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Super DelegatesI'm amazed at how much of the media coverage of the Democratic New Hampshire Primary focuses on Hillary Clinton's "victory". As Darren Abrecht of MacClatchy Interactive points out, "Clinton's popular-vote margin over Obama was razor-thin - fewer than 8,000 votes, or 3%, with 96% of precincts reporting. As a result, each will come away from New Hampshire with 9 delegates." It seems to me the more important story is not who "wins" a given primary but instead what is the overall delegate score. The last I counted, counting super-delegates, Clinton leads with 183 to Obama's 78 delegates. While this is a long way from the 2,025 delegates each candidate would need to sew up the nomination, watching the delegate count is what we should be concentrating on, not whether Hillary's "emotional moment" was sincere or not. T.G.Vincent January 10, 2008 - 2:02am
( categories: Analysis | USA: Campaign 2008 )
Media Consolidation: a call to action!Remember when your local radio station was owned by someone in your community? Remember when the news you read, heard and watched really was "fair and balanced", not because some ad man said so but because you actually had a variety of veiwpoints to choose from?Media consolidation changed all that. Today radio and TV stations, newspapers and publishers, even movies and internet are owned by an ever smaller number of large multinational corporations, presenting an ever smaller variety of views. Now, Kevin Martin, the new head of the FCC wants to loosen the limits on media ownership to allow even more consolidation. He plans to ram through his proposal as soon as December 18, behind closed doors, and with no public input. We can't let this happen. I am calling all of you to action to keep this misguided proposal from happening. I urge everyone to act as soon as possible. Things you can do include: 1) Contact Congress. Congress has oversight power over the FCC. If the FCC won't listen to the public, then Congress must step in. Ask your Representative to hold full public hearings on the issue of media ownership right away - before Congress adjourns for the holiday recess. 2) Contact the FCC. Tell the FCC not to let Big Media get even bigger. The media ownership rules govern how we get news and information -- and that's especially important in an election year. Without diverse sources of information, we can't have a healthy debate about our nation's future, or a healthy democracy. For further information, log onto common cause at: Don't wait! Act today! T.G.Vincent November 3, 2007 - 1:08am
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