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What questions would you like asked of delegates, politicians, media at the DNC - NEED HELP

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debbierlus Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-11-08 01:32 PM
Original message
What questions would you like asked of delegates, politicians, media at the DNC - NEED HELP

Hi all.

I am a finalist in a contest to cover the DNC...and I am in the process of making a finalist video for the last round. This video will be the questions that SHOULD & NEED to be asked of the politicians, media, & delegates at the Democratic National Convention...

If I get to go, I will have backroom access to the media, the delegates, & some politicians....

What do you think needs to be asked? I will use these questions, if I win. Please help. Keep K & R...It would be incredibly useful.

Thanking all of you in advance.

:)
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monicaaida Donating Member (172 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-11-08 01:40 PM
Response to Original message
1. help someone please post this new penn poll as a new thread
help someone please post this new penn poll as a new thread


TEMPLE UNIVERSITY: PENN POLL HILLARY 47 OBAMA 41


Senator Hillary Clinton leads Senator Barack Obama by 44 – 35 percent among Pennsylvanians likely to vote in the Democratic presidential primary on April 22. Nineteen percent remain undecided or refuse to express a preference, but that group leans toward Obama. Adding in the undecided voters who lean to one candidate or the other shrinks Clinton’s lead to 47 – 41 percent.

Asked to express an opinion about the candidates on a scale from 0 to 10, just 1 percent of likely voters say they don’t know enough about the candidates to rate them. “Not many Pennsylvanians who are


Percent

Preferences of undecided

Including preferences of undecided
Clinton

44

3

47
Obama

35

6

41
Another candidate

2


2
Don’t know/not sure

17


9
Refused

2


2

likely to vote in the primary remain uncertain about the candidates or their choice,” said Michael G. Hagen, director of Temple’s Institute for Public Affairs. “That’s why, despite the growing intensity of the campaign, we’ve seen very little reliable change in the polls over the past several weeks.”

Differences among demographic groups are stark:
• 83 percent of blacks favor Obama, compared to 31 percent of whites
• 79 percent under the age of 30 favor Obama, compared to 28 percent over 60 years old
• 55 percent of women favor Clinton, compared to 32 percent of men

The contest is strikingly close, however, among white men, with Obama leading in that group, 40 – 35. That group also is especially likely to express equally favorable opinions about Clinton and Obama. “White men stand out as the group with the most ambivalence about the candidates, as a group and individually,” said Hagen. “That is certainly the reason the candidates have focused so much of their attention on white men in recent weeks.”

The race remains close enough that turnout will be critical, especially in the all-important allocation of convention delegates. The two sides bring different assets to the turnout contest. The Clinton campaign has the backing of more of Pennsylvania’s top elected officials, but the Obama campaign will have more money to spend to get out the vote.

As the Poll shows, supporters of the two candidates also may be motivated to vote by quite different considerations: Clinton supporters are more likely to have a history of voting, while Obama supporters are more engaged in this particular election. The difference is due partly to the age difference between the two groups—the average Obama supporter is seven years younger than the average Clinton supporter—and partly to the success of the Obama campaign in attracting the support of people with little political experience. “Habit and enthusiasm are both very important ingredients in getting people to the polls, and these camps have the two in different measures,” according to Hagen. “It will be fascinating to see how the differences between these coalitions and between these campaign organizations interact to determine the primary’s result.”
Clinton supporters Obama supporters
Some people seem to follow what’s going on in government and public affairs most of the time, whether there’s an election going on or not. Others aren’t that interested. Would you say you follow what’s going on in government and public affairs most of the time, some of the time, only now and then, or hardly at all? (percent “most of the time”) 55 63
Would you say you have been very much interested, somewhat interested, or not much interested in the political campaigns so far this year? (percent “very much interested”) 55 63
How much thought have you given to the coming primary election for president--a great deal, a moderate amount, not much, or none at all? (percent “a great deal”) 54 62
How often would you say you vote—always, nearly always, part of the time, or seldom? (percent “always”) 66 60
Do you happen to know where people who live in your neighborhood go to vote? (percent “yes”) 85 82
Have you ever voted in the polling place or division where you now live? (percent “yes”) 83 76
Thinking back to the election in November of 2006, when Bob Casey ran against Rick Santorum for US Senator from Pennsylvania, did things come up that kept you from voting, or did you happen to vote in that election? (percent “yes, voted”) 71 69
Have you ever voted in a primary election for President, Congress, or Governor? (percent “yes”) 82 73

For this Temple Poll a randomly selected sample of Pennsylvanians registered to vote were interviewed by telephone between March 27 and April 9, 2008. Once the interviewing was complete, the data were weighted to correct for unequal probabilities of selection and response, and to ensure that the demographic characteristics of the sample match the population of registered voters in Pennsylvania. The sample included 583 likely voters, identified on the basis of their voting history and engagement with the campaign. With a sample of this size, the overall margin of error attributable to sampling is 4 percentage points. The sampling error for subgroups is larger.

Additional results from the Poll will be released over the next several days.


http://www.temple.edu/newsroom/2007_2008/04/stories/Templepoll_Pennsylvania.htm
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defendandprotect Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-11-08 01:49 PM
Response to Original message
2. When are we going to nationalize our oil and where are the Electric Cars?
When will Congress begin to tell the American people the true seriousness of Global Warming?

Why do we have a private bank dictating our economic policy?
How could the FED decide on its own that American taxpayers are going to bail out an investment
bank for $29 Billion? These are decisions which our Congress should be making --- in full view of the American public.

Why are you not pointing to the bankrupting of our Treasury by this administration?

Why not just lift the age limitations on Medicare and extend it to everyone?

How does a president who signed off on TORTURE tell the Chinese that they don't respect human rights?
When are we going to have criminal investigations of this administration?
Is there no concern that we have an administration which has failed to "defend and protect" the Constitution but, rather, seeks to destroy it and the Bill of Rights?

How have you responded to stolen elections, stolen primaries, suppression of voters --
2008 is here and we are still using computers which have enabled these thefts since the mid-1960's.

Are there plans to renew the Fairness in Broadcasting Act and overturn recent FCC rulings which have led to corporate controlled-media?

Why are you not making clear that the obsession with monetary profit has brought the airline industry into total disrepair which endangers the lives of every traveler?

Have we learned anything from Milton Friedman economics in CHILE, ARGENTINA, URUGUAY, BRAZIL ...
or will America be left open to the same "shock and awe" perpetrated on those nations?






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debbierlus Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-11-08 02:08 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Thanks. Anyone else. If I go, I will ask these questions to all of em

Thanks!
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niyad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-11-08 03:11 PM
Response to Original message
4. ask the media why the helll they didn't do their jobs, ask the pols why they
didn't do theirs.

good luck to you
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