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the note
And Don't You Know...
...That It's (Apparently) Wrong To Take What Is Given You?

By Mark Halperin, Marc Ambinder, David Chalian, Brooke Brower, Teddy Davis, and Alexander Blenkinsopp.
ABCNEWS.com

 

2003 Note Archives, updated weekly.

Click here for The ABCNEWS Political Unit's exclusive major futures calendar and today's daybook.

E-mail us: Tips, Compliments, Complaints and Questions.

Who we are ... And What We're About.

SILVERDOCS:

The Washington Post 's Jennifer Frey writes about SILVERDOCS, "the inaugural documentary film festival that opens tonight at the AFI Silver Theatre in Silver Spring" — no surprise to Note readers, of course. LINK

Frey describes D.C.'s resource-rich film community, with National Geographic, the Smithsonian, PBS, and the Center for Public Broadcasting located there, along with a growing population of filmmakers, and follows the road to the (soon-to-be annual) festival itself when AFI and the Discovery Channel joined forces.

Washington is a unique site for the event, according to event director Nina Gilden Seavey: "We're trying to embrace the real difference that this audience brings that no other audience in the world really brings … Politics, art, journalism, sports. . . . Washington is unparalleled by any place else in America.'"

As for the Note's pet interest, here's the corresponding section:

"And so tomorrow night's symposium includes screenings of "Only in America," in which Los Angeles director Ron Frank follows the 2000 campaign of Senator Joseph Lieberman, the first Jewish candidate for vice president, and "We Wuz Robbed," Spike Lee's analysis of what happened in the 2000 election. The panel that follows — hosted by ABC political director Mark Halperin and featuring George W. Bush media adviser Mark McKinnon and Democratic strategist Eskew — won't be so much about film as it is faith and politics, and will look at the 2000 election and the upcoming race in 2004."

"'It's getting a much bigger play there [in Washington] than anywhere else, which I'm sure is because of the subject,' Frank says.'A lot of people think, well, our film's a political film, and it really isn't — it's a cultural film — but obviously politics are all over the place on it.'"

Frey Notes that "the festival will run for five days, screening more than 74 films in the newly refurbished, high-quality AFI Silver."

The overwhelming interest in tomorrow night's big political/cinematic event in Silver Spring has been impressive.

The Note reports with deeply mixed feelings that tickets to the "Only in America", "We Wuz Robbed", and post symposium Martini bash are completely sold out.

However, we have some good news for you political junkies that were unable to attain a ticket for tomorrow night. The SILVERDOCS film festival has several other screenings of films with a political bent. Here's a sampling:

EYES OF THE WORLD (directed by Michael Perlman), screening in Feature Competition on Sat., June 21 at 11:00 a.m.

International award-winning journalists reveal the physical and emotional price paid as they gather evidence of war crimes and test their human capacity to endure. LINK

RUN SOME IDIOT (directed by Jim Taylor), screening on Friday, June 20 at 9:15 p.m.

Shot during the 2000 Presidential election, this film hilariously chronicles the campaign trail of a very creative and eccentric presidential candidate, Jim Taylor. LINK

POWER TRIP (directed by Paul Devlin), screening on Friday, June 20 at 4:30 p.m. and Sunday, June 22 at 5:00 p.m.

POWER TRIP examines the difficulty involved in transitioning from communism to a free-market society by focusing on the struggle for electricty in the former Soviet Republic of Georgia. LINK

THE GAME OF THEIR LIVES (directed by Daniel Gordon), screening on Thursday, June 19 at 9:30 p.m.

The famine-struck, nuclear weapons-bent pariah nation Americans are so accustomed to hearing about is not the North Korea depicted in this film. LINK>

Politics:

"Former third-party presidential candidates who were excluded from debates in 2000 asked election officials Tuesday to block the Commission on Presidential Debates from sponsoring next year's forums," writes the AP's Sharon Theimer. LINK

"The complaint to the Federal Election Commission said the debate commission is a partisan organization that lets only Democratic and Republican candidates participate in the debates it organizes. The complaint also said election law requires that an organization staging such debates be nonprofit and nonpartisan."

Karl: The multipartisan complaint about the CPD also made the New York Times . LINK

"[T]he former chairman of Ullico, a union-owned insurer, refused to testify yesterday before a Congressional committee investigating accusations that the insurer's board members earned more than $6 million through insider trading," The New York Times reports. LINK

"Appearing under subpoena, Robert A. Georgine, Ullico's former chairman and chief executive, asserted his Fifth Amendment right against compelled self-incrimination in refusing to answer questions before the House Education and Workforce Committee."

