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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (313741)11/2/2002 5:14:55 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Respond to of 769667
 
Mondale and Coleman to debate on Monday morning:

Posted on Sat, Nov. 02, 2002

Mondale and Coleman set to debate
BY TOM WEBB
Pioneer Press

twincities.com

The U.S. Senate campaigns of Democrat Walter Mondale and Republican Norm Coleman have agreed to hold a debate Monday morning, according to the Mondale campaign.
The debate is set for 10 a.m. Monday morning at the Fitzgerald Theater in downtown St. Paul. Sponsored by Minnesota Public Radio and KARE-11 television, the debate will be broadcast live and the stations will allow any station to rebroadcast the debate Monday evening, according to the Mondale campaign.

Mondale staffers said CNN is considering carrying the debate live, underscoring the importance placed on the Minnesota Senate race by the rest of the country.

Only Coleman and Mondale will debate, excluding Independence Party candidate Jim Moore and Green Party candidate Ray Tricomo. “Our proposal was for all four,” Mondale said Saturday during a campaign stop on the Iron Range in northern Minnesota.

“I’ve been very flexible on it. I want the debate,” Mondale said of negotiations between the two campaigns.



To: calgal who wrote (313741)11/3/2002 12:01:07 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
Bush, Clinton Converge in Florida
1 hour, 51 minutes ago

URL:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=548&ncid=716&e=1&u=/ap/20021103/ap_on_el_ge/bush

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - President Bush (news - web sites) dueled with former President Clinton (news - web sites) for votes in Florida Saturday, stoking emotions from the state's 2000 recount battle as they tried to tip the balance in a fiercely contested governor's race that will decide whether Bush's brother Jeb keeps his job.

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"For the sake of Florida taxpayers, for the sake of Florida schoolchildren, for the sake of dignity and integrity in the office of governor, send Jeb Bush back to Tallahasse," the president told thousands of rowdy Republicans here.

In the first of three events Saturday with Democratic challenger Bill McBride, Clinton invoked the 2000 recount debacle.

"If you don't vote this time because of what happened last time, it's like taking your vote away twice," Clinton told an audience of blacks and union members at Miami-Dade Community College.

Jeb Bush observed that Clinton, Al Gore (news - web sites), Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton were all campaigning in the state for McBride. Each name drew boos. The governor said he doubted the four would have any impact on the election. "Multiply that by 50 and I will take one George W. Bush," he said.

The president's hearty embrace of his brother — heavy on the topic of education, a driving issue in the election here — capped a sprint through Tennessee, Georgia and Florida Saturday.

Bush implored Democrats, independents and "people who don't give a hoot about politics" to vote as he tried to give an edge to GOP candidates for House, Senate and governorships.

The 42nd and 43rd presidents immersed themselves in a contest Democrats say is an Election Day priority: toppling Jeb Bush. Joining the cause Monday, after Clinton's weekend campaigning, was Gore.

Gore has made the Florida recount, which decided the White House, a staple of his get-out-the-vote efforts.

"If anybody ever tells you that one vote doesn't count, talk to me about it," Gore said Friday in West Orange, N.J.

Democrats see the election Tuesday of McBride over the president's brother as a way to embarrass the White House and damage George W. Bush's re-election prospects in 2004.

"They're going to roll out every gun they have to win in Florida," said White House spokesman Ari Fleischer (news - web sites).

Added Susan MacManus, a University of South Florida political science professor: "It's the duel of the presidents."

The bitter 2000 presidential race against Gore loomed large throughout Bush's travels.

"I got a fond spot in my heart for Tennessee, if you know what I mean," he said in Blountville, Tenn. Bush won Gore's home state in the election two years ago.

The Republican faithful packed his audiences, but Bush sought to broaden his message. GOP activists, he said, should "talk it up with people who may not pay attention to politics as much as we do" and reach out to "discerning Democrats."

"I'm traveling the country reminding Republicans, Democrats, people who don't give a hoot about politics to do their duty, and go to the polls," Bush said. In an election season refrain, he added that he had some "suggestions" once voters arrived to vote.

In Tennessee, he promoted Rep. Van Hilleary (news, bio, voting record) in his close contest for governor against Democrat Phil Bredesen, and Lamar Alexander (news - web sites), who challenged Bush for the 2000 presidential nomination and who leads Democratic Rep. Bob Clement (news, bio, voting record) for Tennessee's open Senate seat.

"If you care about the quality of government in Nashville and Washington, turn out to vote!" Bush said. "Go to your houses of worship, go to your coffee shops, and when you get there Monday morning, instead of sitting around worrying about the weather, worry about who the next governor's going to be, worry about who the next senator's going to be."

Pointing to NASCAR (news - web sites) star Darrell Waltrip in the crowd, Bush said the stock car driver had asked his permission to drive the presidential limousine. "No!" Bush said to laughter. But, referring to the region's favorite sport, Bush offered this assurance: Hilleary "is going to win the NASCAR vote."

