Election 2008: The Race for President
The upcoming United States presidential election, will be held on November 4, 2008. It will be the 55th consecutive quadrennial election for president and vice president of the United States. The WiseTo Election site features in-depth content on key the social issues of the 2008 election—abortion, the war in Iraq, health care reform and many more—as well as, the positions of candidates and their party's on these issues. In addition to this rich content WiseTo has informative articles on the history and facts about the presidential elections in the United States.
Candidate images courtesy of AP Images.
Presidential Candidates
Ron PaulU.S. House Representative from Texas
See Other Party's Candidates 
Major Election Issues
An abortion is a medical or surgical procedure that ends a pregnancy. Throughout history, differences over moral and religious values have made abortion a highly controversial issue. The procedure has been legal in the United States since 1973, but it remains controversial with divergent views on such questions as when human life begins, the rights a woman has over her own body, and government interference in the private lives of individuals. The two factions involved in this controversy are poles apart in their views on abortion...
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Of all American institutions, the educational system has perhaps the greatest impact on the lives of ordinary people. More than anything else, in fact, it is education that shapes a person's future. Because of the importance of education, Americans want citizens, not politicians, to have as much control over it...
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Strictly, an environmental policy can be defined as a government's chosen course of action or plan to address issues such as pollution, wildlife protection, land use, energy production and use, waste generation, and waste disposal. In reality, the way a particular government handles environmental problems is most often not a ...
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In January 2001 the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a group of scientific experts assembled by the United Nations, released a frightening report on the potential consequences of the climate phenomenon known as global warming. The panel found that the 1990s had been the warmest decade on record and...
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Many Americans agree that the current system is not working. According to Harvard economist David M. Cutler, "The problems of medical care confront us daily.... Barely one in five Americans thinks the medical system works well." Those concerned with improving the system often look to other nations for reform models...
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In January 2003, the Department of Homeland Security became the Nation's 15th and newest Cabinet department, consolidating 22 previously disparate agencies under one unified organization. In 2002, no single federal department had homeland security as its primary objective. Now it is our mission. We are integrating our resources to meet...
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Illegal immigrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border face a new danger in their harrowing trip across the vast Sonoran desert of America's Southwest. Some U.S. citizens who live near America's southwestern border with Mexico are frustrated by what they see as an unrestricted flow of illegal immigrants. These Americans believe that...
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Same-sex marriages are not legally recognized in the United States. As a result, partners in homosexual relationships often lack privileges, such as the right to inherit property and to medical, tax, and retirement benefits, that partners in traditional marriages enjoy. However, local governments ...
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The U.S. Social Security system provides benefits to the elderly, retirees, the disabled, the unemployed, and children. The Social Security taxes that workers pay go toward benefits for people who have already retired. This system worked well when the population included 1 retiree for every 120 workers...
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The United States's dealings and contacts with, and the American people's attitudes and policies toward, any foreign country are conditioned by the historical and cultural outlooks of the two countries. Any discussion of foreign affairs must start with the assumption that we are analyzing two societies of different traditions as well as two entities...
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Despite fervent opposition from millions of people around the world, and without the backing of the United Nations, American and British troops invaded Iraq on March 19, 2003. In justification of the preemptive attack, coalition forces cited Iraq's failure to cooperate with its UN-mandated disarmament obligations...
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