Alexander Bolton writes in the Hill's top story today that members of the Congressional Black Caucus are urging the Democratic National Committee to hire more minority political consultants in order to better incorporate minority groups into the Democrats' strategizing. LINK

"Responding to caucus members' complaining questions at a meeting last week, DNC Chairman Terry McAuliffe revealed that the DNC had not signed a contract with any African American political consultants for the 2002 election, an attendee said."

"McAuliffe also divulged that the committee had a contract with only one African American consultant for 2004, even though African Americans support Democrats over Republicans by a nearly 9-1 margin and are widely seen as a vital segment of the Democratic base."

David Beckham-inspired question of the day: If you could trade a favorite politician to another country and get something big in return, who would you trade, and what would you want? (Note: in order for this contest to be fun and not whiny, don't trade politicians you dislike.)

National security politics:

On the ground in Baghdad, the Wall Street Journal 's Cloud heralds this: "The search for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq is kicking into a higher gear, amid rising tensions between the military officials conducting the search and civilian and intelligence officials increasingly taking control."

The AP's Ken Guggenheim writes, "House Republicans rejected a Democratic resolution that would have forced the Bush administration to do what it is already doing: provide the intelligence used as the basis for its assertions that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction." LINK

Newt Gingrich is all over the papers today because of that whole meeting with the press he had, and the New York Times focuses on the Speaker's sustained sense that the State Department is "broken." LINK

The New York Times ' Tom Friedman ends his opus this way:

"If I were President Bush … and my political life depended on Iraq being a success, I would already be worrying. I would have double the number of U.S. troops there and be throwing so much food and investment into Iraq that people there would think they've won the jackpot. Why the president is not doing that beats me, and it could end up beating him." LINK

Ornstein, triumphant! "The continuity issue is finally taking hold inside Congress. "

"I knew we had arrived on the serious track when opposition popped up … ."

His Roll Call column tries to answer their objections.

"If one really believes that the threat to Congress is trivial or overblown, there is an easy way to achieve consensus on this issue. Make sure that any constitutional amendment allowing for temporary appointments can only take place if there is a huge catastrophe. Set the threshold very high and make it very specific so that no minor event and no mischievous actors can trigger an undesirable outcome. "

"None of us wants temporary appointments. None of us want a constitutional amendment of this sort ever to be used. But I, and the commission members, believe that anyone who truly loves the House and loves our constitutional system cannot shrink from the reality of the threat or avoid the bottom line of what is necessary for Congress to do to write a meaningful will to the American people."

Judicial confirmation battles:

Senator Daschle asks the president to consult with him on SCOTUS stuff (!), but the Washington zeitgeist increasingly is: no vacancies anytime soon. LINK

The AP's Jesse Holland reports that "Some Republicans were not keen on the idea of Bush talking to Democrats about possible nominees. 'I don't think there's any reason for the president to consult with Democrats,' said Senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, the Senate's No. 3 Republican." LINK

Sen/Dr/Leader Frist "said Daschle will have an opportunity to talk to Bush during their bipartisan leadership meetings at the White House, and can give him any suggestions he wants."

Longing for the Magic 8-ball, the New York Times ' Linda Greenhouse writes, "This is tea-leaf reading time at the Supreme Court, and, no, the only subject is not whether any justices are planning to retire." LINK

"Inside the building, where the frenzy of retirement speculation is largely though not completely discounted, the current topic is when, and under what circumstances, the court plans to announce the remaining 10 decisions and conclude its current term."

As she outlines the impact of the imminent summer recess, Greenhouse also Notes: "Meanwhile, a favorite court-watchers' guessing game is under way — who is writing which opinions? This is a form of card-counting that starts from the premise that the two-week periods in which the court sits for arguments throughout the term result in a fairly even distribution of opinions within each sitting."

