|  | Copyright 2007 NPR - For Personal Use O... NPR political analysts Ken Rudin and Ron Elving delve into the week's political news and analysis. | |
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Ted Stevens loses his Senate seat; Hillary Clinton could be Obama's Secretary of State; and Obama gets mad, kind of; join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin |
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Ongoing races in Minnesota and Alaska; Sarah Palin and fellow Republican governors in Miami; Lieberman's fate; and Ken's birthday; join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin. |
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Election night recap; winners and losers in President, House, Senate, and governors races; the future of Sarah Palin; join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin. |
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The Obama infomercial encroaches on the podcast; a look at the toss-up states; and election day predictions; join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin |
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Obama's ahead in the polls, Sarah Palin's possible contingency plan; and the future of the Republican Party; join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin. |
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Who won the third and final debate between Obama and McCain; wrap-up of the three presidential debates; a look at the house races; join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin. |
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Who came out on top in the McCain-Obama town hall; October surprises on the horizon; a third-party candidate who could help Al Franken get into the Senate; join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin. |
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Ken and Ron highlight what worked—and what didn't—for the candidates in the first two debates; Obama pulls ahead in battleground states; national events follow campaigning senators back home; join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin. |
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McCain suspends his campaign; Obama doesn't back down on the debate; and a review of Senate seats up for grabs; Join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin. |
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Both Obama and McCain claim they'll be the agents of change needed to fix Wall Street; Tina Fey channels Sarah Palin; national polls move back to pre-convention levels while the swing states take shape; join NPR's Washington Editor Ron Elving and Political Editor Ken Rudin. |
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