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Palin Urges Republicans to Control Obama and Democrats

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Excerpt: Sarah Palin urged his fellow Republicans to control the new president Barack Obama and the Democratic majority in a number of issues ranging from taxes to health care, in an indication that it intended to take a leadership role in a party that is looking for a new leader.






Sarah Palin urged his fellow Republicans to control the new president Barack Obama and the Democratic majority in a number of issues ranging from taxes to health care, in an indication that it intended to take a leadership role in a party that looking for a new driver.

In a message to the Republican Governors Association on Thursday, the Republican vice presidential candidate in the recent elections _and mentioned as a possible presidential candidate for the 2012_ recalled some aspects of the acrimonious campaign and spoke about the role of governors in the coming year. After losing the White House and more seats in both houses of Congress, the party is looking for guidance.


"We are the minority party," Palin said at a meeting of "Looking ahead: the GOP (Republican Party) in transition." "But we decided not to be the negative party."

Palin never mentioned the name of the president-elect, but he fired over a dart.

The former vice presidential candidate noted that Congress is led by people like the head of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi, the leader of the majority in the Senate, Harry Reid and Representative Barney Frank, and said that the governors are to ensure that the federal government did not take control of the system of health care. He added that if Obama and the new Congress "will exceed tax issue, we have to show them the way."

Faced with the prospect of losing power in the White House and throughout the Congress for the first time since 1992, Republicans among its governors are seeking to fill the vacuum of leadership.

The conjecture have revolved around Palin despite his two tumultuous months in the national political scene. Will probably have competition for a possible presidential effort of the governors Haley Barbour (Mississippi), Charlie Crist (Florida), Tim Pawlenty (Minnesota) and Bobby Jindal (LA), all of whom are attending the three-day meeting.




A similar article can be found at AP

Dick Cheney and Joe Biden Meets on Thursday at the Naval Observatory

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Excerpt: The meeting between V.P. Dick Cheney and elected V.P. Joe Biden will be held after the meeting that President George W. Bush and Laura Bush had on Monday with the president-elect Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, at the White House, where they toured the executive mansion and held discussions.






Vice President Dick Cheney, preparing to deliver the second most important post of executive power in the country, will meet on Thursday with Vice President-elect Joe Biden at the Naval Observatory.

Megan Mitchell, spokeswoman for Cheney, said that he and his wife, Lynne, invited Biden and his wife, Jill, at his home in the observatory, home of the vice presidency. The meeting for the vice presidential transition follows a historic meeting on Monday President George W. Bush with the president-elect Barack Obama.

"The Cheney and Biden will have a private meeting and after a tour of the residence," said Mitchell.


The meeting will be more of a social nature between Cheney and Biden, who have extensive experience in foreign policy and national security.

Biden, who has been chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations, has expertise in both internal and external affairs, polished during more than three decades in politics.

Cheney is known as one of the main architects of the war in Iraq and a man of hard-line regarding the U.S. foreign policy.

In the absence of a clear description of the position of vice president, Cheney has indicated that the role of his successor depends on the wishes of future presidents.

Cheney same is not sure whether future vice presidents will have as much active participation that has taken him. "Soy renuente a decir que es una tendencia", dijo Cheney a reporteros durante una entrevista en Israel en marzo. "If you look at the history of the post, you can go to any side," he added.

"If you go back and see how it has evolved over the years, I think that really was not until Richard Nixon was vice president that he even had an office in the city center," said Cheney. "The office of Harry Truman was in the Capitol," he said.




A similar article can be found at AP

Obama Forms His Government and Install Evaluation Teams

Excerpt: The president-elect Barack Obama continues his comeback to form a new government, and on Wednesday appointed envoys to the meeting of the G20 and installed equipment assessors traveling on the U.S. bureaucracy, in order to quickly change the direction of the country after assuming the January 20 . The transition team will travel through more than 100 Democrat departments and agencies gathering data to launch new policies as soon as Obama takes.






The president-elect Barack Obama continues his comeback to form a new government, and on Wednesday appointed envoys to the meeting of the G20 and installed equipment assessors traveling on the U.S. bureaucracy, in order to quickly change the direction of the country after assuming the January 20 .

The transition team will travel more than 100 Democrats departments and agencies gathering data to launch new policies as soon as Obama takes.

"This is part of our commitment to make the transition more open and transparent in history," said Podesta, who said the transition team will employ about 450 people in Washington and Chicago, the city where Obama lives, with a budget of $ 12 million.

In addition, Obama appointed on Wednesday to former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Republican Congressman Jim Leach to represent them before the leaders of the G20 on Saturday.

Leach and Albright "will be available to all non-official meetings with visiting delegations," the text of the transition team for Obama. Saturday's summit will bring together the top 20 world economies in Washington to discuss responses to the economic crisis.

On the other hand, Obama's team denied Wednesday that former Secretary of State Warren Christopher, who worked with Bill Clinton participates in the transition as CNN said.

"Christopher is widely respected in the United States and the international community. However, plays no role in the transition process" with the government of George W. Bush, said on Obama team said in a statement.

CNN had said that Christopher and former Democratic Senator Sam Nunn were nominated to head the transition teams for the Departments of State and Defense, respectively.


Christopher was the head of U.S. diplomacy between 1993 and 1997, and Nunn represented the state of Georgia in the Senate between 1992 and 1997.

Among the names that shuffled the press as potential secretaries of state include former presidential candidate John Kerry and Governor Bill Richardson of New Mexico. In addition, the press speculated that Obama will maintain his position in the current defense secretary, Robert Gates.

But so far the only official designation was that of Rahm Emanuel as cabinet chief.

Meanwhile, The Washington Post reported Wednesday that the current director of National Intelligence and the head of the CIA will be replaced to get the new government to the White House.

The Democrats are opposed to maintain their positions in the current director of National Intelligence, Mike McConnell, and the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Michael Hayden, said the newspaper, which cited sources not identified.

The reason: both publicly supported some of the most controversial policies of the Bush administration, such as the use of violent interrogation - are considered torture by human rights organizations - of terrorist suspects.

A Democrat legislator that integrates the Senate Intelligence committee told the Post that there was "consensus" to bring the two officials, although they intend to continue in office.

Among the names that are listed to replace those of Republican Senator Chuck Hagel, and former CIA official John Brennan.

While holding the expectation by his aides, Obama generated a wave of confidence among Americans about what is going to improve the economy, government and race relations, according to a poll published on Wednesday, a week after his historic election.

70% of Americans believe the economy will improve during the presidency of Obama, against 11% who do not believe, according to the poll, the Quinnipiac University.

