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AMERICAN PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   110926


Clear and present safety: the United States is more secure than Washington thinks / Zenko, Micah; Cohen, Michael A   Journal Article
Cohen, Michael A Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Last August, the Republican presidential contender Mitt Romney performed what has become a quadrennial rite of passage in American presidential politics: he delivered a speech to the annual convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. His message was rooted in another grand American tradition: hyping foreign threats to the United States. It is "wishful thinking," Romney declared, "that the world is becoming a safer place. The opposite is true. Consider simply the jihadists, a near-nuclear Iran, a turbulent Middle East, an unstable Pakistan, a delusional North Korea, an assertive Russia, and an emerging global power called China. No, the world is not becoming safer."
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2
ID:   095128


Democrats stalled trade agenda / Rushford, Greg   Journal Article
Rushford, Greg Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Key Words Trade  United States  China  Democratic Party  Obama  Clinton 
Roosevelt  Bush  American Presidential Politics 
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3
ID:   126339


How and why implicit attitudes should affect voting / Glaser, Jack; Finn, Christopher   Journal Article
Glaser, Jack Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article provides a foundation for understanding the role of implicit biases in political behavior, particularly implicit racial attitudes and voting behavior. Although racial attitudes have rarely played a major direct role in American presidential politics until 2008, numerous local, state, and federal elections are held every year in the United States that involve minority candidates. As a result, the implications are considerable.
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