Andrew Burmon

Where the GOP could get dirty Where the GOP could get dirty

From Ohio to Florida to Montana, here's where Republicans may be using voter suppression tactics to tilt the presidential election.
  • Antiwar groups wary of Obama picks

    Rumors about the Obama Cabinet have some activists worrying that the president-elect might not live up to their expectations.
  • Behind the GOP's voter fraud hysteria

    As Republicans warn of catastrophe at the polls, an expert on election fraud explains the real partisan hoax -- the suppression of Democratic votes.
  • Everyone went down to Georgia

    Democrats might find their 60th Senate seat in Georgia, but Saxby Chambliss and the GOP are putting up a fight.
  • Jefferson going to trial

    The Democrats may have their own Ted Stevens.
  • Biden buries the hatchet -- literally

    In which Joe Biden goes home to ride in a horse-drawn carriage and eat some delicious ox roast sandwiches.
  • One more batch of your Election Day stories

    Short lines and ground game in Georgia -- plus, a landslide for Tina Fey in Pennsylvania.
  • More Election Day stories from readers

    A drive through deep red northern Georgia, early birds in Virginia still have to wait in line and a spot of confusion in North Carolina.
  • More of your Election Day stories

    A new citizen votes in North Carolina, big turnout in the Philadelphia suburbs and voting from a bathroom in Michigan.
  • Doonesbury calls it for Obama

    The November 5th edition of Garry Trudeau's comic strip assumes that Barack Obama will win the presidency; some editors are unamused.
  • Big names hit the trail

    With Election Day fast approaching, prominent surrogates are out drumming up support -- we review where they've been and where they're going.
  • A new weapon in the war for yard sign supremacy

    One McCain supporter had a novel idea for how to prevent the traditional theft of campaign signs -- he electrified his.
  • McCain's little brother throws a tantrum

    In an e-mail to friends, Joe McCain expresses his displeasure with the way his brother's campaign is being run.
  • Palin confuses supporters for protesters

    When people at a Virginia rally began chanting "Louder, louder," Sarah Palin responded with a comeback intended for hecklers.
  • Under the big top

    The McCain camp is trying to portray the Troopergate investigation as a circus.
  • Cindy McCain goes after Obama

    The wife of the Republican nominee brings up her son's military service as she attacks Barack Obama.

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