YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Presidential Elections and the Influence of Lobbying
Essays 1 - 30
as soft money and issue advocacy" (Newlin Carney 337). However, pro-reform activist groups are adamant about the issue of raising...
In six pages this paper examines the 1828 US presidential election in a consideration of the candidates, their characters, how it ...
to convey the French language and the Catholic religion on the Native Americans. French Canadians have placed high value on their...
Public Citizens Congress Project (Chaddock, 2003). According to Clemente, "The revolving door is becoming more comfortably establi...
W. Bush). In a May 2008 interview with David Brooks of The New York Times, Obama explained, "Its an argument between ideology and...
of civil rights had something to do with the win. Boller puts it this way: "Truman...waged the kind of campaign, according to jour...
the rest of the electorate, will not vote. A June 14, 2004 editorial in Business Week asserts that this is because democracy in Am...
have strong political views they not only would keep those to themselves, but they made sure that it did not impact their professi...
Voters, n.d.). Here is another interesting fact - the Constitution does not "bind" the electors to vote for the candidate but most...
Campbells model... with one notable exception. This paper will assess the inner workings of Campbells analytical model, assess its...
In 5 pages this paper examines the 2000 US presidential election results and their implications upon citizens, Congress, and upon ...
In eight pages the presidential election of 2000 is examined in terms of the impact the candidacies of Pat Buchanan and Ralph Nade...
the Electoral Vote (which is formally ratified upon completion of the election). The problem is, however, that based on this syste...
In ten pages this paper summarizes sixteen articles that consider how American voting patterns of behavior are influenced by relig...
gave more than $32.6 million in PAC and soft money contributions to politicians of both parties (Tobacco Interests, 2002). The rea...
the airwaves these days. But for the times (and in examining the history), the radio rhetoric of the 1920s and 1930s was quite str...
met. To consider the way planning takes place at all levels the process itself and the approaches can be examined. Mintzberg (et...
the are hungry for a pragmatic, much less ideological, approach to the problems the country confronts" (Daniel and Holladay). Th...
details about the exact smears that were used.] Another of the differences with the 2004 election had to do with information tech...
differing by only around a decade or so. Grover Cleveland was President in 1908 and he was 47 years old (Scholastic.com). William ...
encourage the sharing of videos on YouTube and Brightcove (Yadav). Early in his campaign, Barack Obama acknowledged the importanc...
of the McCain-Kennedy bill that is currently being debated. Current status of political controversy concerning immigration Mr. G...
having to serve it. These days, of course, television is very much ensconced in the fabric of our lives, with most homes having at...
are serious questions in a very serious political situation - we are talking about the President of the United States, still refer...
Carter days. Most voters are cognizant of the economy. Two themes ran through the elections of 1932, 1952 and 1980: the economy an...
pledged to render the election a "solemn referendum" in respect to the Treaty and League of Nations in the hopes that the popular ...
Source: Data compiled in part from The 45 Vice Presidents web site. In other words, if the game is about the electoral vote, ...
Ordinance was one of the earliest reflections of the importance of the issue of slavery in this nation. There were many more refl...
the two main parties are able to vote in these races (1996). In some states, non-registered members can vote too. In general, the ...
on how to interpret current political phenomena." Yet, in doing so, the creation of an archetype is quite helpful. In fact, Wolin ...