| Tagg took serious issue with the president calling his dad a liar. |
| This was a real question posed to Kirsten Gillibrand and Wendy Long, two women running for U.S. senate in New York, during their only debate. |
| A new meme born out the intense stare of Mitt's son during the Presidential debate, Tuesday. Tagg said he wanted to take a swing at Obama. Josh looks like he wants to do much worse. Some NSFW language. |
| "[W]e conclude that Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act violates equal protection and is therefore unconstitutional." The Second Circuit Court of Appeals, out of New York, is the second federal court to hold the 1996 federal definition of "marriage" unconstitutional, but Supreme Court appeals are pending. |
| A quick reversal of spin-room bravado. "You'd think an 'offensive' would include more than a web video," snipes an Obama aide. |
| The former Massachusetts Governor touted hiring "binders full of women" for his cabinet, but many were donors to his gubernatorial campaign. |
| A new ad from the Romney campaign features three women who worked in his Massachusetts cabinet. "He totally gets working women." |
| The stars of TLC's "19 Kids and Counting" stump for the Missouri Congressman defined by his "legitimate rape" comment. "We know how tough it is to be a candidate." |
| "Roaring back," says the president. Aide: "It's about time he took some credit for that." |
| Anonymous attack roils Libertarian circles. |
| Repeats Romney's statement that on September 12, Obama didn't call the Benghazi attack a terrorist attack. But he called it an "act of terror" on the 13th — comments the video excludes. |
| In Romney's failed 1994 bid for Senate, Ted Kennedy hit Romney for the lack of women at Bain Capital in an ad. Romney responded in a debate by mentioning the highest paid employee at Bain was a women and the chairman of the board was a women. |
| At a town hall, Gov. Christie pushes back against a voter who complains Newark residents are leeching her tax dollars. "Give the microphone back." |
| The ad edits out that Romney was speaking of a hypothetical situation where it was the consensus of the country to ban abortion. Romney adds "that's not where we are today. That's not where America is." Romney reiterates in the 2007 debate that his position was to return the abortion issue to states, which is also not shown in the Obama campaign ad. |
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