Democratic and Republican presidential candidates were crisscrossing Nevada in anticipation of the statewide party nomination caucuses on Saturday, Jan. 19.
Did you take part in the caucus? What are your views on the candidates and issues?
Democratic and Republican presidential candidates were crisscrossing Nevada in anticipation of the statewide party nomination caucuses on Saturday, Jan. 19.
Did you take part in the caucus? What are your views on the candidates and issues?
Our state is in the limelight after the Democrats’ debate. Tuesday night’s debate was touted as a way for minorities to get their questions answered by the top three Democratic candidates.
Despite a court battle to get the fourth candidate involved, Dennis Kucinich was not allowed to participate.
The three who were invited, Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, and former Senator John Edwards began the debate in a lovefest over their diverse backgrounds.
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The Nevada Supreme Court heard oral arguments on NBC’s appeal to exclude democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich from taking part in the nationally televised democratic debate tonight in Las Vegas.
What do you think? Should Kucinich be allowed in the debate?
Senator Hillary Clinton is in Las Vegas, making here ninth appearance since starting her campaign last year.
She’s canvassing neighborhoods, meeting with possible caucus-goers. But in just a short time, she’ll be sitting down for some Mexican food and talking with voters.
Presidential candidate Barack Obama has won the support of the 60,000-member Culinary Workers Union in Nevada, a major coup for the Democrat that could boost his candidacy against Hillary Rodham Clinton in the party’s major nominating contest.
Leaders of the Culinary Workers Union, Local 226, was to announce the endorsement at a news conference in Las Vegas Wednesday, the morning after Obama narrowly lost the New Hampshire primary to Clinton, said a Democrat close to the union.
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton won New Hampshire’s Democratic primary Tuesday night in a startling upset, defeating Sen. Barack Obama and resurrecting her bid for the White House. Sen. John McCain powered past his Republican rivals and back into contention for the GOP nomination.
Clinton’s victory capped a comeback from last week’s third-place finish in the Iowa caucuses. It also raised the possibility of a long battle for the party nomination between the most viable black candidate in history and the former first lady, who is seeking to become the first woman to occupy the Oval Office.
Her voice quavering, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton struggled Monday to avoid a highly damaging second straight defeat in the Democratic presidential race. Republicans John McCain and Mitt Romney scrapped for success on the eve of a New Hampshire primary that neither could afford to lose.”You’re the wave, and I’m riding it,” Sen. Barack Obama, the new Democratic front-runner, told several hundred voters who cheered him in 40-degree weather after being turned away from an indoor rally filled to capacity.
Sen. Barack Obama, bidding to become the nation’s first black president, captured the Iowa caucuses Thursday night, opening test in the race for the 2008 Democratic nomination.
Mike Huckabee rode a wave of support from evangelical Christians to victory in the Republican caucuses.