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2008 Presidential Campaign Videos
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(What is 2008_presidential_campaign? - Edit Wiki)

Videos 1 to 24
31. Audio • May 13, 2008 • Thorngate Ltd. Town Hall • Cape Girardeau MO • Part 1 of 2 • 24 Minutes31. Audio • May 13, 2008 • Thorngate Ltd. Town Hall • Cape Girardeau MO • Part 1 of 2 • 24 Minutes
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
May 16, 2008

Senator Obama outlines his plans for change to a group of factory workers at Thorngate, Ltd in Cape Girardeau MO. First stop in his General Election Presidential Campaign. Introduced by Senator Claire McCaskill, (D-MO). Download 24 Minute 8.3 MB mp3 audio file for your digital audio player
Obama Visits Cape Girardeau, Draws Criticism from GOPObama Visits Cape Girardeau, Draws Criticism from GOP
from PubDef.net
May 14, 2008

Senator Barack Obama was in Missouri today. He delivered a speech (posted below) in Cape Girardeau, the heart of the conservative southeast section of our state. Here s the video: Several Missouri Republican leaders used Obama s appearance in the state as an opportunity to slam him as a raise-your-taxes, increase-the-bureaucracy Democrat who is too left of Missouri values. Here s audio from a conference call today with Lt. Governor Peter Kinder, Congresswoman Jo Ann Emerson, and Republican Chairman Doug Russell. AUDIO: GOP Conference Call on Obama Visit Kinder, a Cape Girardeau native, went further by releasing the following statement: Obama s visit to Cape Girardeau cannot hide the fact that his call for increasing taxes would hurt Missourians already struggling with out-of-control health care costs and higher gas prices. We must keep Missouri s economy strong by keeping the government and Barack Obama out of our pocketbooks. The problem for Missourians like you and me is that Obama s solution to every problem is bigger government, more government and higher taxes. Missourians will not accept someone who wants to increase the payroll tax and increase the capital gains tax and even increase the tax on gasoline. My friends, we do not want to go down this road! I also remember, as many of you do, that Barack Obama told his liberal friends not too long ago in San Francisco that folks like those in Southeast Missouri were bitter and clinging to our Second Amendment rights and our religion. I am sure that Southeast Missourians will have a lot to say to Barack Obama about those elitist comments, and many other issues as well. What I find particularly intriguing is that recently, the liberal New York Times did not tab Missouri as a bellwether state despite our knack over the last 100-plus years of picking presidents. It is my suspicion that the New York Times has concluded that a liberal like Barack Obama cannot win Missouri, and from where many of us in Southeast Missouri are sitting, they are probably right. Here, as promised, is the text of Obama s speech: It’s great to be here in Missouri with my good friend Claire McCaskill. This is a state that voted for change when you sent Claire to the Senate in 2006; you voted for change in February when we surprised the pundits and pulled out a victory; and this is a state where we will compete to win when I am the Democratic nominee for President. There is a lot of talk these days about how the Democratic Party is divided. But I’m not worried, because I know that we’ll be able to come together quickly behind a common purpose. There’s too much that unites us as Democrats. There’s too much at stake for our country. And there will be a clear choice on November 4. Now there’s one thing we know for sure about this election. The name George Bush will not be on the ballot. The name of my cousin Dick Cheney will not be on the ballot. But while the Bush-Cheney ticket won’t be up for reelection, the Bush-Cheney policies will, because John McCain is running for four more years of the same approach that has failed the American people. There is a reason that a record number of Americans think that we’re on the wrong track. We’ve lost hundreds of thousands of jobs just this year. The cost of everything from health care, to a tank of gas, to college tuition has skyrocketed while wages have stayed stagnant. Millions of American families are facing foreclosure. We’re spending tens of billions of dollars fighting a war that should’ve never been authorized and never been waged. Meanwhile, Americans have lost faith that Washington can or will do anything about problems they face day in and day out. Because the troubling statistics only begin to tell a story found in communities and at kitchen tables across the country. It’s a story of empty factories shut down forever because the jobs have been shipped overseas and nothing took their place. It’s the story told by a mother who can’t sleep because she can’t afford health care for her sick child; a father who lost his job but can’t afford a tank of gas so that he can look for a new one; a family that doesn’t know where they’ll be living in a month or a year because they’re about to lose a home. It’s a story of an American Dream that is slipping away. And what the American people need at this defining moment is leadership that restores the fundamental American belief that you can make it if you try in this country – that your dreams matter more than the