1-866-OUR-VOTE (administered by the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law) and 1-888-Ve-Y-Vota (administered by the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Education Fund). You can also use text messaging or Twitter to report problems.
Apparently, a Daily Kos blogger has also been asked to participate. Daily Kos, as many of you may know, has been widely discredited for spreading malicious falsehoods and political extremism
Ha ha ha. No, we're not going to be on ABC News website this election night. We have our own website to focus on. Nice try, trying to drag us into this, Andrew, but why would we want to share a stage with a pathological liar?
I also find it funny that Breitbart is going around bragging about being an analyst, while ABC News furiously claims otherwise. Memo to ABC News: You invite a pathological liar and paranoid schizophrenic on your network, and he will lie. Lesson learned?
Christine O'Donnell's Senate campaign made a last-minute attempt to get its message out by buying several 30-minute television ads airing Monday and Tuesday on Delaware 28's cable channel. The ad features O'Donnell talking about her positions and interviews with Delaware residents, against a backdrop of soothing piano or electronic music -- the type that you might have heard in the Nature Company stores at the mall. But there were a few hiccups in the airing of the ad [...] "This isn't our show either!" O'Donnell wrote on Twitter Monday morning shortly after 10:00 a.m. "We are told channel 28 'forgot' to air it...both times... even though we paid for the time slot last week." A source also told the Washington Post that The source that station "forgot to air it."
Christine O'Donnell's Senate campaign made a last-minute attempt to get its message out by buying several 30-minute television ads airing Monday and Tuesday on Delaware 28's cable channel.
The ad features O'Donnell talking about her positions and interviews with Delaware residents, against a backdrop of soothing piano or electronic music -- the type that you might have heard in the Nature Company stores at the mall.
But there were a few hiccups in the airing of the ad [...]
"This isn't our show either!" O'Donnell wrote on Twitter Monday morning shortly after 10:00 a.m. "We are told channel 28 'forgot' to air it...both times... even though we paid for the time slot last week." A source also told the Washington Post that The source that station "forgot to air it."
When those Clark County early voting and mail ballots pop up Tuesday night -- between 7 and 8, we hope -- that will essentially cement the results for Southern Nevada in the U.S. Senate race, if the last two cycles are a guide. That means when we see those numbers, we can reasonably extrapolate in major races what the margin is in the county that will make up about 70 percent of the state vote.
There is rising expectation among GOP elites that Palin will probably run for president in 2012 and could win the Republican nomination, a prospect many of them regard as a disaster in waiting. Many of these establishment figures argue in not-for-attribution comments that Palin’s nomination would ensure President Barack Obama’s reelection, as the deficiencies that marked her 2008 debut as a vice presidential nominee — an intensely polarizing political style and often halting and superficial answers when pressed on policy — have shown little sign of abating in the past two years. (See: Palin speaks to electability issue) "There is a determined, focused establishment effort ... to find a candidate we can coalesce around who can beat Sarah Palin," said one prominent and longtime Washington Republican. "We believe she could get the nomination, but Barack Obama would crush her."
There is rising expectation among GOP elites that Palin will probably run for president in 2012 and could win the Republican nomination, a prospect many of them regard as a disaster in waiting.
Many of these establishment figures argue in not-for-attribution comments that Palin’s nomination would ensure President Barack Obama’s reelection, as the deficiencies that marked her 2008 debut as a vice presidential nominee — an intensely polarizing political style and often halting and superficial answers when pressed on policy — have shown little sign of abating in the past two years. (See: Palin speaks to electability issue)
"There is a determined, focused establishment effort ... to find a candidate we can coalesce around who can beat Sarah Palin," said one prominent and longtime Washington Republican. "We believe she could get the nomination, but Barack Obama would crush her."