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At Any Cost: How Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election p10 www.amazon.com Washington Times reporter Bill Sammon makes it clear in the opening pages of At Any Cost that he's not a big fan of Al Gore. In this fast-paced account of what happened to Florida's controversial vote, he explains how a defeated Gore desperately fought to turn things around. He starts by suggesting that tens of thousands of voters in the Florida Panhandle--Republican country--decided not to cast ballots when the media wrongly called the state for Gore early in the evening on Election Day, before all the polls had closed in the western part of the state. Without this blunder--which hasn't received nearly the attention heaped on the media for prematurely calling the election for George W. Bush several hours later--Sammon believes Gore would have given up his post-election campaign much sooner. Sammon also believes this had repercussions outside Florida: "If not for the networks' early and erroneous projections, Bush might have easily won the popular vote, and carried a few congressional seats with him." The bulk of the book zeros in on Gore and his goal of "seizing the presidency." In one nifty bit of reporting, Sammon tracks down a navy lieutenant whose military ballot Gore's lawyers were determined to throw out. Sammon describes the unseemly spectacle of their success: When the [Duval County] canvassing board announced that the ballots of 149 soldiers, sailors, and airmen had been disqualified, a pair ...
At Any Cost: How Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election part9 www.amazon.com The book is simply superb! Bill Sammon puts names and personalities to some of those voters in Florida whom Al Gore and his minions sought to disenfranchise. They are real people --- people serving their country (that is, us) in the military, at sea or in foreign lands --- and their absentee votes were being casually tossed aside by Gore lawyers who challenged them on the flimsiest possible grounds because "a win is a win," and Gore didn't care WHAT he had to do to "win." Sammon also details some of the network reporting and coverage of events, starting with election night and the early calls for Gore and late calls for Bush, which look for all the world as though the major networks (with the exception of Fox News) were deliberately trying to affect the voting in the midwest and western states by making it seem that Gore was coasting to victories while Bush was struggling. Utterly, utterly contemptible behavior on the part of the networks and the anchors and reporters! Their own quoted remarks betray them. And Sammon includes some new pieces of information --- reports on things going on under the radar --- such as the smear of Katherine Harris at the direction of Gore himself. Sammon also points out that it was seven --- SEVEN, not five --- US Supreme Court Justices who ruled Gore's standardless Florida recount efforts unconstitutional! That fact tends to get lost in the biased coverage from the ...
At any cost: how Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election part8. by Washington times correspondent Bill Sammon. www.amazon.com Washington Times reporter Bill Sammon makes it clear in the opening pages of At Any Cost that he's not a big fan of Al Gore. In this fast-paced account of what happened to Florida's controversial vote, he explains how a defeated Gore desperately fought to turn things around. He starts by suggesting that tens of thousands of voters in the Florida Panhandle--Republican country--decided not to cast ballots when the media wrongly called the state for Gore early in the evening on Election Day, before all the polls had closed in the western part of the state. Without this blunder--which hasn't received nearly the attention heaped on the media for prematurely calling the election for George W. Bush several hours later--Sammon believes Gore would have given up his post-election campaign much sooner. Sammon also believes this had repercussions outside Florida: "If not for the networks' early and erroneous projections, Bush might have easily won the popular vote, and carried a few congressional seats with him." The bulk of the book zeros in on Gore and his goal of "seizing the presidency." In one nifty bit of reporting, Sammon tracks down a navy lieutenant whose military ballot Gore's lawyers were determined to throw out. Sammon describes the unseemly spectacle of their success: When the [Duval County] canvassing board announced that the ballots of 149 soldiers ...
At Any Cost: How Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election part7. www.amazon.com The book is simply superb! Bill Sammon puts names and personalities to some of those voters in Florida whom Al Gore and his minions sought to disenfranchise. They are real people --- people serving their country (that is, us) in the military, at sea or in foreign lands --- and their absentee votes were being casually tossed aside by Gore lawyers who challenged them on the flimsiest possible grounds because "a win is a win," and Gore didn't care WHAT he had to do to "win." Sammon also details some of the network reporting and coverage of events, starting with election night and the early calls for Gore and late calls for Bush, which look for all the world as though the major networks (with the exception of Fox News) were deliberately trying to affect the voting in the midwest and western states by making it seem that Gore was coasting to victories while Bush was struggling. Utterly, utterly contemptible behavior on the part of the networks and the anchors and reporters! Their own quoted remarks betray them. And Sammon includes some new pieces of information --- reports on things going on under the radar --- such as the smear of Katherine Harris at the direction of Gore himself. Sammon also points out that it was seven --- SEVEN, not five --- US Supreme Court Justices who ruled Gore's standardless Florida recount efforts unconstitutional! That fact tends to get lost in the biased coverage from the ...
