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The "spring break" president?
by
Oct 17, 2012
New attack ad from a Tea Party PAC says Obama is the one who's out of touch with Americans
Obama-backed battery maker goes bankrupt
by
Oct 17, 2012
Mitt Romney claims battery maker A123's bankruptcy is another example of Obama's bad record of picking winners, but has the administration really performed as poorly as the GOP says?
Yes, some voters are still undecided
Interview with
Oct 16, 2012
As Gov. Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama prepare to meet again for tonight's second presidential debate, they'll face not only the moderator and each other, but undecided voters.
Checking up on Medicare
by
Oct 16, 2012
Just in time for the second presidential debate, Medicare, the patient, goes to see "Dr. Obama" and "Dr. Romney."
Why we still can't vote online, and why that may be a good thing
by
Oct 15, 2012
We can support candidates with a text, participate in polls, even register to vote online, but we still can't vote that way -- which might be good news.
A new digital music battle, and online gaming as political liability
by
Oct 8, 2012
A Maine state senate candidate gets attacked for her online gaming activities, and a startup that wants to help you sell your used MP3s goes to court against a big entertainment company.
Good news, bad news: Obama and Romney advisers react to jobs report
Interview by
Oct 5, 2012
September's unemployment rate fell to 7.8 percent, the same place it was when President Obama took office. Presidential economic adviser Alan Krueger and Romney adviser Glenn Hubbard share their reactions to this morning's jobs report.
Let the debate spin begin
by
Oct 4, 2012
Obama smirks, Romney leaves heart in Cayman Islands
Breaking down Obama's '$90 billion' green investment
by
Oct 4, 2012
In last night's debate, Mitt Romney said the president gave $90 billion to the green energy world. That $90 billion number? That's right, sort of.
Romney tacks to the center, Obama silent on 47 percent
Interview with
Oct 4, 2012
Last night's debate brought a number of what seem like novel developments: Pivots on critical issues by Romney; the president leaving out seemingly obvious talking points. But how surprising are they, really?












