OnTheIssues.org
Home Issues Candidates Recent Grid Archive Senate House Quizzes The Forum FAQs
  Topics in     the News     Issue     Analysis     About     OnTheIssues     Political     News    Search    2008     Race  
Candidates>>
2011 State of the Union speech

2011 CPAC speeches

2011 State of the State speeches

Books from presidential contenders, past & present
Former Gov. Mitt Romney (R, MA)
No Apology
Rep. Paul Ryan (R, WI)
Young Guns
Pres. Barack Obama
The Audacity of Hope
V.P. Joe Biden
Promises to Keep
Former Rep. Ron Paul
End the Fed

Former Pres. George W. Bush
Decision Points
Former Gov. Sarah Palin (R, AK)
America By Heart
Secy. of State Hillary Clinton
Living History
Former Pres. Bill Clinton
My Life
Gov. Jesse Ventura
American Conspiracies

Background material for presidential race
Gen. Petraeus Letter
to soldiers in Iraq
State of the Union
Pres. Bush's speech, Jan. 23, 2007, and the Democratic Response
Iraq Study Group
Recommendations from the Dec. 2006 Report
SenateMatch quiz
Match your issues to all 33 Senate races
2008 Speculation
Who's declared?
2006 State of the Union
and Democratic Response
RNC Platform
2004 Republican party Platform
Democratic Party Platform
Released July 10 2004
Prez-Veep-Senator
Our associated Yahoo discussion group

 

 

 

 

Obama Administration:         Obama Cabinet:   
        Sen. Barack Obama (D, IL), president-elect Sen. Joe Biden (D, DE), vice president-elect             Sen. Hillary_Clinton (D, NY) U.S. Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D, IL-5), Chief of Staff Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano, Secretary of Homeland Security
Click for our 2012 Presidential VoteMatch quiz or click for 2010 Senate race quizzes.

State and federal officeholders in 2011
(Click below on a state for a list of Governors, House of Representative members, or Senators and their challengers).

State Selection Hawaii Alaska Washington Oregon California Idaho Nevada Utah Arizona Arizona New Mexico Colorado Texas Kansas Oklahoma Minnesota Iowa Missouri Wisconsin Illinois Tennessee Michigan Michigan Mississippi Alabama Kentucky Indiana Georgia Ohio Florida South Carolina North Carolina North Carolina Virginia Washington DC Delaware Delaware Maryland Maryland Pennsylvania New Jersey New Jersey New York Connecticut Rhode Island Rhode Island Connecticut Massachusetts Massachusetts Vermont Vermont New Hampshire New Hampshire Arkansas Louisiana Montana North Dakota Wyoming South Dakota Nebraska West Virginia Maine Washington DC  .htm
AK   AL   AR   AZ   CA   CO   CT   DE   FL   GA   HI   IA   ID   IL   IN   KS   KY   LA   MA  
MD   ME   MI   MN   MO   MS   MT   NC   ND   NE   NH   NJ   NM   NV   NY  
OH   OK   OR   PA   RI   SC   SD   TN   TX   UT   VA   VT   WA   WI   WV   WY  


Issues   Click for our new PresidentMatch 2008 quiz
(Click on a candidate's name to the left or click on an issue below).

2008 GOP Presidential candidates:  
(Click on a candidate below for their issue stances)
Abortion
Budget & Economy
Civil Rights
Corporations
Crime
Drugs
Education
Energy & Oil
Environment
Families & Children
Foreign Policy
Free Trade
Government Reform
Gun Control
Health Care
Homeland Security
Immigration
Infrastructure & Technology
Jobs
Principles & Values
Social Security
Tax Reform
War & Peace
Welfare & Poverty
Rudy Giuliani  (former NYC Mayor)
Mike Huckabee  (AR Governor)
Alan Keyes  (former UN Ambassador)
*John McCain  (AZ Senator)
Ron Paul  (TX Representative)
Mitt Romney  (Former MA Governor)
Fred Thompson  (former TN Senator)
2008 Democratic candidates:
*Joe Biden  (DE Senator for V.P.)
Hillary Clinton  (NY Senator)
John Edwards  (former NC Senator)
Mike Gravel  (former AK Senator)
Dennis Kucinich  (OH Representative)
*Barack Obama  (IL Senator)
2008 Independent candidates:
Constitution: Chuck Baldwin 
Libertarian: Bob Barr   (former US Rep., R-GA)
Green: Cynthia McKinney  (former US Rep., D-GA)
AIP: Alan Keyes  (American Independent Party)
PSL: Gloria La Riva  (Party for Socialism & Liberation)
NAIP: Frank McEnulty  (New American Independent Party)
Socialist: Brian Moore 
Independent: Ralph Nader 
Try the 2008 VoteMatch Quiz You answer 20 questions about your political views; we match you up with Presidential candidates. It's fun! Click here for Senate results; House results; Governor results; and analysis

