Saturday 15 December 2012

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results biogoraphy
He was the first president to be re-elected since Franklin Delano Roosevelt with an unemployment rate higher than 7.4 per cent. The jobless rate on Election Day, 7.9 per cent, was actually a notch higher than when he took office amidst the financial crisis and unfolding recession.
But as achievements go, it lacked the magic of 2008. And the man was different too: not the inspiring and redemptive figure—America’s first black president—he then was, but a toughened, hard-knuckled politician who had to scramble to preserve victory. In 2008, ecstatic throngs of Americans had swept him into the White House believing he was the one who would take them to a better place. In 2012, a slimmer majority kept him in office because he had convinced them his Republican rival would take them somewhere worse.
In 2008, Obama offered a broad vision of national unity and a promise of post-partisan healing that appealed to a cross-section of Americans. In 2012, his strategists cobbled together a narrow victory out of pockets of scientifically micro-targeted subgroups of voters across the swing states—women in Virginia, Latinos in Nevada and working-class whites in Ohio who liked the auto bailout.
                                     penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results
penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

penn national horse racing results

1 comment:

  1. women in Virginia, Latinos in Nevada and working-class whites in Ohio who liked the auto bailout.

    ReplyDelete