"Americans are exceptionally strong expectations in relation to Obama. More than a quarter believe that it will be a great president and more than one third thought to be at least a good president," said Maurice Carroll, director of the institute of the polls Quinnipiac University.




A similar article can be found at AFP

Nancy Pellosi Called for a Limited Emergency Financial Assistance to Automotive Industry

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Excerpt: The chairman of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday called for an "limited emergency financial assistance" for the automotive industry, which would be completed within a few days.







The chairman of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday called for an "emergency financial assistance and limited" for the automotive industry, which would be completed within a few days.

Five days after the disastrous financial results announced by General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co., Pelosi endorsed a bill that would facilitate the inclusion of automotive companies in the financial rescue of 700,000 dollars approved by Congress in October.

In a written statement, the Democratic Representative from California said that the aid is necessary "to avoid the bankruptcy of one or more of the major U.S. manufacturers of automotive companies, which would have a devastating impact on our economy, especially among men and women working in that industry. "

"The Congress and the government (of President George W.) Bush must take immediate action," the lawmaker added.


The situation of the industry attracted the attention of the White House and the president-elect Barack Obama, as well as legislators.

Last week, Obama pressed the Bush administration to help the industry, and on Monday discussed with the president during his visit to the presidential mansion.

People familiar with the conversation said the president responded that he is willing to listen to suggestions.

Prior to postpone its sessions in the face of the elections for the presidency, Congress passed a law intended to 25,000 million dollars in loans guaranteed by the government to automotive companies, in order to produce more efficient vehicles.

Since then, the executive branch and the leaders of the United Autoworkers union (United Workers) requested additional funds to avoid the possible bankruptcy of one of the basic industries of the United States, including an additional $ 50 million to cover the payment of medical insurance Some 780,000 retirees and their families.

GM and Ford said last week that the two spent their cash reserves of 14,600 million dollars in the past three months. Ford said it will eliminate more than 2,000 jobs of its employees.

The statement from Pelosi did not mention the amount that must include the aid plan.




A similar article can be found at AP

Republicans Seek Changes and Palin Looms as The New Leader

Monday, November 10, 2008

Excerpt: The Republican Party is essentially disarmed, broken, and not so much time has passed since the election of President George W. Bush in 2000 prompted allegations that the Republicans would exercise an enduring domination. The defeat of John McCain in the presidential elections on Tuesday and the breakdown in Congress, left the party looking for new leadership and identity.






Washington. The Republican Party is essentially disarmed, broken, and not so much time has passed since the election of President George W. Bush in 2000 prompted allegations that the Republicans would exercise an enduring domination. The defeat of John McCain in the presidential elections on Tuesday and the breakdown in Congress, left the party looking for new leadership and identity.

"It's time to terminate the defeats, my commitment to you is that this will be," said the Republican leader in the Lower House, John Boehner, to his colleagues after the party lost at least 19 seats in Congress in its custody .

Senator Jim DeMint said the party's image has been tarnished by scandals and broken promises, "and added:" We have to do cleaning, reform and rebuild the Republican Party before we can ask Americans who rely on us again " .

DeMint asked party leaders to "adopt a bold new direction" or that leave his post.

Ever since John McCain chose as his companion formula, in late August, Sarah Palin, 44, an attractive governor of Alaska, was the star of the Republican presidential campaign, although views vary on it through the political spectrum. Now that the Republican label has been corroded, and many are looking for a new Ronald Reagan, Palin could be one of the main competing.

"The conservatives are still looking for the ideal candidate. Perhaps the ideal candidate will prove to be an ideal candidate in reality," said Bill Whalen, a research group studies the conservative Hoover Institution.

Palin "has a national stature and love conservative radio commentators," said Whalen. But, "do you want to stay at home and be a local governor or try to play a role in the national political scene? She has to choose." Palin has done little to discourage speculation that he might run for president in 2012.

On Tuesday, Palin told reporters that it is "a unifying role of" if "there is a desire on the part of others to help lead the country." Indeed, in its population of origin, Wasilla, in the suburbs of Anchorage, have begun to leave the sale shirts that say "Palin for 2012."

Grover Norquist, a leading conservative and president of the group Americans for Tax Reform, said that Palin "is one of five or six people who may be plausible presidential candidate in 2012," alongside more familiar names like Mitt Romney, the governor of Texas Rick Perry, and former chairman of the House of Representatives, Newt Gingrich.


Meanwhile, in the House of Representatives was shuffled a change of leadership.

Boehner announced that he will seek another two years as Republican leader. However, the representative Adam Putnam, the number three among the Republicans in the House, resigned "reluctantly", while a party leader said that the representative Eric Cantor tries to compete for second place in importance, responsible for the discipline of the party.

Who now has that place, the legislator Roy Blunt, was considering its options, but not announced immediately if look conserving office, in a sign that probably resign.

Quite a few Republicans and conservative wings of the liberal admitted that the Republican Party is completely destroyed while the Bush administration nears its end, leaving the body without a political leader when incumbent president's term ends in January.

"Nationally, the Republican Party is going to be at a moment of self," said the governor of Minnesota, Tim Pawlenty.

Nearly two dozen prominent conservatives planned to meet on Thursday in Virginia to try to devise solutions to the game.

It is expected a fight for the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee, several heads of state party to emerge the highest national office despite the fact that Mike Duncan has said he wants to remain in the post.



Fidel Castro Says He Will Reject Again U.S. Humanitarian Help

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Excerpt: Former Cuban President Commander Fidel Castro said in an article published on Saturday that the government will reject "another time" supply "humanitarian help" from their enemy the United States, while the island prepares to receive the brunt of powerful Hurricane Paloma. The Cuban government has rejected at least three previous offers of aid from the U.S. government after passage of devastating hurricanes like Ike and Gustav two months ago, considering it "an operation of political propaganda."



Former Cuban President Fidel Castro said in an article published on Saturday that the government will reject "another time" supply "pious help" their enemy the United States, while the island prepares to receive the brunt of powerful Hurricane Paloma.

The Cuban government has rejected at least three offers of aid from the U.S. government after passage of devastating hurricanes and Ike Gustav two months ago, considering it "an operation of political propaganda."

Ike and Gustav entire crops destroyed, seriously affecting agriculture, causing food shortages in the country, and causing losses of more than 8,000 million dollars, according to official figures.


"Again it would be necessary if the Conduct dignified head of the empire (United States), which has been the greatest promoter of the genocidal blockade against our homeland, offering again pious aid," Castro wrote in an article reprinted by the official press Saturday.

