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kansascity.com (Free subscription) | 11/19/2008
Sen. Ted Stevens' election defeat marks the end of an era in which he held a commanding place in Alaska politics while wielding power on some of the most influential committees in Congress.
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Vote By Issues! (Free subscription) | 11/19/2008
Yahoo! News: Democratic Party AP - Sen. Ted Stevens’ election defeat marks the end of an era in which he held a commanding place in Alaska politics while wielding power on some of the most influential committees in Congress. Go to Source
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Detroit Free Press (Free subscription) | 11/19/2008
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Sen. Ted Stevens' election defeat marks the end of an era in which he held a commanding place in Alaska politics while wielding power on some of the most influential committees in Congress.
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San Fransisco Chronicle (Free subscription) | 11/19/2008
Sen. Ted Stevens' election defeat marks the end of an era in which he held a commanding place in Alaska politics while wielding power on some of the most influential committees in Congress. It also moves Senate Democrats within two seats of a filibuster-proof...
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Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Free subscription) | 11/19/2008
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Sen. Ted Stevens' election defeat marks the end of an era in which he held a commanding place in Alaska politics while wielding power on some of the most influential committees in Congress.
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The Essence of Politics (Free subscription) | 11/19/2008
Sen. Ted Stevens' election defeat marks the end of an era in which he held a commanding place in Alaska politics while wielding power on some of the most influential committees in Congress. It also moves Senate Democrats within two seats of a filibuster-proof 60-vote majority and gives President-elect Barack Obama a stronger hand when he assumes office on Jan. 20. On the day the longest-serving...
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Examiner (Free subscription) | 11/19/2008
Sen. Ted Stevens' election defeat marks the end of an era in which he held a commanding place in Alaska politics while wielding power on some of the most influential committees in Congress.
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Examiner (Free subscription) | 11/19/2008
Sen. Ted Stevens' election defeat marks the end of an era in which he held a commanding place in Alaska politics while wielding power on some of the most influential committees in Congress.
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New York Newsday (Free subscription) | 11/19/2008
Sen. Ted Stevens' election defeat marks the end of an era in which he held a commanding place in Alaska politics while wielding power on some of the most influential committees in Congress.
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Defending the Truth (Free subscription) | 11/16/2008
State judges can be voted off the bench in local and state elections. * ---Quote (Originally by Houston Chronicle)--- Election defeat stuns...
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Bradenton.com: Politics (Free subscription) | 11/15/2008
If Republicans in the U.S. Senate ever secretly hoped for one of their own to lose an election, it might be Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, who's in a cliffhanger of a race to keep his seat with Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich.
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TODAY ON VOT3R - Politics STORIES (Free subscription) | 11/15/2008
WASHINGTON — If Republicans in the U.S. Senate ever secretly hoped for one of their own to lose an election, it might be Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, who's in a cliffhanger of a race with Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich.
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CWA-NJ Conservatives with Attitude! (Free subscription) | yesterday
It happens after every election defeat. Prognosticators appear to boldly tell us who we need to become to win in the next election. It is a curious exercise to peer into the future to guess at what will make the voters love us at a distant point in time. National GOP [...]
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Blog Really (Free subscription) | yesterday
The Really: Rove attributes the economic collapse to the complete failure of the Obama administration. Karl? He isn't the President. Your looking-glass world has come to an end. Please go away. Thank you. Some election defeats can be measured arithmetically, by lost votes and seats. But what befell Republicans on 4 November has the feel of a Götterdämmerung. Suddenly Ronald Reagan, the...
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Liberals Are Cool (Free subscription) | 11/20/2008
He must know where the bodies are buried. Rep. John Boehner of Ohio has kept his post as the House Republican leader even after his caucus lost several seats in the Nov. 4 election. You oversee a historic election defeat, your party loses many seats in the House and Senate. Your home State goes from Red to Blue. Nice job, John. Failing upwards feels good.