Published 8/24/2008
by rsinderbrand
at CNN Political Ticker
DENVER, Colorado (CNN) – Hillary Clinton will meet with her primary delegates Wednesday – and will likely release them to Barack Obama at the event, CNN confirms.
Two Democratic sources say the Clinton reception will take place at 1:15 p.m. MT, before that evening’s roll call vote.
"It’s an opportunity for Senator Clinton to see her [...]
(link)
Tags:
Related Content
McCain ad says Clinton got VP snub 'for speaking the truth'
politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com 8/24/2008 — Clinton is the star of a new McCain campaign ad.
(CNN) – John McCain’s campaign is making its boldest pitch yet for disaffected supporters of former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, releasing a new TV ad Sunday that claims Barack ...
Rendell: Obama coverage was embarrassing
politico.com 8/24/2008 — Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell was supposed to give “closing remarks” during this afternoon’s Shorenstein Center-sponsored panel discussion with all three Sunday show moderators—NBC’s Tom Brokaw, ABC’s George ...
Dems give Michigan and Florida full voting rights - Yahoo! News
news.yahoo.com 8/24/2008 — DENVER - Democratic delegates from Michigan and Florida were awarded full voting rights at the national convention Sunday, despite holding early primaries against party rules. The convention credentials committee voted unanimously to restore the ...
Obama, Clinton camps snipe at each other
politico.com 8/25/2008 — Behind the public face of unity at the Democratic National Convention, tensions are boiling and both sides are trading not-for-attribution barbs.
Dems Give Full Voting Rights to Michigan, Florida —
FOXNews.com 8/24/2008
DENVER — Delegates from Michigan and Florida will have full voting rights at the national convention this week, despite violating party rules by holding early primaries.
The convention credentials committee voted Sunday to restore full voting ...
Cable Coverage From New Angles —
Wash Post Elections 8/25/2008
News networks have been aligning themselves politically for some time -- Fox News to the right, MSNBC more and more to the left. And now, some niche networks are about to take an even more personal approach to covering the conventions.
...