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Tracking the 2008 U.S. campaign

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February 26th, 2008

Reid mum on who he favors for Democratic nomination

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

WASHINGTON - Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid gushed on Tuesday that his Democratic Party has two “outstanding candidates” but fell silent about who he prefers for the presidential nomination.rtr1wabh.jpg

Sens. Hillary Clinton of New York and Barack Obama of Illinois are battling for the nomination which could come down to who the Democratic superdelegates support — Reid is one of them so his backing could be crucial.

“I can’t hear a word you are saying. Okay?” Reid told reporters when asked the question, drawing laughter.

Reid is one of 796 superdelegates — members of Congress and other party leaders — who will have a vote at the Democratic presidential nominating convention this summer. Superdelegates will join the delegates won by Clinton and Obama in state contests nationwide.

If neither secure the 2,025 delegates needed to win the nomination by the time the convention convenes, superdelegates will end up deciding who is the party’s 2008 standard bearer.

Reid, who represents Nevada in the Senate, has remained neutral in the race. But his son, Rory Reid, a county commissioner in Nevada, helped Clinton win the state presidential contest earlier this year.

Reid brushed off a question if there would be risks to the party if the nomination race isn’t soon wrapped up.

“We have two outstanding candidates, Clinton and Obama,” Reid said. “When this is decided — I don’t know when it will be decided — but the other will step behind the other one and support them 100 percent.”

“I am totally satisfied with this process.  I think it’s been the best presidential election that I’ve been involved in,” Reid said.  

Click here for more Reuters 2008 campaign coverage

- Photo credit: Reuters/Joshua Roberts (Reid speaks to reporters earlier this year.)
   

February 22nd, 2008

U.S. House lawmakers set election debate, viewership limited

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

WASHINGTON - Tired of those seemingly endless U.S. presidential debates?rtr1wf2r.jpg

Well the leaders of one of the nation’s most unpopular institutions, the Democratic-led U.S. Congress (approval rating below 20 percent), plan to begin a series of election-year debates of their own on Monday.

However, don’t expect to see this evening clash of lawmakers on any network or commercial television station like the presidential debates. 

C-Span, the cable station devoted to covering Congress, says it will air the debate. But it was not immediately certain if it would do so live or on a delayed basis.

In a statement, organizers say the debates are aimed at fostering bipartisan discussion of “the most important issues facing the country.”

The first debate will focus on the seesawing economy, which has emerged as a top issue in this November’s congressional and presidential elections. Eight lawmakers will debate, including Rep. Rahm Emanuel, chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, as well as Rep. Adam Putnam, head of the Republican Conference.

“Carried out in a genuine spirit of bipartisanship, dialogues such as these can help us to fix a broken Washington,” said Putnam of Florida. 

The first of these so-called “Congress Debates,” set to begin at 8 p.m. EST, is being hosted by the House Democratic Caucus and the House Republican Conference in cooperation with the Democratic Leadership Council and Congressional Institute. The event will be held in the nation’s capital at George Washington University

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- Photo credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

February 6th, 2008

Sens. Clinton, Obama share laugh at Kennedy’s expense

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

WASHINGTON - Democratic Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama interrupted their presidential campaigns on Wednesday to return to the U.S. Capitol where they shared a rare laugh together — at the expense of Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts.rtr1wrt9.jpg

Kennedy, the Democratic Party’s leading liberal and one of its most popular yet polarizing figures, endorsed Obama last month for their party’s presidential nomination.

Yet Clinton enjoyed sweet revenge in Super Tuesday’s nominating contests when she defeated Obama in Massachusetts.

“A big sigh of relief when he endorsed you,” a smiling Clinton told Obama, prompting Obama and Kennedy to join her in hearty laughter.

Just the fact that Clinton and Obama acknowledged each other sparked interest since they seemed to avoid each other last week when President George W. Bush delivered his final State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress.

Clinton and Obama returned to the Senate in a failed Democratic bid to pass an economic rtr1wr9t.jpgstimulus package somewhat bigger than the one approved last week by the House of Representatives.

Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the leading Republican presidential candidate, did not bother to return to Congress. Republican aides noted that a “nay” vote by McCain was not needed to defeat the Democratic measure.

His Senate office spokeswoman Melissa Shuffield did not explain why he missed the vote, despite his plane landing an hour before the vote began. “His absence would not have affected the outcome, as he would have opposed cloture,” she said.

Such a vote could draw criticism on the campaign trail since the Democratic measure would have expanded proposed tax rebates to include retirees and disabled veterans. And Clinton’s campaign wasted no time issuing a statement blasting him.

“By failing to stand up as the deciding vote, John McCain let our families down,” said her spokesman Phil Singer. 

Click here for more Reuters 2008 campaign coverage

- Photo credit: Reuters/Joshua Roberts (Clinton leaving the Senate after the vote); Rick Wilking (McCain at a news conference earlier in Phoenix).

January 23rd, 2008

Cheney says standing ovation tempts him to run again, ‘almost’

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

Vice President Dick Cheney received a sustained standing ovation from fellow conservatives on Wednesday, prompting the often-criticized vice president to joke about himself.

rtx57z7.jpg“A welcome like that, it’s almost enough to make me want to run for office again,” Cheney said, drawing laughter. “Almost, almost.”

Polls show most Americans disapprove of Cheney just as they do of his boss, President George W. Bush.

But Cheney was embraced at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative Washington think tank, where he urged Congress to pass a White House-backed surveillance bill. But first he subjected himself to some self-deprecating humor.

“I hold an office that has only one constitutional duty — presiding over the Senate and casting tie-breaking votes,” Cheney said.

“Before the Constitution was written, some, including Benjamin Franklin, believed that the vice presidency was entirely unnecessary.  He said that if the office were to be created, anyone who served as vice president should be addressed as ‘Your Superfluous Excellency.’”

“That’s better than some of the things I’ve been called,” Cheney said, drawing more laughter.

Yes, because outside a group of demonstrators chanted, “Fire the liar, impeach Cheney.”           

January 18th, 2008

Pelosi greeted with “Impeach” Bush and Cheney buttons

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi says she’s drawing heat from fellow Democratic lawmakers as well as people across the nation for refusing to move to impeach President George W. Bush or Vice President Dick Cheney.

“I go through airports, and people have buttons as if they knew I was coming,” Pelosi said with a smile, mimicking a protester pointing to an “Impeach” button on their chest.rtx4btx.jpg

But the California Democrat said she is sticking to her position that trying to remove Bush or Cheney would be divisive, and she added, most likely unsuccessful. If the House voted to impeach Bush and Cheney, a two-thirds vote would be needed in the closely divided Senate to oust them.

Many Democrats and civil liberties groups have accused the Bush administration of misleading the United States into the Iraq war and violating the rights of U.S. citizens with its warrantless surveillance program. The White House denies the charges.

In helping Democrats win back control of Congress in 2006 from rtr1vyu5.jpgRepublicans, Pelosi said she would not push for impeachment despite a number of calls to do so.

Speaking with reporters, she recalled that she wanted to focus on unifying the nation, passing the Democrats’ legislative agenda — not picking an impeachment fight with the White House.

“It was my belief that an impeachment of the Vice President or the President … would be very divisive in our country, and that is what I believed then,” Pelosi said. “It should have come to no surprise when I became Speaker I said it again, and I continue to hold that view.”

Click here for more Reuters 2008 campaign coverage

- Photo credits: Reuters/Jim Young (Bush and Cheney talking about the economy in the White House Roosevelt Room on Friday); Larry Downing (Pelosi takes control of the House as Speaker on Jan. 4, 2007)

January 17th, 2008

Speaker Pelosi wants a Democratic uniter in White House

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

rtx4vov.jpgU.S. House of Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, paused when asked what she’s looking for in the next president to help produce a more productive Congress.

Then she said with a grin and without naming names, “The first trait, I would say, is that we want it to be a Democrat who shares the values of the American people.”