"For sure it will be rejected," added the Cuban leader, who is kept away from public life since he became ill in July 2006 and was replaced as president by his younger brother, General Raúl Castro, in February.

Fidel Castro is consulted on major decisions of the Cuban state.

Cuba and the United States are at loggerheads since the revolution that brought Fidel Castro to power in 1959. Washington applied since 46 years ago a trade embargo against the island.

In late October, the island won an overwhelming endorsement of the embargo against the United States in the UN General Assembly, where a record number of 185 countries condemned the economic sanctions.

Castro warned in his article that Paloma will miss Earth by emergency programs to alleviate food shortages left by Ike and Gustav.

"Many crops whose results were expected soon, countless hours of human labor, fuel, seed, fertilizer (...) will miss," Castro wrote.

On Friday, the island left the recovery to begin evacuating people, the protection of stored foods and the rapid harvesting of crops.

Cuba, whose system of the Civil Defense has been praised for its effectiveness in dealing with the weather, said Saturday the stage cyclone warning for the provinces of central and eastern Colombia, after Hurricane Paloma be strengthened to category 4.

At least 150,000 students in internal centers of eastern and central parts of the country have already been evacuated and hundreds of thousands of people from areas prone to flooding were moved to safe places, told state television.



This article can be found at Reuters

Palin Labels Anonymous Criticism as "Cowardly"

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Excerpt: Gov. Sarah Palin described as lies the criticism lodged against him by former advisers to John McCain, including accusations that the Republican Party lawyers are the way to Alaska to claim his expensive wardrobe and his alleged ignorance as to whether Africa is a continent.







As we announced before, saying that McCain supporters was going to use Mrs. Sarah Palin as scapegoat, now in the following article you'll read how after flying back to Anchorage, Alaska, Gov. Sarah Palin described as lies the criticism lodged against her by former advisers to John McCain, including accusations that the Republican Party lawyers are on the way to Alaska to claim his expensive wardrobe and his alleged ignorance as to whether Africa is a continent .

Gov. Sarah Palin denounced anonymous criticisms leveled at her by former John McCain aides as lies, including allegations that Republican lawyers were traveling to Alaska to reclaim her high-priced wardrobe and that she didn't know Africa was a continent.

"Those accounts are not true," the former Republican vice presidential candidate said in her first public comments on the matter since the election Tuesday.

Palin returned Friday to her Anchorage governor's office and said she had no immediate plans to build on her newfound national name-recognition and popularity with the Republican base for a possible 2012 presidential run.

Instead, Palin said, she wanted only to get back to the governor's desk to advance a proposed pipeline tapping Alaska's vast North Slope natural gas reserves and to prepare Alaska's proposed 2010 budget.

As for the vice presidential campaign, Palin denounced criticism from unidentified McCain campaign aides as "cowardly." She said she found it frustrating trying to respond to false allegations when she didn't know who was making them.

"It's ridiculous," she told reporters. "You guys report based on anonymous sources, so it's hard to have a defense."

One report said she and her family went on a shopping spree, spending more than the $150,000 in clothing that the Republican National Committee had earlier reported.

"The RNC purchased clothes," Palin said.

"Those are the RNC's clothes. They're not my clothes. I never forced anybody to buy anything. I never asked for anything more than maybe a Diet Dr Pepper once in a while."


The RNC will inventory clothing it purchased for her to account for dollars spent, she said. She scoffed at reports that the RNC was sending lawyers to take back clothes from her home.

"It's not happening. Nobody's told me that they're coming to my house to look through closets, to look through anything. The belly of the plane that had clothes in it, and those clothes being packed up and sent back by staffers, perhaps that's what they're talking about, but these aren't attorneys."

She said she wasn't angry at the continued coverage of her clothing, but mostly disappointed.

"This is Barack Obama's time right now, and this is an historic moment in our nation and this can be a shining moment for America and our history, and look what we're talking about. Again, we're talking about my shoes and belts and skirts. It's ridiculous."

She also denied a report that she didn't know Africa was a continent, not a country, and that she didn't know the members of the North American Free Trade Agreement — the United States, Canada and Mexico. She remembered discussing both Africa and Obama's stance on NAFTA with people preparing her for her debate, she said. Anything reported as a gaffe was taken out of context, she said.

"That's cruel. It's mean-spirited. It's immature. It's unprofessional and those guys are jerks if they came away with it, taking things out of context, and then tried to spread something on national news. It's not fair and it's not right."

Asked if she felt muzzled by her limited time with reporters during the campaign, Palin said the media is a cornerstone of democracy and an important part of the checks and balances on government.

"Heaven forbid that a candidate or an elected official shy way from speaking to the media," she said. "So it was a little bit of a frustration that I didn't get to call more of those shots, and I guess that was sort of the 'rogue' criticism was, 'She wants to talk to more of the media' than perhaps some in the campaign wanted me to."

Palin backed off from calling for the resignation of fellow Alaskan Ted Stevens, the longest-serving Republican in Senate history. Stevens leads Democrat Mark Begich by about 3,500 votes with more than 50,000 to be counted.

A Washington jury convicted Stevens on Oct. 27 of seven felony counts of failing to report more than $250,000 in gifts, mostly renovations on his home. Stevens is appealing the verdict.

"The Alaska voters have spoken and me not being a dictator won't be telling anyone what to do," she said.

Fellow senators have indicated they could boot Stevens.

"That's their baby," Palin said. "They'll have to figure out what to do there."

Palin said she was not interested in running for the job if it comes open.

"Not planning on that. Nope," she said.


Article Source: Yahoo News

McCain-Palin, The Hidden War

Friday, November 7, 2008

Excerpt: Barely 24 hours after the election of Barack Obama as the next U.S. president. UU. Began to know the internal battles between John McCain and his number two, Sarah Palin, that shed light on the difficult relationship that both leaders had during the campaign.







Barely 24 hours after the election of Barack Obama as the next U.S. president. UU. Began to know the internal battles between John McCain and his number two, Sarah Palin, that shed light on the difficult relationship that both leaders had during the campaign.

According to published yesterday, The New York Times, there was a "civil war" within the Republicans with their two heads visible face in full election campaign, which had its most tragic moment in the wake of statements by Palin, telephone, he did to a false Nicolas Sarkozy on his hypothetical candidacy for the presidency. The governor of Alaska did not hesitate imitator of the French president, despite his exaggerated accent, and acknowledged that as president he was in "eight years".


