AltWeeklies Wire

Boxer's Rebellionnew

Activists and Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) forced Congress to discuss voting rights on Jan. 6 when Boxer joined members of the U.S. House of Representatives in challenging the certification of Ohio's Electoral College vote.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Rachel Brahinsky  |  01-12-2005  |  Politics

Inside the Washington State Recountnew

A ballot-counter tells all about the gubernatorial hand recount that Democrat Christine Gregoire won by 129 votes out of 2.8 million. Guess what? It wasn't the Democrats who tried to game the system.
Seattle Weekly  |  Karyn Quinlan  |  01-05-2005  |  Politics

Washington Lobbyists Shake Down Indian Casinosnew

When Ralph Reed, the former director of the Christian Coalition, led a Christian anti-gambling crusade in Texas, he was secretly being paid $4.2 million by lobbyist Jack Abramoff for his work. Abramoff, who represents a tribe running a casino in Louisiana, didn't want the Tiguas to have a competing casino in Texas.
The Texas Observer  |  Lou Dubose  |  12-21-2004  |  Politics

Alberto Gonzales Played Role in Texas Death Penalty Casesnew

Alberto Gonzales briefed George W. Bush on death-penalty cases when Bush, as governor of Texas, allowed 150 men and two women to be executed. And now Gonzales will be the nation's chief law enforcement officer.
The Village Voice  |  Nat Hentoff  |  12-08-2004  |  Politics

The Fun Begins As Georgia Libertarians Notch a Winnew

The Libertarians won their first partisan election in the state when Ben Brandon of Rising Fawn was elected Dade County executive.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Doug Monroe  |  12-02-2004  |  Politics

Alberto Gonzales, The Devil You Don't Knownew

Those who cheer John Ashcroft's departure as Attorney General should think twice, as Gozales is a "considerably more dangerous replacement."
Boston Phoenix  |  Harvey Silverglate and Dan Poulson  |  11-22-2004  |  Politics

Was It Hacked?new

The Bush administration's "fix" of the 2000 election debacle (the Help America Vote Act) made crooked elections considerably easier, by foisting paperless electronic voting on states before the bugs had been worked out or meaningful safeguards could be installed.
Orlando Weekly  |  Alan Waldman  |  11-18-2004  |  Politics

The Voting Story Ohio's Secretary of State Didn't Want You to Readnew

In the months leading up to the Nov. 2 election, Ken Blackwell, Ohio's Republican secretary of state, did all he could to suppress the vote, ensure chaos and limit media scrutiny. Four Scene reporters covered the weirdness in Cleveland and Akron.
Cleveland Scene  |  Denise Grollmus, Kevin Hoffman, Chris Maag and Rebecca Meiser  |  11-11-2004  |  Politics

Blue in a Red Americanew

For those who live in Blue America, Election Day's crimson tide was a terrible blow not just to their hopes for a Kerry victory, but to their very idea of what it means to be an American.
Boston Phoenix  |  Dan Kennedy  |  11-05-2004  |  Politics

Illinois's Rising Sonnew

Barack Obama, who becomes the Senate's only African-American member and one of its most progressive, started on the road to Capitol Hill by opposing the U.S. invasion of Iraq. On Tuesday, he trounced his Republican challenger, Alan Keyes, winning more than 70 percent of the vote in Illinois.
Illinois Times  |  Todd Spivak  |  11-05-2004  |  Politics

Rough Night at Kerry Headquarters

The crowd at Kerry headquarters in Boston on election night had grown glum, but the mood changed at 10:53 p.m., when Pennsylvania and its 21 electoral votes were called for Kerry.
Boston Phoenix  |  Adam Reilly  |  11-03-2004  |  Politics

George W. Bush in His Own Wordsnew

The interesting thing about being president, Bush has said, is that he doesn't need to explain why he says things. Many of his inexplicable quotations are compiled here.
City Pages (Twin Cities)  |  Corey Anderson  |  11-01-2004  |  Politics

The 2004 Riverfront Times Candidate Challenge Weeds Out Cowardsnew

Tired of listening to synthetic speeches, Riverfront Times asked candidates for political office to play "Rock, Paper, Scissors," bowl, sing and run a footrace to win the paper's endorsement. Several 'fraidy cat contenders declined the invitation.
Riverfront Times  |  Chad Garrison  |  10-28-2004  |  Politics

George McGovern on Liberalism's Past, Present and Future

In a Q&A interview, statesman George McGovern discusses the current presidential race and his views that Democrats should own up to being liberal.
Gambit  |  Michael Tisserand  |  10-22-2004  |  Politics

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