Tag: 2008 presidential campaign

  • Candidate Obama is now president-elect

    Winning decisively in the swing states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Florida and Virginia, Barack Obama was elected the 44th president today – the first black American ever chosen for the office.

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    Obama and his family took the stage at Grant Park in Chicago just before midnight EST.

    “Hello Chicago!” he declared. “If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible, who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time, who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer.”

    Republican candidate John McCain conceded the race at 11:15 p.m., graciously pledging to work with Obama “to help him lead us through the many challenges we face.”

    Obama’s acceptance speech echoed the theme of inclusion he offered four years ago, at the Democratic convention that nominated John Kerry as its candidate.

    “We have never been just a collection of individuals or a collection of red states and blue states,” he said. “We are the United States of America.”

    He addressed those who did not vote for him: “I will be your president too,” he said.

    And he spoke to those beyond America’s borders: “Our stories are singular but our destiny is shared.”

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    • Obama convenes economic advisers, calls for swift action on economy

      November 7, 2008 at 4:37pm

      In his first news conference as president-elect Barack Obama laid out the top priority of his first 100 days: A package of spending that he hopes will stimulate economic growth and aid a struggling middle class.

    • Anti-Obama ads target blue-collar workers in Macomb County, MI

      The swift boats are sailing again.

      But as The New York Times reported yesterday, they may be traveling on smaller waters.

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      Some negative television ads sponsored by political action groups aren’t trying to reach national audiences, reporter Jim Rutenberg writes.

      Rather, they’re running in small, targeted markets in battleground states in the belief that a small swing in voter preference can affect the outcome of this year’s presidential race.

      This is especially clear in Michigan, a state that’s up for grabs.

      Freedom’s Defense Fund, a conservative political-action group not connected to the campaign of Republican Sen. John McCain, has launched a series of ads attacking Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic presidential candidate.

      The ads are appearing on cable stations in Macomb County, an area northeast of Detroit, and are targeted at “white, unionized auto workers,” the Times reports.

      The two ads that have aired show Obama with controversial “friends,” his former minister, the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., and the former mayor of Detroit, Kwame M. Kilpatrick.

      The fact that the ads place Obama, an African-American, with two figures who are also African-American, has led Democrats to charge that the Freedom’s Defense Fund is attempting to exploit racial attitudes. Officials of the fund deny this charge.

      While the fund may have changed some of its tactics for this campaign, a review of the group’s funding and staffing reveals some familiar players.

      Billionaire Roger Milliken has contributed at least $15,000 to the fund since it started in 2004.

      Ninety-one-years old, Milliken is the CEO and chairman of Milliken & Company, a South Carolina textile and chemical manufacturing concern.

      He has given tens of thousands of dollars to conservative political candidates and groups over the years.

      A long-time opponent of free trade and illegal immigration, Milliken this year backed California Congressman Duncan Hunter’s unsuccessful campaign for the Republican presidential nomination.

      He also contributed to the campaigns of congressmen Ron Paul and Tom Tancredo.

      In 1996, Milliken served as an adviser to the presidential campaign of Pat Buchanan. The campaign treasurer was Scott B. Mackenzie, who had earlier worked on the presidential campaigns of Ronald Reagan.

      The two men are now linked at the Freedom’s Defense Fund, Milliken as contributor and Mackenzie as treasurer.

      Mackenzie also serves as the treasurer of the Black Republican Freedom Fund, another PAC.

      And he’s listed as a staff member at BMW Direct Inc., a fund-raising consultant for conservative candidates and groups.

      Michael Centanni, the chief operating officer of BMW Direct, is the chairman of Freedom’s Defense Fund.

      The Times reports that subsequent advertisements by the fund will link Obama to Antoin Rezko, a Chicago real estate developer convicted on bribery charges; William Ayers, the former Weather Underground member; and Raila Odinga, the Kenyan prime minister.

      Jerome S. Corsi, author of the anti-Obama biography Obama Nation is a paid consultant for the Freedom’s Defense Fund.

    • 4br penthous/duplex in luxury Obama blg, great location (Muckety)

      Emotions are running so high in this year’s presidential race that real estate agents may want to start promoting buildings not only for their park views and their square footage, but for their residents’ political leanings.

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      Muckety examined the most recent round of campaign finance reports, analyzing total donations by Manhattan residents who had given at least $1,000. We then totalled contributions by address to see which buildings gave the most to which candidate.

      Not surprisingly, most of the top addresses were clustered in a relatively small area around Central Park.

      The top money-getters in the top 20 buildings are shown on the map below – M for McCain, C for Clinton and O for Obama.


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      Not all the addresses are residential buildings. Some contributors – including Peter Peterson and Stephen Schwarzman of Blackstone – used business locations. The two private equity managers, at 345 Park Avenue, are backing McCain.

      Leonard and Evelyn Lauder, reporting their contributions from the offices of Estee Lauder, at 767 Fifth Avenue, support Clinton.

      Among top residential buildings, the historic Beresford, at 7 West 81st Street, went for Obama. Clinton drew the majority of dollars donated by residents of the San Remo apartments, on Central Park West.

      ([Muckety](https://createpositivechange.org/2008/05/08/4br-penthousduplex-in-luxury-obama-blg-great-location/2671)