This interview with Palin fell as a heavy blow in the campaign team of McCain, and even in the same senator, to produce a cataclysm within the formation. But tensions came over and fronts emerged since mid-September. The campaign team of McCain faced the governor of the large amount of money that went to his image. The Republican National Committee in September spent more than $ 150,000 in clothes, makeup and accessories for Palin and even members of his family.

The newspaper also highlighted the concern of McCain advisers who realized that Palin had become a liability of the candidate in the middle of the campaign. The controversial statements on international policy or errors on the responsibilities as a possible vice dented the image of the Republican nomination, according to sources close to acknowledge McCain. Something that was reflected in the polls.


'Obama' and 'Michelle', two names in fashion in Kenya and Sierra Leone

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Excerpt: I know you love gossip. Why would you be visiting this blog if not? Well, this isnot the type of gossip which brings "scandal" but the one which put a smile in our faces: The names' Obama 'and' Michelle 'had much success on Wednesday in maternity wards in Kenya, where a woman was given two names to a pair of twins, found AFP.



I know you love gossip. Why would you be visiting this blog if not? Well, this isnot the type of gossip which brings "scandal" but the one which put a smile in our faces: The names' Obama 'and' Michelle 'had much success on Wednesday in maternity wards in Kenya, where a woman was given two names to a pair of twins, found AFP.

At the General Hospital of the New Nyanza Province in Kisumu (western Kenya), the capital of the region where the family is originally elected U.S. president's father, Pauline Adhiambo gave birth to twins in which he called Obama and Michelle, found an AFP correspondent.

In this hospital, at least eight other children were baptized as Barack, Obama or both, while the maternity of the capital, Nairobi, and throughout the country, reported the birth of many homonyms of the future occupant of the White House.

"I talked with my husband and we agreed to say that the name of Barack Obama would be ideal for our small, because the whole city and the world were very excited to Barack Obama and for us is a great man," confided a mother family, Josephine Anyang Anyang to AFP.

Kisumu is the third largest town in Kenya and fiefdom of the Luo ethnic group, which belonged to the late father of Barack Obama.

In Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, six children were born Wednesday morning at the main maternity of the country were called Barack, according to the medical establishment.

"It's a historic event, not just for America but for the world," he said to AFP the proud mother of one of Barack newborns in Freetown.




Article Source: AFP

After the Election, Mainstream Media Claims the World Celebrates Obama's Victory

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Excerpt: Throughout the world, in living rooms, plazas, beaches and streets crowded, Barack Obama's victory was hailed by people from various countries such as a shift towards racial equality, in the hope that his presidency augure an America more balanced and less controversial.




Throughout the world, in living rooms, plazas, beaches and streets crowded, Barack Obama's victory was hailed by people from various countries such as a shift towards racial equality, in the hope that his presidency augure an America more balanced and less controversial.

People gathered in front of televisions or radios estruendosos heard in the continuous flow of information about the elections on Tuesday in the United States. In Sydney, the Australians filled a room at a holiday hotel. In Rio de Janeiro, Brazilians did feast on the beach. In the Japanese city of Obama, people began to dance when he was announced the victory of their candidate's namesake town.

The observers, many of them in countries where the idea that a member of a minority elected president is unthinkable, there were expressions of surprise and satisfaction that the United States could overcome centuries of racial conflict and elect an African-American as president.

"This shows that the U.S. is truly a diverse and multicultural society where skin color does not really matter," said Jason Ge, a student of international relations at Peking University in China.

In an interconnected world where people in the most extreme possible to track the presidential race step by step, many observers echoed the thoughts of Obama while they struggled to put into words their perception that the elections marked a turning point.

"I really believe this is going to change the world," said Akihiko Mukohama, 34, singer of a band that traveled to the Japanese city of Obama to act on an act in favor of the now president-elect. Mukohama was carrying a T-shirt bearing the words "I love Obama."

Many people felt that _para better or mal_ economic power, military and cultural life of the United States gave a global significance to the elections.

"The eyes of the world are on this," said Australian Phil Keeling, who wore clothing head to toe in the colors red, white and blue and images of Obama and Republican presidential candidate John McCain to attend a festival hall in downtown Sydney to see the development of the U.S. elections on giant television screens.

Among many critics of the policies of outgoing President George W. Bush had high hopes that an Obama victory would bring about a more inclusive approach to U.S. and internationally cooperative. Many felt that the war in Iraq is a mistake that Obama is not repeated.

In Germany, where more than 200,000 people attended this summer to see Obama during his tour of Europe and the Middle East, elections dominated the headlines of newspapers, television news and pages on the internet. Among the more irreverent celebration was a feast called "Goodbye, George" to celebrate the departure of Bush.

The Obamanía was evident not only in Europe but also in the Muslim world, where many expressed hope that the Democrats seek more negotiations over confrontation.

The Bush displeased to Muslims to mistreat prisoners in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo, human rights violations that were condemned worldwide.




Article Source: Asociated Press (AP)

Beware! This is The Season for Tricking Voters

Monday, November 3, 2008

Excerpt: The tendency of the vote, according to polls, is so favorable to the Democratic candidate Barack Obama that only fraud could save the Republican John McCain on polling day, valued by many observers, including the two most renowned researchers in the field, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Greg Palast.


The tendency of the vote, according to polls, is so favorable to the Democratic candidate Barack Obama that only fraud could save the Republican John McCain on polling day, valued by many observers, including the two most renowned researchers in the field, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Greg Palast.

Among the most scandalous information they found in their extensive search at the national index of the process, they note that those responsible for the electoral system in Colorado has eliminated one of every six names on the registers of electors.

In the hours before Election Day, as inevitable as winter, comes an onslaught of dirty tricks — confusing e-mails, disturbing phone calls and insinuating fliers left on doorsteps during the night.

The intent, almost always, is to keep folks from voting or to confuse them, usually through intimidation or misinformation. But in this presidential race, in which a black man leads most polls, some of the deceit has a decidedly racist bent.

Complaints have surfaced in predominantly African-American neighborhoods of Philadelphia where fliers have circulated, warning voters they could be arrested at the polls if they had unpaid parking tickets or if they had criminal convictions.

Over the weekend in Virginia, bogus fliers with an authentic-looking commonwealth seal said fears of high voter turnout had prompted election officials to hold two elections — one on Tuesday for Republicans and another on Wednesday for Democrats.

In New Mexico, two Hispanic women filed a lawsuit last week claiming they were harassed by a private investigator working for a Republican lawyer who came to their homes and threatened to call immigration authorities, even though they are U.S. citizens.

"He was questioning her status, saying that he needed to see her papers and documents to show that she was a U.S. citizen and was a legitimate voter," said Guadalupe Bojorquez, speaking on behalf of her mother, Dora Escobedo, a 67-year-old Albuquerque resident who speaks only Spanish. "He totally, totally scared the heck out of her."