Topics in the News

(Click on a topic below or see the referenced topic above).
Affirmative Action See Civil Rights
Alternative Energy See Energy & Oil
American Exceptionalism See Foreign Policy
Arab Spring See War & Peace
Armed Forces Personnel See See Homeland Security
Bilingualism See Civil Rights
Campaign Finance See Government Reform
Bailout & Stimulus See Corporations
China See Free Trade
Death Penalty See Crime
Death Tax See Tax Reform
Disabled Rights See Civil Rights
Don't-Ask-Don't-Tell See Civil Rights
Drug War See Drugs
Domestic Energy See Energy & Oil
Entitlement Reform See Health Care
Faith-Based Organizations See Welfare & Poverty
Flat Tax & FairTax See Tax Reform
Foreign Aid See Foreign Policy
Gay Rights See Civil Rights
Globalization See Free Trade
Global Warming See Environment
Illegal Immigrants See Immigration
Internet See Technology
Israel & Palestine See See War & Peace
Mexican Border See Immigration
NAFTA See Free Trade
North Korea See War & Peace
Nuclear Energy & Weapons See Homeland Security
ObamaCare See Health Care
Privacy See Civil Rights
Privatization See Social Security
School Prayer See Education
SDI Missile Defense See Homeland Security
Second Amendment See Gun Control
Sovereignty See Foreign Policy
Stem Cells See Abortion
Supreme Court See Government Reform
Ten Commandments See Principles & Values
Terrorism See War & Peace
Three Strikes See Crime
Tort Reform See Government Reform
Unionization See Jobs
United Nations See Foreign Policy
Veterans See Homeland Security
Vouchers See Education
WMD See War & Peace
On the Issues: Samuel Alito - Miers - O'Connor - Roberts - Rehnquist - other justices.
                     Samuel Alito, newest Justice Harriet Miers, withdrawn nominee Sandra Day O'Connor, retiree John Roberts, newly  Chief Justice William Rehnquist, former Chief Justice

The Web
OnTheIssues.org

Party Match
DNC Platform
(Democratic Party)
RNC Platform
(Republican Party)
GP Platform
(Green Party)
LP Platform
(Libertarian Party)
NLP Platform
(Natural Law Party)

LeaderMatch
(Under construction)
George Bush Sr.
(President, 1989-1993)
Jimmy Carter
(President, 1977-1981)
Noam Chomsky
(Liberal Activist)
Bill Clinton
(President, 1993-2001)
Gerald Ford
(President, 1974-77)
Newt Gingrich
(Speaker of the House, 1994-1998)
Denny Hastert
(Speaker of the House)
Rev.Jesse Jackson
(Democratic Spokesman)
Rush Limbaugh
(Conservative talk-show host)
Richard Nixon
(President, 1969-1974)
Ross Perot
(Reform Party founder)
Ronald Reagan
(President, 1981-1989)
Donald Trump
(Real estate magnate)

SenateMatch
(AZ,R) McCain
(CA,D) Boxer
(FL,R) Martinez
(GA,D) Miller
(IL,D) Obama
(MO,R) Bond
(NH,R) Gregg
Other Senators
(2004 races)

Challengers
in 2004 races

House of Representatives
Search for...

Site Map
Home
(Main page)
Issues
(Presidential quotations 
organized by topic)
Candidates
(Presidential quotations organized by candidate)
Recent
(Most recent quotation 
for each candidate)
Issue Grid
(Summary by topic of each candidate's positions)
Candidate Grid
(Summary by candidate of positions on each topic)
Archives
(Debate and book excerpts)
Senate
(Senate races in 33 states)
VoteMatch
(Presidential Selector and Political Affiliation 20-question quiz)
The Forum
(Your views on the
candidates and the issues)
SpeakOut Issues
(Policy background)
News
(Latest headlines 
on the Presidential race)
About Us
(About OnTheIssues.org)
Letters
(Other viewers' letters)
Low-graphics version
(No ads, less Java)
Write Us
(Your feedback to us)

 Question Answer VoteMatch results
     
Below are the summary results of our VoteMatch 20-question political quiz, with analysis of the responses in terms of McCain's & Obama's stances from the 2004 elections. This data represents 15,800 VoteMatch quiz responses in the period January 1 through Dec. 31, 2004. Click on the links below for excerpts on each topic, or click for a summary of Obama's VoteMatch answers and McCain's VoteMatch answers, with headlines evidencing how we concluded their answer to each question. Click on the "analysis" link to see background and details about the question.

