US Democratic race reaches Kentucky
AFP - Fri May 16, 6:02 am EDTKentucky residents are used to close, competitive races that could be decided by a nose -- just not the presidential kind.
220 Stories, most recent news story added Sat May 17, 5:39 am EDT
Kentucky residents are used to close, competitive races that could be decided by a nose -- just not the presidential kind.
Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, will spend the weekend in Kentucky ahead of next week's presidential primary. Clinton is scheduled to make three stops in the Bluegrass on Saturday, with two more stops scheduled for Sunday. Clinton will appear at a community picnic at the Maker's Mark Distillery in Loretto on Saturday afternoon, then travel to Frankfort for a ...
Bill Clinton, in a second day of campaign stops in Kentucky for his wife before Tuesday's primary election, continued to urge voters to look past the condemnations of her campaign as a failed effort. Sen. Hillary Clinton can win the nomination, the former president told about 1,000 supporters who rallied Friday in a fire station parking lot in Madisonville and a similar number earlier at a ...
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton is heading back to Kentucky.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton is heading back to Kentucky. Clinton's campaign announced late Thursday night that she will visit the Bluegrass State on Saturday, three days before the state primary. There's no immediate word on where she will campaign.
Add a shot of whiskey and a pinch of tobacco and, politically, Kentucky is a lot like neighboring West Virginia — Clinton country.
Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway is reminding citizens that his office will once again operate the Election Fraud Hotline on primary Election Day, May 20.
Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama's campaign has ramped up its efforts to emphasize his Christian faith in a series of new radio and television ads, as well as in a flier that volunteers have distributed. Kentucky Lt. Gov. Daniel Mongiardo, who endorsed Obama on Sunday, narrated a new radio spot for Obama that highlights the Illinois senator's upbringing and values, including how ...
The upcoming Oregon and Kentucky primaries are near perfect illustrations of the two separate wings of the Democratic Party. Affluent, green and antiwar Oregon is expected to support Illinois Sen. Barack Obama. Kentucky's rural, blue-collar population will help New York Sen. Hillary Clinton.
Hillary Clinton is expected to rack up a sizable victory in Kentucky's May 20 Democratic primary against front-runner Barack Obama. Clinton's track record gives her a strong advantage in Kentucky.
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton is bringing her campaign to one of Northern Kentucky's biggest parties.