Monday, March 5, 2012

Super tuesday

  • The closest that Americans get to a national presidential primary comes every four years when a large group of states hold their primaries and caucuses on the same day. It's called Super Tuesday, a phrase that dates back more than two decades.
  • (New York Times Blogs)
  • With 10 states holding Republican primaries or caucuses on March 6 — Super Tuesday — a lot of money is being spent on TV ads. The superPACs supporting the remaining GOP candidates have doled out some $12 million for ads in those states.
  • (NPR News)
  • Americans will go to the polls in ten states to make their voices heard in the Republican primaries and caucuses on Super Tuesday, March 6.
  • (ABC News)
  • CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — Newt Gingrich made a last-ditch effort to sway voters in Tennessee ahead of Tuesday's vote, as he tries to keep his wavering campaign going.
  • (Politico.com)
  • Super? Maybe not this time. But it is a Tuesday, one with the biggest payout of the Republican presidential primaries.
  • (Washington Times)
  • The day before Super Tuesday, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney brought his message of job-creation and increased prosperity to a part of the state that doesn't see many Republicans.
  • (The Christian Science Monitor)
  • And 1 knock-out punch? Probably not.
  • (WBIR)
  • Rick Santorum delivered his closing pitch to Ohio primary voters, saying his showing in Tuesday's primary was critical to proving that a grass-roots insurgency candidate could compete with an established, moneyed competitor.
  • (Sun Sentinel)

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