We thought just making threats against the president, a major party's nominee, or any other public official these days is at least worthy of an investigation and/or criminal charges. But I guess it depends on which nominee gets threatened.
A shill is defined by most dictionaries as: "An accomplice of a hawker, gambler, or swindler who acts as an enthusiastic customer to entice or encourage others." After the performance of CNN personality Candy Crowley in the most recent presidential debate, many believe she was on the side of the president.
I doubt this will make it into the media coverage of the second presidential debate, but if you were to hear the words of Andrew Stepanian at Hofstra University Tuesday evening, you would be listening to a convicted terrorist.
President Obama, on the heels of the beating he took from Mitt Romney, unleashed a new ad trying to capitalize on Romney's comment he would cut funding for public broadcasting.
You might remember the story some time ago here on our website about the Virginia man who's dead dog received a voter registration form. The same group is now the subject of a possible investigation.
Last week, Mitt Romney‘s campaign adviser, Eric Fehrnstrom, likened his candidate’s plan to retool and change message once he secured the GOP nomination to the classic toy the Etch-A-Sketch. “You can kind of shake it up and we start all over again,” Fehrnstrom said during the now notorious CNN interview.
While changing courses for a general election is pretty standard practice, it’s not something
On Wednesday in Minnesota, Mitt Romney found himself on the receiving end of a glitter bomb. But this wasn’t, as he later tried to spin it, a form of celebration for his recent Florida primary win.
After taking a beating by Newt Gingrich in last week’s South Carolina debates and primary, GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s campaign flailed — but in Thursday night’s debate in Jacksonville, FL, the former Massachusetts governor delivered his most aggressive performance yet.