Abortion is a Woman's Right    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: 59% agree with Obama's pro-choice stance, and only 34% with McCain's pro-life stance. This issue has the fewest people answering "no opinion" of any VoteMatch issue (only 7%), which reflects the fact that it is overwhelmingly the issue with the most voter interest (as indicated by our viewership statistics). Click for all candidates' headlines on abortion or for background information.
 
Require Companies To Hire More Women/Minorities    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: Obama supports Affirmative Action but questions its effectiveness; McCain supports Affirmative Access with more focus on process than outcome. Note that our question specifies REQUIREMENT: 39% support that, and 45% oppose it. (This has changed from 35% support and 51% oppose in 1999-2000, the largest shift for any question which had identical wording then). Click for all candidates' headlines on Civil Rights or for background information.
 
Sexual Orientation Protected By Civil Rights Law    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: 61% agree with Obama's relatively pro-gay leave-it-to-the-states stance, and 25% with McCain's Defense-of-Marriage stance. The response pattern indicates a divisive issue: both "strongly" bars are larger than their corresponding non-strong bars. The "strongly support" bar has the highest response of any quiz question (and has grown since 1999-2000) -- this is attributable to the growing interest and growing divisiveness in this topic due to the advent of same-sex marriages. Click for all candidates' headlines on Civil Rights or for background information.
 
Permit Prayer In Public Schools    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: It's difficult to decode the candidates's stances on religious issues, since both are wary of issues of separation of church and state, and neither wants to be seen as anti-religion. But McCain is considerably more willing to federally fund values education, which the results above would imply are supported by 49% of voters. 37% oppose school prayer, which implies a closer match to Obama's "no" vote on voluntary prayer. Click for all candidates' headlines on Education or for headlines on Values.
 
Death Penalty    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: McCain supports the death penalty, and Obama is opposed. McCain's fervent support is backed up by 49% of voters. Obama's opposition is backed by 38% of voters (a shift from 47%-43% in 1999-2000). Click for all candidates' headlines on Crime or for background information.
 
Mandatory "Three Strikes" Sentencing Laws    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: McCain supports mandatory sentencing, which matches voter preference: 47% to 35% opposed. Obama prefers prevention (support for mandatory sentencing has waned since 1999-2000). McCain is more fervent than the wording of this question, in favor of "Two Strikes" and limited parole, including minors. Click for all candidates' headlines on Crime or for background information.
 
Absolute Right To Gun Ownership    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: The Gun Control issue is second in the Big Three issues in terms of viewer interest, behind Abortion and ahead of Education -- all the other issues are very distantly behind. Voters are split on the issue: 42% agree with McCain's pro-gun rights stance, while 44% agree with Obama's pro-registration stance. Click for all candidates' headlines on Gun_Control or for background information.
 
More Federal Funding For Health Coverage    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: This is the most lopsided of any response: 66% in favor, versus only 20% opposing. Accordingly, McCain has been promoting various spending programs, such as Medicare prescription drugs. But health care is generally seen as a Democratic issue, favoring Obama's more fervent stance of incrementally reaching universal coverage. Click for all candidates' headlines on Health Care or for background information.
 
Privatize Social Security    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: Only 35% agree with Obama's stance to keep Social Security within the federal government, while 44% agree with McCain's stance of privatization (but support of privatization has waned since the 1999-2000 score of 56%-29%). Social Security until recently was called the "Third Rail" of politics -- touch it and you die -- but clearly the voters are ready for a change. This question is perhaps the most skewed by our demographics -- our respondents are all Internet users, and hence are younger and more affluent than the general population. Click for all candidates' headlines on Social Security or for background information.
 
Parents Choose Schools Via Vouchers    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: 44% agree with Obama's stance to fund public schools only, and 37% agree with McCain's stance to fund vouchers for private schools. Education is primarily a non-federal issue, with 93% of funding and most decisions occuring at the state and local levels. But education is solidly third in voter interest (behind abortion and guns, as measured by our viewership statistics -- it has slipped from second place in 1999-2000), so the candidates are obligated to make their views known despite the limited power of the presidency on this issue. Click for all candidates' headlines on School Choice or for background information.
 
Reduce use of coal, oil, & nuclear energy     Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: The environmental issue is the most lopsided issue on which the candidates sharply differ; this is a particularly sharp difference because the question is worded in terms of direct conservation. 59% agree with Obama's stance that global warming is a serious threat, and 23% with McCain's stance drill for more oil. Click for all candidates' headlines on Energy or for background on Environment or background on Energy issues.
 