demands of special interests or the convenience of political posturing. That’s why I’m running for President. That’s why we’ll be united as Democrats. Because Washington has failed the American people, and this election is our chance to turn the page. John McCain has served his country with honor, and I respect that service. But for two decades, he has supported policies that have shifted the burden on to working people. And his only answer to the problems created by George Bush’s policies is to give them another four years to fail. Just look at where he stands and you’ll see that a vote for John McCain is a vote for George Bush’s third term. Four more years of George Bush’s tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans who don’t need them and didn’t ask for them. Four more years of a health care plan that works for the healthy and the wealthy while tens of millions go without care, and families struggle with rising costs. Four more years of a President who supports privatizing Social Security. Four more years of a war that has cost us thousands of lives and a trillion dollars without making us safer, while we run up a mountain of debt that is mortgaging our children’s future. Four more years of a White House that is run by the kind of lobbyists who run John McCain’s campaign, while Washington tells the American people – “you’re on your own.” Well we know that the American people cannot afford any more of the Bush-McCain program. Not this time. Not when the stakes are so high. Not when the opportunities are so great. We need a new direction in Washington. We need new leadership in the White House. We know that government cannot solve all of our problems, and we don’t expect it to. We don’t want our tax dollars wasted on programs that don’t work or perks for special interests that don’t work for us. We understand that we cannot stop every job from going overseas or build a wall around our economy, and we know we shouldn’t. But that is not an excuse to spend another four years doing nothing to reclaim the American Dream for working people. We’re the nation that built the largest middle class in history. We all have a stake in each other’s success. We can’t continue an economic program that rewards Wall Street at the expense of Main Street because then we all end up hurting. It’s time to end a failed approach that tries to build prosperity from the top down, and renew our common prosperity from the bottom up. Instead of a tax code that rewards wealth and not work, we’ll provide an income tax cut of up to $1,000 for a working family, and eliminate income taxes altogether for any retiree making less than $50,000 per year. Instead of more inaction on health care, we’ll finally bring this country together, stand up to the drug companies and insurance companies, and make health care affordable and accessible for every single American. Instead of putting a secure retirement at risk, we’ll safeguard Social Security, we’ll protect pensions instead of CEO bonuses, and we’ll help all Americans save more so they can have a retirement that is dignified and secure. Instead of gimmicks like a gas tax holiday that rewards the oil companies while doing nothing to lower gas prices in the long-term, we’ll raise fuel efficiency standards, invest in alternative energy, and create millions of Green Jobs that will free this country from our addiction to oil. Instead of a blank check to fight an endless war in Iraq, we can end this war, restore our military, finish the fight against al Qaeada, and invest some of those dollars to put millions of Americans to work rebuilding our roads and bridges, laying down new rail lines and new broadband, and making sure that all of America can compete and win in the 21st century. That’s the new direction we need in this country. The other party has already decided to run on the failed policies of the past; that’s why we need to be the party that stands for the future. Everywhere I go, I meet Americans who can t wait another day for change. Change that refuses to let lobbyists drown out the voices of the American people.. Change that puts folks back to work. Change that finally delivers on the promise of health care you can afford, and an energy policy that makes sense. Change that leaves behind partisanship that stands in the way of progress, because we’re all in this together as Americans. This is our chance to build a new majority of Democrats and Independents and Republicans who know that four more years of George Bush just won’t do. This is our moment to turn the page on the divisions and distractions that pass for politics in Washington, so that we can write the next chapter in the history of American prosperity for all Americans.
McCain Surging in Missouri?McCain Surging in Missouri?
from PubDef.net
March 27, 2008

The Kansas City Star s Prime Buzz Blog is reporting that Missouri is leaning towards Republican John McCain for president against either Democratic rival in the latest Rassmussen Report. McCain edges out Hillary Clinton 50-41 percent and beats Barack Obama out-right, leading with a whopping 15 point lead at 53-38 percent. Divine from this what you may, but the KC folks think Missouri s bellwether state status is in jeopardy.
Discussion of Rev. Jeremiah WrightDiscussion of Rev. Jeremiah Wright
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
March 17, 2008