In Pennsylvania, e-mails appeared linking Democrat Barack Obama to the Holocaust. "Jewish Americans cannot afford to make the wrong decision on Tuesday, Nov. 4," said the electronic message, paid for by an entity calling itself the Republican Federal Committee. "Many of our ancestors ignored the warning signs in the 1930s and 1940s and made a tragic mistake."

Laughlin McDonald, who leads the ACLU's Voting Rights Project, said he has never seen "an election where there was more interest and more voter turnout, and more efforts to suppress registration and turnout. And that has a real impact on minorities."

The Obama campaign and civil rights advocacy groups have signed up millions of new voters for this presidential race. In Ohio alone, some 600,000 have submitted new voter registration cards.

Across the country, many of these first-time voters are young and strong Obama supporters. Many are also black and Hispanic.

Activist groups say it is this fresh crop of ballot-minded citizens that makes some Republicans very nervous. And they say they expect the dirty tricks to get dirtier in final hours before Tuesday.

"Oh, there's plenty of time for things to get ugly," said Zachary Stalberg, president of The Committee of Seventy, a Philadelphia-based government watchdog group that is nonpartisan.

Other reports of intimidation efforts in the hotly contested state of Pennsylvania include leaflets taped to picnic benches at Drexel University, warning students that police would be at the polls on Tuesday to arrest would-be voters with prior criminal offenses.

In his Jewish neighborhood, Stalberg said, fliers were recently left claiming Obama was more sympathetic to Palestinians than to Israel, and showed a photograph of him speaking in Germany.

"It shows up between the screen door and the front door in the middle of the night," Stalberg said. "Why couldn't someone knock on the door and hand that to me in the middle of the day? In a sense, it's very smartly done. The message gets through. It's done carefully enough that people might read it."

Such tactics are common, and are often impossible to trace. Robo-calls, in which automated, bogus phone messages are sent over and over, are very hard to trace to their source, say voting advocates. E-mails fall into the same category.

In Nevada, for example, Latino voters said they had received calls from people describing themselves as Obama volunteers, urging them to cast their ballot over the phone.

The calls were reported to Election Protection, a nonprofit advocacy group that runs a hot line for election troubles. The organization does not know who orchestrated them.

"The Voting Rights Act makes it a crime to misled and intimidate voters," said McDonald. "If you can find out who's doing it, those people should be prosecuted. But sometimes it's just difficult to know who's doing what. Some of it's just anonymous."

Trying to mislead voters is nothing new.

"We see this every year," said Jonah Goldman of the advocacy group Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. "It all happens around this time when there's too much other stuff going on in the campaigns, and it doesn't get investigated."

In 2006, automated phone calls in the final days leading to the federal election wrongly warned voters they would not be allowed to vote without a photo ID. In Colorado and Virginia, people reported receiving calls that told them their registrations had expired and they would be arrested if they showed up to vote.

The White House contest of 2004 was marked by similar deceptions. In Milwaukee, fliers went up advising people "if you've already voted in any election this year, you can't vote in the presidential election." In Pennsylvania, a letter bearing what appeared to be the McCandless Township seal falsely proclaimed that in order to cut long voting lines, Republicans would cast ballots on Nov. 2 and Democrats would vote on Nov. 3.

E-mail assaults have become increasingly popular this year, keeping pace with the proliferation of blogging and Obama's massive online campaign efforts, according to voting activists.

"It is newer and more furious than it ever has been before," Goldman said.

And Republicans are not exempt. "Part of it is that election campaigns are more online than ever before," said Goldman. "During the primaries, a lot of Web sites went up that seemed to be for (GOP candidate Rudy) Giuliani, but actually were attack sites."

New York City's former mayor and his high-profile colleagues Fred Thompson and Mitt Romney were also targeted in fake Internet sites that featured "quotes" from the candidates espousing support for extreme positions they never endorsed.

Excerpt:



This Article can be found at Yahoo News

Obama Vs. McCain. The Battle Across Campaign's Closing Day

Excerpt: The Democratic candidate for president of the United States, Barack Obama and his Republican rival, John McCain, campaigned on Sunday in the key states of Ohio and Pennsylvania, with McCain struggling to overcome the advantage of Obama in the last 48 hours of an exhausting electoral race.



The Democratic candidate for president of the United States, Barack Obama and his Republican rival, John McCain, campaigned on Sunday in the key states of Ohio and Pennsylvania, with McCain struggling to overcome the advantage of Obama in the last 48 hours of an exhausting electoral race.

Obama warned his supporters not to trust during a rally in Ohio, one of the key states that will decide the election Tuesday to succeed the unpopular President George W. Bush.

Aiming for a last-minute upset, Republican John McCain embarked on a grueling odyssey through seven swing states Monday while Democrat Barack Obama was headed toward three longtime GOP bastions that have become Democratic-leaning battlegrounds in the historic presidential contest.

"My friends, it's official: There's just one day left until we take America in a new direction," McCain said at a raucous, heavily Hispanic rally in Miami just after midnight.

The candidates' disparate schedules on the last day of the long presidential contest reflected the overall state of the race going into its final hours.

Obama, cruising comfortably ahead in national and many battleground state polls, was starting his day with a late morning rally in Jacksonville, before heading to events in Virginia and North Carolina.

McCain, meanwhile, was struggling to hang onto those and other states that voted for President Bush in 2004 in hopes of preserving a slim path to victory Tuesday night.

The Arizona senator planned a demanding schedule across time zones, beginning early in Tampa and going on to Tennessee, whose media market reaches into Virginia. He was also scheduled to hit Pennsylvania, Indiana, New Mexico and Nevada before ending early Tuesday with a rally in Prescott, Ariz., before returning home to Phoenix.

McCain's running mate, Sarah Palin, was racing through five Bush states — Ohio, Missouri, Iowa, Colorado and Nevada — in an effort to boost conservative turnout. The Alaska governor has been a popular draw for many GOP base voters.

Joe Biden, Obama's running mate, was to campaign in Missouri, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Polls show the six closest states are Florida, Indiana, Missouri, North Carolina, Nevada and Ohio. The campaigns also are running aggressive ground games elsewhere, including Iowa, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Colorado and Virginia.

Breaking with tradition, both candidates planned to campaign on Election Day. McCain scheduled campaign stops in Colorado and New Mexico while Obama was set to make a quick trip to Indiana before returning to Chicago for a massive rally in Grant Park.