Drug Use Is Immoral: Enforce Laws Against It    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: 48% support the Drug War, while 38% oppose it. This has not been much of a campaign issue but McCain & Obama disagree: Obama would restrict Drug War funding, while McCain would implement stronger penalties. Click for all candidates' headlines on Drugs or for background information.
 
Allow Churches To Provide Welfare Services    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: Both McCain & Obama once again agree with a voter consensus: 51% favor welfare services by private organization while only 28% oppose it. Obama favors continuing welfare reform, and McCain favors faith-based organizations. Click for all candidates' headlines on welfare & poverty or for background information.
 
Decrease overall taxation of the wealthy     Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: 51% agree with a flatter tax structure and only 33% oppose. Tax cuts are generally seen as a Republican issue, so this consensus favors McCain. McCain favors a making the tax cuts permanent; Obama favors cuts targeted to the middle class. Click for all candidates' headlines on Tax Reform or for background information.
 
Immigration Helps Our Economy - Encourage It    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: Immigration has a very large number of viewers answering "No opinion", at 21%. And the results, 39% in favor and 40% opposed, indicate a lack of voter consensus as well. This result is nearly unchanged since 1999-2000 despite the post-September-11 focus on immigration issues. McCain has mixed views, calling for tougher enforcement and a temporary worker program. Obama is just as ambiguous, calling for earned citizenship but limits on visas. Click for all candidates' headlines on Immigration or for background information.
 
Support and Expand Free Trade    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: Free Trade has the smallest strong opposition of our 20 issues (7%, despite the ongoing anti-globalization movement), as well as a strong consensus in favor: 58% to only 23% opposed. McCain & Obama agree in supporting free trade, with McCain promoting the free market, and Obama voting for free trade agreements while insisting on labor and environmental standards. Click for all candidates' headlines on Free Trade or for background information.
 
More Spending On Armed Forces     Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: This is another strong voter consensus; 54% in favor with only 29% opposed, despite that the wording says MORE spending, not just MAINTAIN spending, which favors the Republican viewpoint. McCain & Obama outdo each other in pledging better military pay; but they differ on what else they would spend on, with McCain focusing on a general military buildup and Obama focusing on veterans' benefits. Cheney's calls for better readiness tend to reinforce this as a Republican issue. Click for all candidates' headlines on Iraq in general, or for background information.
 
Reduce Spending on Missile Defense ("Star Wars")    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: 44% favor, and 37% oppose, a shift against Star Wars since the 42%-42% split in 1999-2000. McCain wants to deploy national missile defense; Obama would work within the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. Click for all candidates' headlines on Homeland Security, or for background information.
 
Link Human Rights To Trade With China    Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: 51% favor restrictions on China trade, with only 25% opposing. This is the only issue of our 20 questions where McCain & Obama both disagree with the voter's preference -- Obama voted for China PNTR; McCain agrees and would add Taiwan to the WTO as well. Their agreement is not surprising, since Clinton, Gore, and the Republican Congress have also agreed on this issue. What is surprising is the strong public consensus against it, which only Nader acknowledges, and even he has not come out strongly on this issue. Click for all candidates' headlines on Foreign Policy or for background information.
 
Seek UN approval for military action     Strongly Support
 
Support
 
No Opinion
 
Oppose
 
Strongly Oppose
 
Analysis: 57% favor multilateralism and 25% oppose it. McCain claims to be an internationalist but post-9-11 speaks more in favor of unilateralism. Obama would bring the UN into Iraq. Click for all candidates' headlines on Foreign Policy or for background information.


Explore The Results
Take the VoteMatch Quiz  |  Quiz results from 2000  |  More Issue Results  |  How It Works  |  Quiz Comments
The above analyses reflect data collected from March 2000 through October 2000, with edits to the text to reflect the 2004 election. Sample size is well over 100,000 viewer sessions. The margin of error is well under 1%, but the data represents a "self-selected sample" of people who use the Internet for political information.


Home | Issues | Candidates | Most Recent Quote | Issue Grid | Books + Debates | Senate Races | VoteMatch | The Forum | Policy Papers | News | About Us | Write Us
Reproduction of material from any OnTheIssues.org pages without written permission is prohibited. Copyright ?1999-2008 by Jesse Gordon, OnTheIssues.org & SpeakOut.com, all rights reserved.
OnTheIssues.org 1770 Massachusetts Ave. #630, Cambridge MA 02140
E-mail: submit@OnTheIssues.org, Jesse Gordon, editor-in-chief
| Advertising information | Privacy and Use Policy

最新快播电影 鬼片电影