More than just Obama & McCain; 14 tickets on Florida ballot for President
WINK TV Southwest Florida - Sun Oct 12, 5:56 pm EDTWhen you vote for President, there will be 14 choices on the Florida ballot.
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When you vote for President, there will be 14 choices on the Florida ballot.
Oct. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama is ahead in a series of new polls from Florida to Iowa, gains that are helping him maintain a national lead over Republican John McCain.
With less than three weeks until the Nov. 4 election, national political figures are plowing through Palm Beach County to get out the vote for Barack Obama and John McCain.
Obama surrogates are hosting discussions around the state tomorrow to hit McCain on his plans for social security.
Obama was on top in seven of 11 new state polls, while McCain claimed the advantage in Alabama, and the two were statistically tied in Georgia, North Carolina and one Ohio poll.
Joyce Russell is an independent voter in South Florida who thinks Ronald Reagan was "the best president we ever had." She is so eager for change this year she has decided to vote for Democrat Barack Obama.
Just three weeks before Election Day, Florida has a blue tinge! Sunshine State Democrats - mindful of the fiasco in 2000 which gave the Presidency...
It's 22 days until election day, and it seems we can't escape the presidential candidates, With some big races going on locally, it's not just images of John McCain and Barack Obama that voters are being bombarded with in South Florida.
Increased support from oldest voters and South Floridians boosts Democrat Barack Obama has opened a slight lead in the presidential race in Florida, helped by growing support from those 60 and older and from voters in Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties.
Republican White House hopeful John McCain could still capture key battleground state Florida, which has been leaning Democratic for weeks, according to a Florida congressman on Sunday.
- In an unprecedented display of television advertising and field organization for a Democratic presidential candidate, Barack Obama has moved Florida to the forefront of his battleground states.