Obama exuded confidence Sunday at events in three cities in the bellwether state of Ohio, which voted for President Bush in 2000 and 2004 but is trending Democratic this year as it struggles against an anemic economy.

"We cannot afford to slow down or sit back or let up," Obama told voters at an evening rally in Cincinnati. "We need to win an election on Tuesday."

An e-mail to Obama's Ohio supporters signed by former Vice President Al Gore reminded them that the state was decided by an average of nine voters per precinct in 2004. Gore asked for volunteers in the final two days to keep Obama from losing the state.

McCain was fighting to hold onto Florida's 27 electoral votes while making a play for Pennsylvania and New Hampshire, two states that voted for Democrat John Kerry last time but which McCain's advisers believe could swing to the GOP this year. Polls, however, show Obama comfortably ahead in both places.

In New Hampshire, McCain held his last town hall meeting of the 2008 campaign — something of an exercise in nostalgia, as he conducted dozens of such freewheeling affairs in the months leading up to his victory in that state's primary.

McCain took voter questions on issues like illegal immigration and paying for college while thanking New Hampshire for rescuing his campaign in 2008 and in the 2000 Republican primary, when he briefly upended George W. Bush.

"I come to the people of New Hampshire to ask them to let me go on one more mission," McCain said in Peterborough, where he was introduced by Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling.

In Pennsylvania, the Republican National Committee placed automatic telephone calls, or robocalls, using quotes from Obama's Democratic rival Hillary Rodham Clinton where she criticized Obama during last year's primary season. The New York senator repudiated the calls in a statement.

The Pennsylvania Republican Party was running ads reminding voters of Obama's relationship with his incendiary former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright. Obama severed ties with Wright after videotapes surfaced showing the pastor making anti-American statements from the pulpit of Chicago's Trinity United Church of Christ, where Obama worshipped for 20 years.

McCain has refused to make Wright a campaign issue but the Pennsylvania GOP said it spoke to Obama's character and judgment.

"Do we want the next President of the United States to have spent years listening to hateful rhetoric without having the good judgment to walk out?" the committee said in a statement on its Web site.




This Article can be read at Yahoo News

Woman Refused to Give Candy to Children of Obama Supporters

Excerpt: Shirley Nagel a woman from Grosse Pointe Farms MI, refused to give candy to children whose parents are sympathetic to the Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama.



One woman refused to give candy to children whose parents are sympathetic to the Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama.

Shirley Nagel it distributed sweets on Friday, during Halloween, but only those who shared his sympathy toward the Republican candidate John McCain and to Sarah Palin, the companion formula.

The television station WJBK reported that a poster placed in Nagel's house in a suburb of Detroit, gave this warning to children seeking sweets: "Do not give away anything to the supporters of Obama, liars, naughty, or to children of supporters (the candidate). "

"Obama scares me," said Nagel at WJBK.

When asked about what I felt that some children had to leave her house crying and with empty hands, the woman replied: "Well, everyone is responsible for their decisions."





Falsified Registrations at ACORN becomes Votes

Excerpt: The liberal group ACORN "community organization" had become a campaign issue last month after the Democrat Attorney General of Nevada and Democratic Secretary of State came together to make a very visible raid on the offices of the Group in Las Vegas. The files were seized consisting of a huge volume of what could be thousands of fraudulent voter registrations.



The liberal "community organizing" group ACORN became a campaign issue last month after Nevada's Democratic attorney general and its Democratic secretary of state teamed up to conduct a highly visible raid of the group's Las Vegas offices. They seized files on what could be thousands of fraudulent voter registrations.

After ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, complained the raid was a "stunt" designed to hinder its efforts at minority registration, Larry Lomax, the chief elections officer in Las Vegas, responded that the group's claims it had extensive quality controls to catch fraudulent registrations were "pathetic." He noted that ACORN had hired 59 inmates from a work-release program at a nearby prison and that some inmates who had been convicted of identity theft had been made supervisors. That led some local wags to joke that at least ACORN was hiring specialists to do their work.

ACORN's second line of defense has been that fraudulent registrations can't turn into fraudulent votes, as if the felony of polluting voter lists was somehow not all that serious. But that defense goes only a short distance. "How would you know if people using fake names had cast votes in states without strict ID laws?" says GOP Indiana Secretary of State Todd Rokita, who this year won a major Supreme Court case upholding his state's photo identification law. "It's almost impossible to detect and once the fraudulent voter leaves the precinct or casts an absentee ballot, that vote is thrown in with other secret ballots there's no way to trace it."

Anita MonCrief, an ACORN whistle-blower who worked for both it and its Project Vote registration affiliate from 2005 until early this year, agrees. "It's ludicrous to say that fake registrations can't become fraudulent votes," she told me. "I assure you that if you can get them on the rolls you can get them to vote, especially using absentee ballots." MonCrief, a 29-year old University of Alabama graduate who wanted to become part of the civil rights movement, worked as a strategic consultant for ACORN as well as a development associate with Project Vote and sat in on meetings with the national staffs of both groups. She has given me documents that back up many of her statements, including one that indicates that the goal of ACORN's New Mexico affiliate was that only 40 percent of its submitted registrations had to be valid.

MonCrief also told me that some ACORN affiliates had a conscious strategy of flooding voter registration offices with suspect last-minute forms in part to create confusion and chaos that would make it more likely suspect voters would be allowed to cast ballots by overworked officials. Nate Toller, who worked on ACORN registration drives and headed an ACORN campaign against Wal-Mart in California until 2006, agrees. "There's no quality control on purpose, no checks and balances," he told me.

There are already documented examples of fraudulent registrations being converted into fraudulent votes in Ohio, where ACORN and other groups were active. Darrell Nash, an ACORN registration worker, submitted an illegal form for himself and then cast a paper ballot during the state's "early voting" period.

Franklin County prosecutor Ron O'Brien also cracked down in the case of 13 out-of-state registrants who came to Ohio to register voters in Columbus for the group Vote From Home. The group all lived out of the same rented 1,175-square-foot house in Ohio, registered to vote and then most of them either cast early voting ballots or submitted applications for absentee ballots before leaving the state. They have agreed to have all of their ballots canceled in exchange for the prosecutor's decision not to file charges.

The Columbus Dispatch reported last month that "none of them seems to have ties to Ohio" — and apparently had no intention of staying there. One has even moved back to England, where he is a student. It is illegal in almost all states to vote somewhere that is not your permanent residence.

The owner of the house the fraudulent voters stayed at is also under investigation. He has voted in Ohio even though he has lived and worked in New York for the past four years.

Many are concerned that other fraudulent votes could be cast in Ohio.




