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No matter which one becomes president or stays president the whole system will be the same. The only difference will be smaller morale issues like abortion, gay rights, and so on. Not that these issues will ever go away but they will just have greater or lesser support depending on who sits in the big chair.
International Level: Senior Politician / Political Participation: 174 17.4%
Romney vs. Obama: An Overview of the Candidates Housing Views
Even while housing is repeatedly cited as a leading cause of the Great Recession and as a significant key to a full recovery the candidates for President of the United States have had little to say on the subject . While President Barack Obama has been heavily involved in housing issues for almost four years and it is fairly easy to derive and document what we can assume will be his policy over the next four years the same is obviously not true for the challenger. Mitt Romney finally released a ... Ref. Source 4
HA! Yeah right, There are MANY candidates who say "I care about the country" But most of them don't really care. And when some of those careless candidates become presidents, they don't "Take care" of [their] country much! They don't care about the people much either!
International Level: Envoy / Political Participation: 240 24%
Two days before the first presidential debate, a new national survey indicates a very close contest between President Barack Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney in the race for the White House.
And according to a CNN/ORC International poll, neither candidate appears to have an edge on the economy, which remains the top issue on the minds of Americans and which may dominate Wednesday night's debate on domestic issues in Denver.
Fifty-percent of likely voters questioned in the CNN survey, which was released Monday, say that if the election were held today, they would vote for the president, with 47% saying they would support Romney, the former Massachusetts governor. The president's three point margin is within the poll's sampling error. Ref. CNN
President Barack Obama enjoys the backing of 70% of likely Latino voters, according to a CNN/ORC International poll, slightly higher than the 67% of Latinos who voted for him in 2008.
Polling also showed that 56% of registered voters said the main focus of U.S. Policy on undocumented immigrants should be developing a plan that would allow them to become legal residents. That's a change from a year ago, when 55% said the focus should be on deporting undocumented immigrants and stopping more from coming to the United States.
Note: Watch Obama and Mitt Romney challenge each other on Wednesday in the first of this year's presidential debates, live on CNN TV, CNN.com
Both Candidates Leave God Off The Campaign Trail
Religious Based News
Religion figured prominently in the last two presidential races, but is virtually absent from the 2012 campaign. After invoking faith throughout his first presidential bid, President Obama now barely mentions God. Similarly, rival Mitt Romney refers to religion in only the vaguest of terms.
Source: Religion