www.amazon.com The book is simply superb! Bill Sammon puts names and personalities to some of those voters in Florida whom Al Gore and his minions sought to disenfranchise. They are real people --- people serving their country (that is, us) in the military, at sea or in foreign lands --- and their absentee votes were being casually tossed aside by Gore lawyers who challenged them on the flimsiest possible grounds because "a win is a win," and Gore didn't care WHAT he had to do to "win." Sammon also details some of the network reporting and coverage of events, starting with election night and the early calls for Gore and late calls for Bush, which look for all the world as though the major networks (with the exception of Fox News) were deliberately trying to affect the voting in the midwest and western states by making it seem that Gore was coasting to victories while Bush was struggling. Utterly, utterly contemptible behavior on the part of the networks and the anchors and reporters! Their own quoted remarks betray them. And Sammon includes some new pieces of information --- reports on things going on under the radar --- such as the smear of Katherine Harris at the direction of Gore himself. Sammon also points out that it was seven --- SEVEN, not five --- US Supreme Court Justices who ruled Gore's standardless Florida recount efforts unconstitutional! That fact tends to get lost in the biased coverage from the liberal networks! Thanks to Bill Sammon for his excellent work ...
At Any Cost:How Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election part 4. www.amazon.com Washington Times reporter Bill Sammon makes it clear in the opening pages of At Any Cost that he's not a big fan of Al Gore. In this fast-paced account of what happened to Florida's controversial vote, he explains how a defeated Gore desperately fought to turn things around. He starts by suggesting that tens of thousands of voters in the Florida Panhandle--Republican country--decided not to cast ballots when the media wrongly called the state for Gore early in the evening on Election Day, before all the polls had closed in the western part of the state. Without this blunder--which hasn't received nearly the attention heaped on the media for prematurely calling the election for George W. Bush several hours later--Sammon believes Gore would have given up his post-election campaign much sooner. Sammon also believes this had repercussions outside Florida: "If not for the networks' early and erroneous projections, Bush might have easily won the popular vote, and carried a few congressional seats with him." The bulk of the book zeros in on Gore and his goal of "seizing the presidency." In one nifty bit of reporting, Sammon tracks down a navy lieutenant whose military ballot Gore's lawyers were determined to throw out. Sammon describes the unseemly spectacle of their success: When the [Duval County] canvassing board announced that the ballots of 149 soldiers, sailors, and airmen had been disqualified, a ...
At any cost: how Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election Part 2. www.amazon.com Washington Times reporter Bill Sammon makes it clear in the opening pages of At Any Cost that he's not a big fan of Al Gore. In this fast-paced account of what happened to Florida's controversial vote, he explains how a defeated Gore desperately fought to turn things around. He starts by suggesting that tens of thousands of voters in the Florida Panhandle--Republican country--decided not to cast ballots when the media wrongly called the state for Gore early in the evening on Election Day, before all the polls had closed in the western part of the state. Without this blunder--which hasn't received nearly the attention heaped on the media for prematurely calling the election for George W. Bush several hours later--Sammon believes Gore would have given up his post-election campaign much sooner. Sammon also believes this had repercussions outside Florida: "If not for the networks' early and erroneous projections, Bush might have easily won the popular vote, and carried a few congressional seats with him." The bulk of the book zeros in on Gore and his goal of "seizing the presidency." In one nifty bit of reporting, Sammon tracks down a navy lieutenant whose military ballot Gore's lawyers were determined to throw out. Sammon describes the unseemly spectacle of their success: When the [Duval County] canvassing board announced that the ballots of 149 soldiers, sailors, and airmen had been disqualified, a ...
At any cost: how Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election.by Washington times correspondent Bill Sammon. www.amazon.com Washington Times reporter Bill Sammon makes it clear in the opening pages of At Any Cost that he's not a big fan of Al Gore. In this fast-paced account of what happened to Florida's controversial vote, he explains how a defeated Gore desperately fought to turn things around. He starts by suggesting that tens of thousands of voters in the Florida Panhandle--Republican country--decided not to cast ballots when the media wrongly called the state for Gore early in the evening on Election Day, before all the polls had closed in the western part of the state. Without this blunder--which hasn't received nearly the attention heaped on the media for prematurely calling the election for George W. Bush several hours later--Sammon believes Gore would have given up his post-election campaign much sooner. Sammon also believes this had repercussions outside Florida: "If not for the networks' early and erroneous projections, Bush might have easily won the popular vote, and carried a few congressional seats with him." The bulk of the book zeros in on Gore and his goal of "seizing the presidency." In one nifty bit of reporting, Sammon tracks down a navy lieutenant whose military ballot Gore's lawyers were determined to throw out. Sammon describes the unseemly spectacle of their success: When the [Duval County] canvassing board announced that the ballots of 149 soldiers ...
Washington Examiner's Bill Sammon analyzes Mike Huckabee's foreign policy.
The Examiner's Bill Sammon mocked Senator Craig on Special Report with Brit Hume
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