Read the full Article at Politics.com

Palin Feels Media Criticism Threaten Her First Amendment Rights

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Excerpt: In a radio interview given Friday morning in Washington DC, the Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin said he feared that their First Amendment rights could be threatened by "attacks" from journalists.



In a radio interview given Friday morning in Washington DC, the Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin said he feared that their First Amendment rights could be threatened by "attacks" of journalists. What we propose is in itself a negative campaign against Barack Obama.

Palin told WMAL-AM that his criticism of the associations of Obama in the 1960s with the radical Bill Ayers and the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, should not be regarded as negative attacks. On the contrary, such a suggestion from journalists or columnists would be putting at risk their constitutional rights to freedom of expression.

ABC News' Steven Portnoy reports: In a conservative radio interview that aired in Washington, D.C. Friday morning, Republican vice presidential nominee Gov. Sarah Palin said she fears her First Amendment rights may be threatened by "attacks" from reporters who suggest she is engaging in a negative campaign against Barack Obama.

Palin told WMAL-AM that her criticism of Obama's associations, like those with 1960s radical Bill Ayers and the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, should not be considered negative attacks. Rather, for reporters or columnists to suggest that it is going negative may constitute an attack that threatens a candidate's free speech rights under the Constitution, Palin said.

"If [the media] convince enough voters that that is negative campaigning, for me to call Barack Obama out on his associations," Palin told host Chris Plante, "then I don't know what the future of our country would be in terms of First Amendment rights and our ability to ask questions without fear of attacks by the mainstream media."

However she feels about the way her story has been told in the press, Palin told WMAL she is not discouraged.

"It's sort of perplexing to me, because I'm a practical person and plainspoken also, but just cutting to the chase and calling things like I see them, just like most Americans. But this has not left a bitter taste in my mouth, the bitter shots taken by the mainstream media and by some of the elitism there in Washington," Palin said.

"What this has left me with is a very energized and positive feeling about America, because there are enough Americans who are desiring the positive change that John McCain's gonna usher in."

Plante then suggested that in her next sit-down interview, Palin should tap the reporter on the knee and ask, "So who you votin' for?"

Palin laughed and said, "Yeah, maybe that just would say it all."

"I'm gonna try that," she said.




Original article can be found at ABC News

Palin being McCain Scapegoat?

Excerpt: If everything else fails, then blame your campaign partner, That seems to be McCain's camp aides motto. John McCain campaign is looking for someone to blame wether McCain loses on Tuesday and obviously they have decided that scapegoat to be Sarah Palin.



If everything else fails, then blame your campaign partner, That seems to be McCain's camp aides motto. John McCain campaign is looking for someone to blame wether McCain loses on Tuesday and obviously they have decided that scapegoat to be Sarah Palin.

Probably Sara could say to McCain, "John, you are not being a gentleman here", but everyone knows that politics and politicians go after their own convenience regardless of whose head they have to stomp on to get where they want, and the following article confirms that.

John McCain's campaign is looking for a scapegoat. It is looking for someone to blame if McCain loses on Tuesday.

And it has decided on Sarah Palin.

In recent days, a McCain “adviser” told Dana Bash of CNN: “She is a diva. She takes no advice from anyone.”

Imagine not taking advice from the geniuses at the McCain campaign. What could Palin be thinking?

Also, a “top McCain adviser” told Mike Allen of Politico that Palin is “a whack job.”

Maybe she is. But who chose to put this “whack job” on the ticket? Wasn’t it John McCain? And wasn’t it his first presidential-level decision?

And if you are a 72-year-old presidential candidate, wouldn’t you expect that your running mate’s fitness for high office would come under a little extra scrutiny? And, therefore, wouldn’t you make your selection with care? (To say nothing about caring about the future of the nation?)

McCain didn’t seem to care that much. McCain admitted recently on national TV that he “didn’t know her well at all” before he chose Palin.

But why not? Why didn’t he get to know her better before he made his choice?

It’s not like he was rushed. McCain wrapped up the Republican nomination in early March. He didn’t announce his choice for a running mate until late August.

Wasn’t that enough time for McCain to get to know Palin? Wasn’t that enough time for his crackerjack “vetters” to investigate Palin’s strengths and weaknesses, check through records and published accounts, talk to a few people, and learn that she was not only a diva but a whack job diva?

But McCain picked her anyway. He wanted to close the “enthusiasm gap” between himself and Barack Obama. He wanted to inject a little adrenaline into the Republican National Convention. He wanted to goose up the Republican base.

And so he chose Palin. Is she really a diva and a whack job? Could be. There are quite a few in politics. (And a few in journalism, too, though in journalism they are called “columnists.”)

As proof that she is, McCain aides now say Palin is “going rogue” and straying from their script. Wow. What a condemnation. McCain sticks to the script. How well is he doing?

In truth, Palin’s real problem is not her personality or whether she takes orders well. Her real problem is that neither she nor McCain can make a credible case that Palin is ready to assume the presidency should she need to.

And that undercuts McCain’s entire campaign.

This was the deal McCain made with the devil. In exchange for energizing his base by picking Palin, he surrendered his chief selling point: that he was better prepared to run the nation in time of crisis, whether it be economic, an attack by terrorists or, as he has been talking about in recent days, fending off a nuclear war.

“The next president won’t have time to get used to the office,” McCain told a crowd in Miami on Wednesday. “I’ve been tested, my friends, I’ve been tested.”

But has Sarah Palin?

I don’t believe running mates win or lose elections, though some believe they can be a drag on the ticket. Lee Atwater, who was George H.W. Bush’s campaign manager in 1988, told me that Dan Quayle cost the ticket 2 to 3 percentage points. But Bush won the election by 7.8 percentage points.

So, in Atwater’s opinion, Bush survived his bad choice by winning the election on his own.

McCain could do the same thing. But his campaign’s bad decisions have not stopped with Sarah Palin. It has made a series of questionable calls, including making Joe the Plumber the embodiment of the campaign.

Are voters really expected to warmly embrace an (unlicensed) plumber who owes back taxes and complains about the possibility of making a quarter million dollars a year?

And did McCain’s aides really believe so little in John McCain’s own likability that they thought Joe the Plumber would be more likable?

Apparently so. Which is sad.

We in the press make too much of running mates and staff and talking points and all the rest of the hubbub that accompanies a campaign.

In the end, it comes down to two candidates slugging it out.

Either McCain pulls off a victory in the last round or he doesn’t.

And if he doesn’t, he has nobody to blame but himself.