Link to Blog that strongly criticizes the media coverage:http://newsbusters.org/blogs/mark-finkelstein/2008/03/17/cbs-has-baracks-back-guest-compares-wright-jesus-rebuking-pharisee
Mike Huckabee: Lexington, SC- 01/17/08Mike Huckabee: Lexington, SC- 01/17/08
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
January 18, 2008

Mike Huckabee speaks at the Flight Deck Shoppes in Lexington, SC for Lexington Counties dedication of their new HQ.
Mike Huckabee: Lexington, SC- 01/15/08Mike Huckabee: Lexington, SC- 01/15/08
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
January 17, 2008

Mike Huckabee speaks to supporters at Hudson Smokehouse in Lexington, SC.
Mike Huckabee: Rock Hill, SC- 01/15/08Mike Huckabee: Rock Hill, SC- 01/15/08
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta)
January 17, 2008

Mike Huckabee speaks at the Laurel Creek CC in Rock Hill, SC.
Fred Thompson: Moncks Corner, SC- 01/11/08Fred Thompson: Moncks Corner, SC- 01/11/08
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
January 13, 2008

Fred Thompson holds a townahall at Gilligan's Restaraunt in Moncks Corner, SC.
John McCain: Charleston, SC- 01/09/08John McCain: Charleston, SC- 01/09/08
from skabichoska
January 10, 2008

John McCain speaks to supporters at the Citadel and does a media gaggle afterwards.
Mike Huckabee: Spartanburg, SC- 01/09/08Mike Huckabee: Spartanburg, SC- 01/09/08
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
January 10, 2008

Mike Huckabee speaks to supporters at a rally in Spartanburg, SC's local Marriott.
Fred Thompson: Sumter, SC- 01/09/08Fred Thompson: Sumter, SC- 01/09/08
from - blip.tv (beta)
January 10, 2008

Fred Thompson does a radio townhall at Guignard Diner in Sumter, SC.
Fred Thompson: Greenville, SC- 01/08/08Fred Thompson: Greenville, SC- 01/08/08
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta)
January 09, 2008

Fred Thompson does a radio townhall at Stax Omega restaraunt in Greenville, SC.
Fred Thompson: Columbia, SC- 1/08/08Fred Thompson: Columbia, SC- 1/08/08
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta)
January 08, 2008

Fred Thompson speaks at the Bird on a Wire restataunt in Columbia, SC.
Mitt Romney: North Charleston, SC- 12/18/07Mitt Romney: North Charleston, SC- 12/18/07
from - blip.tv (beta)
December 18, 2007

Mitt Romney speaks at Sticky Fingers Restaraunt in North Charleston, SC.
John McCain: Newberry, SC- 12/15/07John McCain: Newberry, SC- 12/15/07
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta)
December 17, 2007

John McCain gives the commencement address at Newberry College in Newberry, SC.
John McCain: Greenville, SC- 12/11/07John McCain: Greenville, SC- 12/11/07
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta)
December 12, 2007

John McCain speaks to the Greenville Rotary Club in Greenville, SC.
John McCain: Batesburg-Leesville, SC- 12/10/07John McCain: Batesburg-Leesville, SC- 12/10/07
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
December 10, 2007

John McCain speaks at Shealy's BBQ in Batesburg-Leesville, SC.
Mike Huckabee: North Charleston, SC- 12/07/07Mike Huckabee: North Charleston, SC- 12/07/07
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
December 09, 2007

Mike Huckabee receives the endorsement of Tim Scott, a local coucilman, in North Charleston, SC.
Fred Thompson: Anderson, SC- 12/05/07Fred Thompson: Anderson, SC- 12/05/07
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
December 06, 2007

Fred Thompson speaks at Mama Penn's Restaraunt in Anderson, SC.
Fred Thompson: Pickens, SC- 12/05/07Fred Thompson: Pickens, SC- 12/05/07
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
December 06, 2007

Fred Thompson speaks at Garren's Restaurant in Pickens, SC.
John McCain: Clemson, SC- 11/28/07John McCain: Clemson, SC- 11/28/07
from - blip.tv (beta)
November 29, 2007

John McCain does a Townhall Meeting at Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina.

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