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Keyes's entry into the Republican race after Buchanan had secured victories in New Hampshire and Louisiana led many to believe that Keyes was a stalking horse for neoconservative elements in the Republican Party, since Buchanan was well known as ardent foe of abortion and had suffered political fallout for bringing abortion and "cultural war ...
On July 25, 2000 Alan Keyes ended his campaign during the National Convention after he received 985,819 votes and 22 delegates. After the roll call vote his delegate number fell to six, ironically defeating John McCain, the man who doomed his campaign, by five delegates. Popular vote result: [12] George W. Bush - 12,034,676 (62.00%)
Alan Keyes had sought the Republican nomination in 1996, when he gained 3% of the vote, and in 2000 when, despite the events of the previous campaign, he led a semi-important campaign [clarification needed] that did well in the debates and early primaries and reestablished himself as a serious politician.
Lichtman confirmed he will not be altering his 13 keys system, which he said still has a high success rate. "I don't think the problem was the keys themselves. You cannot change a model on the fly ...
The other keys a candidate can use to win in Lichtman's model include: whether the incumbent sees a significant third-party candidate whether the economy is in recession
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Musk denied media reports that he also pledged $45 million per month to Trump’s campaign, but shared in an interview on X that he did create a super PAC to pool donations for the Republican ...
Bowerstown offices of Consumers' Research, built 1934–35. In 1927 Schlink and Chase, encouraged by the public response to the publishing of their book Your Money's Worth, solicited financial, editorial, and technical support from patrons of other activist magazines to support the creation of an organization to offer consumers the unbiased services of "an economist, a scientist, an accountant ...