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Michael Brown’s parents meet with Eric Holder – Video


Michael Brown #39;s parents meet with Eric Holder
Michael Brown #39;s parents explain to Anderson Cooper the impact of their meeting with Attorney General Eric Holder.

By: Reginald Salazar

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Michael Brown's parents meet with Eric Holder - Video

Levin: Eric Holder Debate-off – Video


Levin: Eric Holder Debate-off
Mark offers to debate Holder. The full audio from two shows, with some editing to remove unrelated stuff. So far, there #39;s been no update acept one quick blurb (that I recall) on a later show...

By: tharpdevenport

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Levin: Eric Holder Debate-off - Video

POLL: Democrat Mark Schauer takes lead over Rick Snyder in toss-up race for Michigan governor – Video


POLL: Democrat Mark Schauer takes lead over Rick Snyder in toss-up race for Michigan governor
POLL: Democrat Mark Schauer takes lead over Rick Snyder in toss-up race for Michigan governor.

By: WXYZ-TV Detroit / Channel 7

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POLL: Democrat Mark Schauer takes lead over Rick Snyder in toss-up race for Michigan governor - Video

Democrat finds a way to knock both the GOP and Obamacare in less than 30 seconds

So you're a Democratic congressman running in one of the most competitive reelection races this cycle, in a district that has flipped several times between both parties in the past decade. It's time to start airing TV ads. What do you do?

It seems that Rep. Pete Gallego (D-Tex.) has found a way to knock both House Republicans and President Obama. In less than 30 seconds.

The setting for the ad is a playground where the congressman's 9-year old, Nicolas, is seen playing with other young boys.

"When I tell my dad some kids don't play fair -- all he does is laugh," Nicolas says.

Cut to Gallego: "There isn't much difference between the playground at Nicolas' school and the floor of Congress, except when they take their ball and go home - we all get hurt," he says. "During the government shutdown, I didn't take my pay like others did. And I told the president 'no' to special treatment for Congress when he tried to exempt them from Obamacare."

In those two sentences, Gallego not only conjures up memories of last fall's government shutdown -- for which Americans generally blame congressional Republicans -- but also finds a way to needle Obama for the botched rollout of the Affordable Care Act, which remains unpopular across most of the country. Notably, Gallego doesn't say he opposes the law, widely known as Obamacare -- he merely name drops one of several GOP-backed measures he supported to change or chip away at the law.

The balance Gallego strikes -- by overtly offending both parties -- is notable when contrasted with messages by other vulnerable House Democrats.

There's Reps. Ron Barber (D-Ariz.), who's airing a biographical spot that emphasizes how he likes to put "Arizona First." Rep. Nick Rahall (D-W. Va.), a perennially endangered Democrat, attacked super PACs in his first ad, but also played up his home state roots. Rep. Bill Enyart (D-Ill.) plays up the work he's done for his district in a spot shot along the banks of the Mississippi River. In his first ad of the cycle, Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Ill.) mentions several Democratic-backed proposals he supports, including same-sex marriage.

Perhaps the Democrat coming closest to Gallego's approach is Rep. Patrick Murphy (D-Fla.), who barely won his seat two years ago, and has been playing up his supposed willingness to work with both parties in several ads. In one spot where he's seen jogging, Murphy talks about how he opposes congressional pay raises, supported bills to withhold congressional pay during budget impasses and doesn't use the House Gym.

Gallego faces Republican Will Hurd, a former CIA operative, in the Lone Star State's most closely-watched House race. Whoever wins will represent the 23rd Congressional District of Texas, a sprawling region that stretches from San Antonio's western suburbs to the eastern outskirts of El Paso and includes the longest stretch of U.S.-Mexico border in any district. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney won the district in 2012 by 3 percentage points; Sen. Ted Cruz (R) won it by 6 percent. Gallego won by 5 points. The seat has switched parties five times in the past 20 years -- one of the few left that has flip-flopped so frequently.

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Democrat finds a way to knock both the GOP and Obamacare in less than 30 seconds

Democrat schools chief contender reaches out to Republican heartland

WORLAND -- Mike Ceballos didn't take a bite of pie all night.

His campaign team kept him on his toes -- former Worland Mayor LaVertha Gotier most of all -- despite long tables loaded with sizzling hamburgers and tempting potato chips.

"I even got a check for you," Gotier said after saying hello at the Worland-Ten Sleep Chamber of Commerce barbecue Aug. 26.

Ceballos laughed, slapped his knee.

"Well," he said. "Well. Thank you."

"Every vote counts," Gotier said. "C'mon, doll."

She took Ceballos' arm and led him to a row of middle-age people sitting behind a dessert table, where Ceballos shook hands and explained several times how to pronounce his Spanish last name.

The barbecue was the latest stop for Ceballos, a Democrat and former telecommunications executive running for superintendent of public instruction, the top schools job in the state.

Ceballos knows that to win, he has to woo voters outside his party and from all over Wyoming, where two of every three voters are registered Republicans.

So he's going to places like Worland. As of the primary election last month, 579 registered Democrats lived in the whole county.

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Democrat schools chief contender reaches out to Republican heartland