Archive for January, 2008

Kennedy Endorsements of Barack Obama

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

A President Like My Father

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

I have never had a president who inspired me the way people tell me that my father inspired them. But for the first time, I believe I have found the man who could be that president — not just for me, but for a new generation of Americans.

Caroline Kennedy

OBAMA WINS SOUTH CAROLINA

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Barack Obama routed Hillary Rodham Clinton in the racially-charged South Carolina primary Saturday night, regaining campaign momentum in the prelude to a Feb. 5 coast-to-coast competition for more than 1,600 Democratic National Convention delegates.
Former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina was running third, a sharp setback in the state where he was born and scored a primary victory in his first presidential campaign four years ago.
The Associated Press made its call based on surveys of voters as they left the polls.
About half the voters were black, according to polling place interviews, and four out of five of them supported Obama. Black women turned out in particularly large numbers. Obama, the first-term Illinois senator, got a quarter of the white vote while Clinton and Edwards split the rest.
The victory was Obama’s first since he won the kick-off Iowa caucuses on Jan. 3. Clinton, a New York senator and former first lady, scored an upset in the New Hampshire primary a few days later. They split the Nevada caucuses, she winning the turnout race, he gaining a one-delegate margin. In a historic race, she hopes to become the first woman to occupy the White House, and Obama is the strongest black contender in history.
The South Carolina primary marked the end of the first phase of the campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, a series of single-state contests that winnowed the field, conferred co-front-runner status on Clinton and Obama but had relatively few delegates at stake.

B Gettin’ All Irish at Davos

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Business Leaders Back Anti-Poverty Push

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

By William L. Watts, MarketWatch
Last update: 1:30 p.m. EST Jan. 25, 2008

DAVOS, Switzerland (MarketWatch) — Business leaders vowed Friday to make 2008 a landmark year in the battle against poverty as the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum turned its attention toward social issues.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced that business leaders would meet in London in May to look at ways corporations can contribute to efforts to meet the United Nations’ millennium development goals to alleviate poverty.

“It is right that, here in Davos, we tell the truth that there is a development emergency and that we must summon everyone in a call to action to take measures to meet the MDGs by 2015,” said U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

“We can make more progress and it is important to be part of this endeavor,” said Microsoft Corporation Chairman Bill Gates.

Voting Continues in South Carolina

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

Bob Hebert in today’s New York Times:

Mr. Obama’s campaign was always going to be difficult, and the climb is even steeper now. There is no reason to feel sorry for him. He’s a politician out of Chicago who must have known that campaigns often degenerate into demolition derbies.

Still, it’s legitimate to ask, given the destructive developments of the last few weeks, whether the Clintons are capable of being anything but divisive. The electorate seems more polarized now than it was just a few weeks ago, and the Clintons have seemed positively gleeful in that atmosphere.

It makes one wonder whether they have any understanding or regard for the corrosive long-term effects — on their party and the nation — of pitting people bitterly and unnecessarily against one another.

What kind of people are the Clintons? What role will Bill Clinton play in a new Clinton White House? Can they look beyond winning to a wounded nation’s need for healing and unifying?
These are questions that need to be answered. Stay tuned.