Voters must be wary of over-simplifying election
By Jarrett Dieterle
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By Jarrett Dieterle
Presidential nominee Barack Obama, a Democrat, spoke at a rally at the Richmond Coliseum with an estimated 13,000 people in attendance. Democratic Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine introduced Obama, and former Virginia Gov. and U.S. Senate candidate Mark Warner, also a Democrat, spoke as well.
Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama told a crowd of 13,000 people Wednesday at the Richmond Coliseum not to be "hoodwinked" by the economic policies of John McCain, whose proposals he said would be a continuation of the Bush administration.
With the third and final Presidential Debate behind us it is clear that while none of the candidates delivered the knockout punch, Barack Obama did emerge as victorious in all of the three debates.
WOODBRIDGE, Va. -- Republican presidential candidate John McCain rallied supporters in Virginia on Saturday in a state that polls suggest is slipping out of 44 years of his party's control.
The 2008 presidential race isn't the only Nov. 4 election students registered to vote in Richmond will help decide. They'll also be voting for the city's new mayor under a new voting system.
Welcome to The Collegian's blog about the final 2008 presidential debate. This is the fifth live blog for The Collegian during the election.
Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin drew a crowd of 25,000 people on Monday at the Richmond International Racetrack, where she attacked Sen. Barack Obama's approach to the economy and presented Republicans as the more patriotic of the two parties.
Former President Bill Clinton told an enthusiastic and attentive crowd at Virginia Commonwealth University Sunday night that during the last eight years, America has seen the largest increase in economic inequality since the 1920s.
By Paul Negrin
This update includes the USA Today-Gallup poll results.
By Jenn Hoffman
1. How closely are you following the presidential race?
University of Richmond students and faculty gathered in Whitehurst living room at 9 p.m. on Thursday for a vice presidential debate viewing party and post-debate reaction forum, where some students said they thought Gov. Sarah Palin had been talking down to them.
Welcome to The Collegian's blog about the 2008 vice presidential debate. This is the third live blog for The Collegian during the election.
Nearly 52 percent of University of Richmond undergraduate students favor Barack Obama over John McCain for president, while the number of students who identify as Democrats, Republicans and Independents is virtually the same, according to a survey conducted last week by The Collegian.
By Becky Kauffman
While none of the presidential candidates, John McCain and Barack Obama, delivered the KO, the first Presidential Debate did sharpen the contrast between the two and gave Obama an edge on not just the economy, but also foreign policy and national security -- considered by many to be John McCain's strong points.
Welcome to The Collegian's Live-Blog! Feel free to add commentary about the debate.
Students at the University of Richmond, like students throughout Virginia, are registering to vote in record numbers for the 2008 presidential election.