Pelosi, who has had a number of spats with Republican President George W. Bush, added, “I put value on a president who can bring people together.”

But she does not intend to endorse a presidential candidate until her party selects its nominee.

Still, Pelosi told reporters on Thursday: “Any measure of a great president, I think, should be one who has a vision, he or she … that takes us to a new horizon, thinking in a bigger and more entrepreneurial way about the future.”

Click here for more Reuters 2008 campaign coverage

– Photo credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque (Bush and Pelosi at a bill signing in December.)

January 4th, 2008

Biden ready to return to Senate after W.House bid crashes

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

U.S. Sen. Joe Biden, having failed for a second time to win the White House, says he’s  ready to return to Congress after months on the campaign trail and work full time as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee.

“I am not going away,” Biden, 65, declared in a statement early on Friday after finishing a disappointing fifth in the Iowa caucuses on Thursday night.rtx4ecm.jpg

“I’m returning to the Senate as the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and will continue to ensure that we protect the nation’s security and show our country that Democrats know how to keep America safe, keep our commitment to our troops and restore our country’s respect in the world,” said Biden, first elected to the Senate in 1972.

Biden, who unsuccessfully ran for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination, has been widely mentioned as a possible secretary of state if his party captures the White House in November.

But the independent-minded senator, a leading critic of the Iraq war, has said he would prefer to remain chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee where he could freely offer his advice and criticism about U.S. foreign policy regardless who is the next president.

January 3rd, 2008

Iowa Live Blogging: Ron Paul defeats Republican national front-runner in Iowa

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

U.S. Rep. Ron Paul — the soft-spoken Texan who has opposed the Iraq war and a ban on same-sex marriages — had something to cheer about in losing the opening round in the race for the U.S. presidency.

Though Paul finished fifth in the Iowa Republican caucuses, the 72-year-old maverick placed far ahead of former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who is running first in national polls.

With more than 85 percent of the precincts reporting, Paul had 10 percent of the vote compared to 4 percent for Giuliani who spent little time in the state. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee won with 34 percent.

January 3rd, 2008

Iowa Live Blogging: Biden says he’s staying in race despite landslide defeat

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

UPDATED - Biden decides to drop out.  See story here.

Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden says he is sticking in the race for the White House — despite earlier vows to dropout unless he finished at least a close fourth in Iowa.

With more than three-quarters of the precincts reporting, Biden was a distant fifth with just 1 percent, behind Bill Richardson at 2 percent as well as the three closely contested leaders — Barack Obama, John Edwards and Hillary Clinton. Biden, buoyed in recent days be bigger crowds and more campaign contributions, said he will reassess his chances at the end of this month.

“My intention is at the end of that time to sit down and say, ‘OK am I in this or am I not in this,’” Biden said in an interview with Gannett News Service. “Something’s happening. You’ve seen the crowds - they’re real.”

December 7th, 2007

Republican lawmaker predicts Clinton will win presidency

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

lahood.jpg Republican U.S. Rep. Ray LaHood of Illinois, who earned a reputation for candor during 13 years in office, says he believes Democrat Hillary Clinton — one of America’s most popular and polarizing political figures — will win the U.S. presidency next November.

“I think that she will energize the conservative base of our party, but I believe that she’s going to be the next president,” LaHood told Reuters in an interview on Thursday at the U.S. Capitol.

“These things are cyclical,” LaHood said. “The country likes a change. I think she’ll get the nomination, and at this point our party is not energized about any of our candidates.”

LaHood said he backs the White House bid of Republican Sen. Johh McCain of Arizona — “he has the most experience of any candidate running for president” — but sees Clinton positioned to prevail.

“People are tired of the (Iraq) war, they are tired of Republicans,” said LaHood, 62, who announced he will not seek reelection to an eighth term next year.

LaHood said Clinton is being given a big lift by the fact she has the support of “the most powerful, the most influential people in the Democratic Party.” They include, of course, her husband, former President Bill Clinton.

File photo: Congressman LaHood chairs the Impeachment debate before the House of Representatives December 19, 1998/Reuters Television.