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2012

Sister Simone Campbell: Ryan budget does not pass 'moral test'

In a speech Wednesday night at the Democratic convention, Sister Simone Campbell, star of the "nuns on the bus" tour that has traveled the nation criticizing Rep. Paul Ryan's (R-WI) budget, knocked the Romney-Ryan approach to economics saying it was "immoral" because it disregards the needs of the most vulnerable members of society.

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5 Questions For: MSNBC host Melissa Harris-Perry on political diversity and being 'better off'

This year's political convention season, says MSNBC host Melissa Harris-Perry, got complicated. Although she is in Charlotte for the Democratic National Convention this week, she missed going to Tampa, Florida last week for its Republican counterpart because real life got in the way. Hurricane Isaac's path, which initially threatened the convention before tearing through New Orleans, meant the Tulane University professor and her family had to evacuate their home, which they subsequently lost.

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Study: First Lady's convention speech seven grade levels higher than Ann Romney's

The speech First Lady Michelle Obama delivered at Tuesday night's Democratic convention read at a twelfth grade level, according to an analysis by a University of Minnesota political scientist, making it, by that measure, the most complex speech delivered by a presidential candidate's spouse at a nominating convention.

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Obama, Romney to crisscross in New Hampshire

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama and his Republican rival Mitt Romney are barnstorming across battleground states in their quest for the White House, but on Friday the two will find themselves in the same small corner of America.

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Obama and Romney's economic plans compared

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina — The health of the US economy is set to dominate the second day of the Democratic convention in Charlotte, North Carolina Wednesday, offering a rejoinder to Republican attacks over President Barack Obama's economic management.

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Lewinsky's rabbi to lead prayer after Clinton speech

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina — Former US president Bill Clinton may wish there were a few more degrees of separation between him and the next speaker at the Democratic convention on Wednesday.

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5 Questions For: Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) on equal rights and reproductive choice

Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) represents the 14th Congressional district, which includes Manhattan's Upper East Side, Roosevelt Island, and the northeast part of Queens. First elected to Congress in 1993 after ten years on the New York City Council, she's known as a tireless advocate for women's rights and the perennial sponsor of the Equal Rights Amendment. She spoke to Raw Story just outside the House Cloakroom at the Time Warner Cable Arena.

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Fluke tells Soledad O'Brien GOP policies make women feel 'under attack'

Womens' rights activist Sandra Fluke, who became a lightning rod in the debate over contraception rights this year, said Wednesday that the phrase "War on Women" isn't just a disagreement regarding policy on reproductive issues or a way to frame the discussion over them.

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Five questions for a young activist fighting AIDS globally

On Tuesday, Raw Story met 22-year-old AIDS activist Amirah Sequeira at a screening of the film "How to Survive a Plague." We caught up with her again on Wednesday to talk about her path to activism, her work as national coordinator of the Student Global AIDS Campaign and the definition of "bird-dogging," a practice she and other activists have used to target, assess and take action on the policies of politicians and other public figures and thereby shape policy.  Sequeira graduated from Columbia University in May and is currently living and working in the Washington, DC area.

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Bill Clinton to make economic case for Obama's reelection tonight at Democratic Convention

Bill Clinton, the last two-term Democratic president, will urge US voters Wednesday to let Barack Obama lead America back to prosperity, in a highly-anticipated convention speech.

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5 questions for: Anti-abortion activists who say 'drunk' Democrats support 'whores killing babies'

While most protesters at the 2012 Democratic National Convention were forced to enter a lottery and have be confined to "free speech" zones, a group of anti-abortion activists have circumvented the official rules, displaying large signs and blaring messages -- like "sluts are whores are killing babies"-- directly outside the convention center in Charlotte.

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Dems move Obama's convention speech to smaller indoor space in face of weather woes

Bad weather has forced President Barack Obama to move Thursday's major re-election pitch away from a 70,000-seater stadium to a much smaller indoor venue, organizers said.

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Michelle Obama: Election about 'how we want our democracy to function for decades to come'

In her first public appearance after her widely-acclaimed Democratic National Convention speech on Tuesday in Charlotte, First Lady Michelle Obama told the Democratic Convention's African-American Caucus that this year's election was about more than simply electing her husband: it was about what America would be in the future.

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