Presidential Issue Series:
(This is the second in a five-part weekly series examining issues in the 2000 presidential race.)
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(This is the second in a five-part weekly series examining issues in the 2000 presidential race.)
If the wrestling superstars have their way, there may be two new jabronis laying the smack down in the World Wrestling Federation ring.
(This is the first in a five-part weekly series examining issues in this November's presidential election.)
RICHMOND -- U.S. Senatorial candidates Sen. Chuck Robb (D) and former Gov. George Allen (R) clashed over education and abortion issues Sunday night in the first televised debate of the campaign.
Gratuitous violence on television may never again see the light of day following a measure passed 16-2 Wednesday by the Senate Commerce Committee to ban the controversial material from daytime viewing.
Former Virginia Gov. George Allen (R) and U.S. Sen. Chuck Robb (D) are locking horns over environmental issues as both candidates for the U.S. Senate seat rush to lay claim to Virginia's improving environment.
The Federal Election Commission decided yesterday to hand over $12.6 million in disputed federal funds to Reform Party candidate Pat Buchanan, leaving the party's other faction, led by John Hagelin, screaming fraud.
If Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush triumphs in November's election, Virginia's own Gov. James S. Gilmore III may be packing his bags and heading for a national appointment in the Bush White House.
As presidential candidates Texas Gov. George W. Bush (R) and Vice President Al Gore (D) embark on whirlwind campaign tours to woo potential voters, both camps have blatantly omitted traditionally Republican Virginia from their campaign itineraries.
When two prominent Charlottesville politicians opted out of Virginia's lieutenant governor race, the decision threw state party leaders for a loop.
Brandishing a hypodermic needle as a weapon, an unidentified man robbed the Emmet Street Virginia National Bank and escaped with an undisclosed amount of money early yesterday evening.
U.S. Senator Chuck Robb urged delegates of the Democratic National Convention to vote for presidential candidate Al Gore in order to "continue with the progress of the last eight years."
Los Angeles, Aug. 15 -- Last night before a cheering, teary-eyed crowd at the Democratic National Convention held in the Staples Center, President Bill Clinton delivered his farewell address, praising the work of his administration by elaborating on a slogan from his 1996 campaign. "We built our bridge to the twenty-first century and we are not going back," he said, touting his administration's achievements and endorsing the presidential candidacy of Vice President Al Gore.
Prior to a surprise appearance from Vice President Al Gore at Wednesday night's Democratic National Convention, Gore's running mate, Joseph Lieberman, stressed that despite Republican attempts to "walk and talk a lot like" Democrats, there are distinctive differences between the two parties.
Los Angeles, Aug. 15 -- First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton warned delegates and guests at the Women's Leadership Forum of the Democratic National Convention that a possible George W. Bush presidency might result in the appointment of pro-life Supreme Court justices, causing women to "wake up and find ourselves going backwards."
Los Angeles, Aug. 15 -- Last night before a cheering, teary-eyed crowd at the Democratic National Convention held in the Staples Center, President Bill Clinton delivered his farewell address, praising the work of his administration by elaborating on a slogan from his 1996 campaign. "We built our bridge to the twenty-first century and we are not going back," he said, touting his administration's achievements and endorsing the presidential candidacy of Vice President Al Gore.
Los Angeles, Aug. 15 -- First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton warned delegates and guests at the Women's Leadership Forum of the Democratic National Convention that a possible George W. Bush presidency might result in the appointment of pro-life Supreme Court justices, causing women to "wake up and find ourselves going backwards."
Los Angeles, Aug. 15 -- Last night before a cheering, teary-eyed crowd at the Democratic National Convention held in the Staples Center, President Bill Clinton delivered his farewell address, praising the work of his administration by elaborating on a slogan from his 1996 campaign. "We built our bridge to the twenty-first century and we are not going back," he said, touting his administration's achievements and endorsing the presidential candidacy of Vice President Al Gore.
Los Angeles, Aug. 15 -- First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton warned delegates and guests at the Women's Leadership Forum of the Democratic National Convention that a possible George W. Bush presidency might result in the appointment of pro-life Supreme Court justices, causing women to "wake up and find ourselves going backwards."
Following criticisms of voting practices during this year's Republican presidential primaries, the U.S. Supreme Court heard a case Monday questioning the legality of California's blanket primary law, which allows anyone to vote regardless of political party affiliation.