign arm would break off from the Democratic National Committee and transform into a nonprofit that will do advocacy work and mobilize the grassroots in support of Obama's policies.
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Archived under:
Presidential races, Other
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January 22, 2013, 5:23 pm
By
Cameron Joseph
Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden (D) said he thinks his father, Vice President Joe Biden, will consider running for president in 2016 — and hopes he gives the decision a good look. "In a couple years, I think he's going to take a hard look at it," Beau Biden said on MSNBC. "I hope he does."
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Archived under:
Presidential races
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January 22, 2013, 12:19 pm
By
Alexandra Jaffe
Crossroads GPS, the nonprofit arm of GOP strategist Karl Rove's American Crossroads, unveiled a video Tuesday blasting President Obama's second inauguration speech as revealing his "liberal" agenda.
The ad features clips of reporters and pundits, whom Crossroads GPS dubs the "mainstream media," describing Obama's speech as a liberal rallying cry. In the clips, the address is described as "the most liberal speech Barack Obama has ever given," "much more radical than the speech he gave four years ago," and as "laying out his real agenda."
"If the media is calling Obama's policies liberal, what can we expect in the next four years?" the video asks at the end.
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Archived under:
Presidential races, Campaign ads, In the News, Campaign
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January 18, 2013, 10:21 am
By
Cameron Joseph
The Democratic-leaning public affairs firm Global Strategy Group has hired Bill Burton, a longtime ally of President Obama's who most recently ran the pro-Obama super-PAC Priorities USA. Burton was an early hire onto Obama's presidential campaign, working as national press secretary on the campaign and then deputy White House press secretary at the beginning of Obama's first term. Before that he was communications director for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee under then-Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-Ill.). "GSG is an outstanding, dynamic and rapidly growing firm. I couldn't be more excited to join such a talented team," Burton said in a statement. "I look forward to building on our strong presence in Washington, and to extending GSG’s unrivaled combination of strategic thinking and sharp execution that the firm provides for its clients."
The hire marks a shift in the super-PAC world, and comes in the same week that Obama for America, the president's campaign organization, shifts to being a nonprofit outside group.
Archived under:
News, Lobbying Hires, Presidential races
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