Original Article can be found at Politico.com

Republican Sarah Palin Falls Victim of Canadian Pranksters

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Excerpt: The nominated as vice president of the United States by the Republican Party, Sarah Palin, was the victim on Saturday of some Canadian pranksters, who called it imitating the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, and did accept an invitation to hunt seal pups.



The nominated as vice president of the United States by the Republican Party, Sarah Palin, was the victim on Saturday of some Canadian pranksters, who called it imitating the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, and did accept an invitation to hunt seal pups.

I've found on the following article how with an exaggerated French accent, one of the members of a Quebec comedy duo "The Masked Avengers' trick-famous politicians and celebrities, including the very-Sarkozy, asked whether Palin would take him to a hunting trip in helicopter and said in French that could go to kill seal pups.

Sarah Palin unwittingly took a prank call Saturday from a Canadian comedian posing as French President Nicolas Sarkozy and telling her she would make a good president someday.

"Maybe in eight years," replies a laughing Palin.

The Republican vice presidential nominee discusses politics, the perils of hunting with Vice President Dick Cheney, and Sarkozy's "beautiful wife," in a recording of the six-minute call released Saturday and set to air Monday on a Quebec radio station.

Palin campaign spokeswoman Tracey Schmitt confirmed she had received the prank call.

"Governor Palin was mildly amused to learn that she had joined the ranks of heads of state, including President Sarkozy and other celebrities, in being targeted by these pranksters. C'est la vie," she said.

The call was made by a well-known Montreal comedy duo Marc-Antoine Audette and Sebastien Trudel. Known as the Masked Avengers, the two are notorious for prank calls to celebrities and heads of state.

Audette, posing as Sarkozy, speaks in an exaggerated French accent and drops ample hints that the conversation is a joke. But Palin seemingly does not pick up on them.

He tells Palin one of his favorite pastimes is hunting, also a passion of the 44-year-old Alaska governor.

"I just love killing those animals. Mmm, mmm, take away life, that is so fun," the fake Sarkozy says.

He proposes they go hunting together by helicopter, something he says he has never done.

"Well, I think we could have a lot of fun together while we're getting work done," Palin counters. "We can kill two birds with one stone that way."

The comedian jokes that they shouldn't bring Cheney along on the hunt, referring to the 2006 incident in which the vice-president shot and injured a friend while hunting quail.

"I'll be a careful shot," responds Palin.

Playing off the governor's much-mocked comment in an early television interview that she had insights into foreign policy because "you can actually see Russia from land here in Alaska," the caller tells her: "You know we have a lot in common also, because ... from my house I can see Belgium."

She replies: "Well, see, we're right next door to different countries that we all need to be working with, yes."

When Audette refers to Canadian singer Steph Carse as Canada's prime minister, Palin replies: "Well, he's doing fine and yeah, when you come into a position underestimated it gives you an opportunity to prove the pundits and the critics wrong. You work that much harder." Canada's prime minister is Stephen Harper.

Palin praises Sarkozy throughout the call and also mentions his wife Carla Bruni, a model-turned-songwriter.

"You know, I look forward to working with you and getting to meet you personally and your beautiful wife," Palin says. "Oh my goodness, you've added a lot of energy to your country with that beautiful family of yours."

The Sarkozy impersonator tells Palin his wife is "so hot in bed" and then informs her that Bruni has written a song for her about Joe the Plumber entitled "Du rouge a levres sur une cochonne" — which translates as "Lipstick on a Pig."

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama derided his Republican challenger John McCain's call for change in Washington as "lipstick on a pig," days after Palin made a lipstick joke at the Republican convention. The McCain-Palin campaign then released an ad implying Obama was calling Palin a pig with that remark.

The caller asks Palin if Joe the Plumber is her husband and adds: "We have the equivalent of Joe the Plumber in France. It's called Marcel, the guy with bread under his armpit."

He also tells the Alaska governor that he loved the "documentary" made about her and referred to a pornographic film with a Palin look-alike made by Hustler founder Larry Flynt.

She answers tentatively, "Ohh, good, thank you, yes."

The callers then reveal the prank and identify themselves and their radio station.

"Ohhh, have we been pranked?" Palin asks before handing the phone to an aide who ends the call.

Obama's campaign spokesman Robert Gibbs, commenting on the prank, said: "I'm glad we check out our calls before we hand the phone to Barack Obama."




Original Article found at Yahoo News

Obama's Birth Certificate Verified By Hawaii State

Excerpt: The frantic race to the White House is approaching its climax and candidates Barack Obama and John McCain had a fight without quarter on Saturday, three days of the historic presidential election.



The frantic race to the White House is approaching its climax and candidates Barack Obama and John McCain had a fight without quarter on Saturday, three days of the historic presidential election.

For the first time in U.S. history, a black candidate, Democrat Obama could become president; and a woman, the Republican Sarah Palin, could fill the post of vice president of the first world power.

While Obama showed "extraordinary qualities," McCain stressed on Saturday that his rival is the wrong choice, and during the campaign, accusations of Obama not being a born American citizen spread among media.

Now to unveil the truth, the Hawaii state's Department of Health director on Friday released a statement verifying the legitimacy of Sen. Barack Obama birth certificate.

The state has received multiple requests for a copy of Obama's birth certificate. State law does not allow officials to release the birth certificate of a person to someone outside of the family.

There were rumors that Obama was born in Kenya, where his father is from. The Constitution requires that the president be a natural born citizen of the U.S.

While many sites and news organizations have released copies provided by the Obama campaign, the rumors have persisted.

"There have been numerous requests for Sen. Barack Hussein Obama’s official birth certificate. State law (Hawai‘i Revised Statutes §338-18) prohibits the release of a certified birth certificate to persons who do not have a tangible interest in the vital record," DOH Director Dr. Chiyome Fukino said.

Fukino said she and the registrar of vital statistics, Alvin Onaka, have personally verified that the health department holds Obama's original birth certificate.

"Therefore, I as Director of Health for the State of Hawai‘i, along with the Registrar of Vital Statistics who has statutory authority to oversee and maintain these type of vital records, have personally seen and verified that the Hawai‘i State Department of Health has Sen. Obama’s original birth certificate on record in accordance with state policies and procedures," Fukino said.

Fukino said that no state official, including Gov. Linda Lingle, ever instructed that Obama's certificate be handled differently from any other.

Some Obama critics claim he was not born in the United States.

Multiple lawsuits were filed to try and force Obama to provide proof of citizenship. Earlier Friday, a southwest Ohio magistrate rejected a challenge to Obama's U.S. citizenship. Judges in Seattle and Philadelphia recently dismissed similar suits.




Find the original article at KITV