YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Analysis of the Debates Between 2000 Presidential Candidates George W Bush and Al Gore
Essays 31 - 60
This aids women because many do not have the means to carry their own health insurance nor do they have the ability to obtain empl...
In six pages this paper compares marketing strategies of 1992 presidential candidates Ross Perot, Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas an...
In 5 pages this paper outlines Al Gore's presidential policy platform which includes workplace daycare facilities, gun control leg...
and try to block all attempts at reform, whether its health care, keeping the Internet free of corporate gatekeepers, improving ed...
In eight pages this paper considers the marketing of political candidate Al Gore in a strategic examination that includes the 4Ps,...
In ten pages this paper examines the changes that transpired during G.W. Bush's campaign for the presidency in 2000 and discusses ...
has not sufficiently supplemented the needy systems with cash. In essence, schools continue to fail not because they do not want t...
presidential candidates, but was himself subjected to the use of power by others. George W Bush was the son of George Bush, and ...
are occasionally updated, which means the activist is still under secret surveillance. Considering the culture of fear in which Am...
In five pages this research paper considers both presidential nominees' positions regarding the campaign finance reform issues and...
In five pages these presidential candidates are examined in terms of their military experience and the individual differences in m...
In three pages this paper discusses the U.S. presidential candidate's approach to the nation's economy. Four sources are cited in...
in the minds of some, but most will only look at the present prices at the gas pump and not realize what is really happening in th...
as well as create government programs (i.e., national park maintenance) while forcing employers to offer health care benefits to e...
is gone, lost in the concrete jungles of the latest big-box development and six-lane "main street." What, then, is the bes...
knew what the definition of a couple was....
In twelve pages rhetoric and communication tactics are the criteria used to analyze the March 7, 2000 'Super Tuesday' speech of th...
A report consisting of five pages discusses from the perspective of a political consultant how Gore could register a significant v...
In six pages this paper discusses the role of the media in shaping public perceptions regarding the 2000 presidential election and...
making their own choices and opting to purchase for themselves individual insurance (Gleckman, 2004). The President believes that...
In five pages this paper argues that Al Gore should be declared the winner in the state of Florida and become U.S. President with ...
In six pages advertising and its power are discussed in terms of how a Democratic Party ad in 2000 targeted the abortion views of ...
family is an asset. In the United Stats, when somebody wants to run, there is a process they must follow. First, they must gain ...
stance on the issues. This paper will outline each. There are several areas where, according to your own political views, ...
(which was considered the brash "newcomer" of the political parties during the mid 19th century), was a party that actually came o...
readily surmise that the campaign approaches might also differ from those of past elections. "The framers of the Constitution con...
unfreezes and temperatures climb. Alaska appears to be on a direct and damaging collision course with time, inasmuch as its entir...
In fourteen pages issues relevant to Bush's presidential bid such as issues, workers, money, constituents, and winning odds are ex...
In ten pages this paper examines the 2000 U.S. Senate race in Florida between Republican candidate Bill McCollum and Democratic ca...
In ten pages this paper examines the candidacy of Al Gore in a consideration of tactics of persuasion and the media bias concept. ...