News for 'republican-john-mccain'

'Fears on outsourcing, H-1B visas unfounded'

'Fears on outsourcing, H-1B visas unfounded'

Rediff.com25 Nov 2008

Industry leaders say President-elect Obama will be good for enhanced US-India commercial ties.

Dixville Notch: Obama begins with a landslide win

Dixville Notch: Obama begins with a landslide win

Rediff.com4 Nov 2008

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama on Tuesday won handsomely in the first election returns of the 2008 presidential race, winning 15 of 21 votes cast in Dixville Notch, New Hampshire.

Obama, McCain in neck-and-neck race: Poll

Obama, McCain in neck-and-neck race: Poll

Rediff.com7 Jun 2008

With five months to go for the US Presidential election, presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama and Republican John McCain are locked in a statistical dead heat with more than one in five voters acknowledging that they might change their mind between now and November, an opinion poll showed.

Even Bush's 'Brain' predicts Obama victory

Even Bush's 'Brain' predicts Obama victory

Rediff.com4 Nov 2008

Even Karl Rove, the man known as George W Bush's 'Brain' and the person behind Bush's 2000 and 2004 campaign victories, predicts a win for Democratic candidate Barack Obama in the US presidential election on Tuesday.

US voters say Obama, McCain are 'flip-floppers'

US voters say Obama, McCain are 'flip-floppers'

Rediff.com4 Jul 2008

A majority of US voters think the presumptive presidential nominees -- Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain -- are 'flip-floppers', a phenomenon that apparently led to the defeat of incumbent George W Bush's rival John Kerry in the 2004 polls, a new opinion poll says. Asked if Obama and McCain are willing to stick to their principles regardless of the political consequences, the latest CNN/Opinion Research Corp. survey says that the people do not think so.

US poll expected to be the most expensive ever

US poll expected to be the most expensive ever

Rediff.com23 Oct 2008

As much $5.3 billion is expected to be spent, an amount that is over the Gross Domestic Product of several small countries, but something that neither Senator Barack Obama nor Senator John McCain and all of their colleagues in the House of Representatives and Senate even wince about for a nanosecond.