In Marietta, Ga., Bush boosted Sonny Perdue, a former Democratic president of the state Senate, in his campaign to unseat Democratic Gov. Roy Barnes, the favorite. Bush also made an appeal for Rep. Saxby Chambliss (news, bio, voting record), R-Ga., trying to oust Democratic Sen. Max Cleland (news, bio, voting record).

"It's time to quit the sermonizing and it's time to pass the plate," Bush said.

"If we believe in democracy, if you love freedom, then you have a responsibility to go to the polls next Tuesday, and I'm not talking about just a handful of Georgia citizens, I mean everybody — Republicans, Democrats, people who could care less about political party," Bush said.



To: calgal who wrote (313741)11/3/2002 1:27:52 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 769667
 
Battle for Senate Hinges on Turnout
2 hours, 59 minutes ago
By ALAN FRAM, Associated Press Writer
URL:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=683&ncid=71...

WASHINGTON (AP) - Republicans hope to buck history and capture Senate control in an Election Day contest so excruciatingly close that factors as fickle as the weather may help decide the outcome.

Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri, New Hampshire, Minnesota and South Dakota all have tossup Senate races, and the outcome in five other states is far from sure. Operatives from both parties agree no visible overriding national issue has arisen that should tilt the voting to either party's advantage.

"I wish I was smart enough to give you a good answer," said Democratic pollster Fred Yang when asked what the decisive factor might be.

"I don't think there's a single factor, it's race by race," said GOP consultant Jan von Lohuizen.

Minnesota and New Jersey have been the settings for the campaign's most extraordinary events, both featuring the unexpected re-emergence of 70-something candidates.

In Minnesota, former Vice President Walter Mondale stepped in as Democratic candidate after the death of incumbent Sen. Paul Wellstone in the crash of his campaign plane Oct. 25. Former Sen. Frank Lautenberg became the Democrats' nominee in New Jersey after Sen. Robert Torricelli (news, bio, voting record) dropped out because of ethics allegations that seemed to doom his re-election drive. Lautenberg seems likely to win, while Mondale's prospects are uncertain.

Wellstone's death left the Senate in Democratic hands by 49-49 plus a Democratic-leaning independent. Republicans need to gain just one seat to grab control of the chamber, because Vice President Dick Cheney (news - web sites) has the power to break tie votes.

More peculiar events may lie ahead. If Sen. Mary Landrieu (news, bio, voting record), D-La., fails to win 50 percent of the vote on Election Day, she will face a Dec. 7 runoff against the second-place candidate. So it may take a month to learn which party controls the Senate for the next two years.

Seeking every advantage, both parties were pouring last-minute money into states with close races and dispatching high-profile campaigners into the field.

President Bush (news - web sites) was racing to a half-dozen Senate battleground states in the campaign's closing days, while former President Clinton (news - web sites) was journeying to New Jersey, Florida and his native Arkansas. Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., was working his home state, where Democratic colleague Tim Johnson was running neck-and-neck with GOP challenger Rep. John Thune (news, bio, voting record).

Operatives Yang and von Lohuizen agreed that even the weather could influence the outcome in razor-close races by affecting turnout. Traditionally, Republican voters generally are more dedicated than Democrats about slogging to the polls through foul weather.

A GOP takeover would be all the more remarkable because they are defending 20 of the 34 Senate seats in play.

In addition, they would be defying the historical trend in which the party holding the White House usually loses seats in midterm elections. The last midterm contest in which the president's party gained Senate seats compared to the previous Election Day was in 1982, when President Reagan's GOP picked up one.

Following is a look at other closes races:

_Missouri: Republicans consider this their strongest chance for a pickup, with former Rep. Jim Talent running strongly against Democratic Sen. Jean Carnahan (news, bio, voting record). She was appointed to replace her husband, Mel, who was elected in 2000 three weeks after he was killed in a plane crash. The winner completes the final four (news - web sites) years of the six-year term.

_Arkansas: With conservatives upset that he divorced his longtime wife and married a younger former aide, GOP Sen. Tim Hutchinson (news, bio, voting record) is having a hard time holding off Democratic state Attorney General Mark Pryor, son of a beloved former senator who retired in 1996. The Democrats' likeliest takeover.

_New Hampshire: Democratic Gov. Jeanne Shaheen and GOP Rep. John Sununu (news, bio, voting record) are in an even fight for the seat held by Republican Sen. Bob Smith, whom Sununu ousted in a bitter primary.

_Colorado: Incumbent Republican Sen. Wayne Allard (news, bio, voting record) is running even with his 1996 challenger, Democratic lawyer Tom Strickland, as the candidates trade charges of being too cozy with big corporations.

_North Carolina: Former GOP presidential candidate Elizabeth Dole (news - web sites) is in an unexpectedly close race against Erskine Bowles, Clinton's White House chief of staff.

_Georgia: Democratic Sen. Max Cleland (news, bio, voting record) is facing a strong challenge from GOP Rep. Saxby Chambliss (news, bio, voting record).

_Iowa: Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin (news, bio, voting record) seems to be opening a lead against Republican Rep. Greg Ganske (news, bio, voting record).

_Texas: GOP state Attorney General John Cornyn seems to be holding off Democrat Ron Kirk, the former Dallas mayor