Gingrich campaign paid off some debts, still owes $600000 Washington Post At the end of last year, he owed a total of $1.19 million — nearly a half-million dollars of that to InfoCision, an Ohio-based telemarketing firm that specializes in fundraising for conservative political, Christian and nonprofit groups.
Ohio GOP shuts door on Kasich power grab Columbus Dispatch The Dispatch public affairs team talks politics and tackles state and federal government issues in the Buckeye Forum podcast. It's unusual for a public body to be found in violation of Ohio's open-meetings laws. It's not that violations are unheard of, ... Ohio Election Will Spotlight GOP FeudOhio News Network
Get prepared for upcoming election Chillicothe Gazette In a little more than a month, Ohio partisan voters will head to the polls and choose their... You know that old cliché about a month being an eternity in politics? Don't believe it. In a little more than a month, Ohio partisan voters will head to the ...
Ohio 2008 vs. 2012: Polls In January Rarely Match Results In November Ology Today, Public Policy Polling is out with a survey of the Ohio electorate. PPP found that Obama has sea level approval ratings, with 48 percent of voters approving and disapproving. Among Democrats and independents, Obama has seen a marked improvement ...
Big finance boosting its political gifts Philadelphia Inquirer Why did they choose to filibuster the nomination of Obama's choice to head the agency, former Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray, and demand that the Dodd-Frank financial reforms be weakened before they took effect? For that matter, why did some ...
Christians cry foul: Did Obama exploit Jesus for political gain? Washington Times Keep politics and religion separate,” says David Ball, an adjunct professor of theology at the Methodist Theological School in Ohio . “That, at least, is how the passage is often interpreted.” Fortunately, for many politicians, Jesus is not physically ...
Navy Vets Charity Scammer Hiding in New Mexico? ABC News Bobby Thompson, whose real name and identity are unknown, used money collected by his charitable group to make donations to prominent politicians, nearly all of them Republicans. Here he is with Rep. John Boehner, R.-Ohio, the next Speaker of the.