Bush Administration strategy/personality:

According to the Boston Globe 's Names column, Laura Bush dined safely in Nantucket. LINK

PoliticsNH.com's James W. "W." Pindell was there for Mr. Card's visit to New Hampshire. LINK

Card received an award and told Republican activists 'it is too early' to rule out the use of U.S. troops as peacekeepers in Israel and a future Palestinian state," the Manchester Union Leader reports. LINK

The Associated Press reports on White House Horticulturalist Dale Haney's turn on the administration's Web chat series. LINK

"'[The dogs] hang out with us during the day while the president and first lady are busy. Barney plays with the volleyball, and Spot plays with a tennis ball. And Spot loves to swim this time of year in the pool,' Haney typed in response to a question from 'Mary, from Mount Vernon, N.J.'"

"Condoleezza Rice is used to making tough policy decisions as President Bush's national security adviser. Soon she'll face a tough personal decision: whether to run for governor of California," writes Jim Puzzanghera of the San Jose Mercury News. LINK

Media:

The Boston Globe 's Mark Jurkowitz takes a healthy look at Joe Lelyveld. LINK

With our "SATC" references about to explode, the New York Times ' incomparable Bill Carter reports that "The Sopranos" plan to do a 6th and final season of 10 episodes. LINK

UPCOMING MAJOR POLITICAL EVENTS

—9:30 am: Senate convenes to take up Medicare legislation
—9:30 am: White House off-camera morning briefing
—10:00 am: House convenes to take up tax legislation
—10:30 am: Senate Minority Leader Daschle briefs press
—10:40 am: President participates in discussion on prison ministries
—12:45 pm: White House daily press briefing with Ari Fleischer
—2:20 pm: President meets with Senators on Medicare
—6:00 pm: President attends annual Congressional barbeque
—7:30 pm: Vice President Cheney speaks at Washington Campus 25th anniversary, DC

Major Futures

— June 16-19, 2003: Florida legislature special session to consider medical liability reform
— June 18, 2003: Rep. Dick Gephardt attends health care roundtable with SEIU employees, Los Angeles, California
— June 18, 2003: Senator Joe Lieberman campaigns in Oklahoma
— June 18-19, 2003: Senator John Kerry campaigns in New Hampshire
— June 18, 2003: AFSCME/New Democrat Network host "An Evening of Iowa Politics," Washington, DC
— June 19, 2003: Senator John Edwards appears at McLean County Museum of History, Bloomington, Illinois
— June 19-20, 2003: Association of State Democratic Chairs presidential candidate forum, Minneapolis
— June 20, 2003: Laura Bush attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraiser, Chattanooga, Tennessee
— June 20, 2003: Rep. Dick Gephardt keynotes St. Charles County Democrat Days, St. Peter's, Mo.
— June 20, 2003: President Bush attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraiser, Greensboro, Georgia
— June 20-21, 2003: Pennsylvania Democratic Party state commitee meeting, Harrisburg
— June 21, 2003: Jasper County Democrats host Democratic presidential forum, Newton, Iowa
— June 21, 2003: "Hear It From the Heartland" forum with Sen. John Kerry, Mason City, Iowa
— June 22, 2003: Presidential candidate forum hosted by Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, Chicago
— June 23, 2003: California county elections officers report number of recall petition signatures to Secretary of State
— June 23, 2003: President Bush attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraiser, New York City
— June 23, 2003: Vice President Cheney attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraisers in Boston and Richmond
— June 23, 2003: Gephardt fundraiser featuring Barry Manilow, New York City
— June 23, 2003: Former Vermont Governor Howard Dean officially declares his candidacy, Burlington, Vermont
— June 24, 2003: Amb. Carol Moseley Braun addresses DL21C, New York
— June 25, 2003: President Bush hosts annual U.S.-EU Summit, Washington, DC
— June 25, 2003: Democratic National Committee Presidential Dinner fundraiser, Washington, DC
— June 25, 2004: Laura Bush attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraisers, Cincinnati and Philadelphia
— June 26, 2003: League of Conservation Voters/California League of Conservation Voters presidential candidate forum on the environment, Los Angeles, CA
— June 27, 2003: George P. Bush attends "Filibuster Buster" reception on Capitol Hill
— June 27, 2003: President Bush attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraisers, San Francisco and Los Angeles
— June 28, 2003: Sen. Clinton attends DSCC fundraiser with Sen. Boxer in San Francisco
— June 28, 2003: Sen. Bob Graham keynotes Tennessee Democrats' Jackson Dinner, Opryland Hotel, Nashville
— June 28, 2003: Gov. Bill Richardson keynotes the Florida Democrats Jefferson-Jackson Gala, Hollywood, Florida
— June 28, 2003: Nat'l Assn of Latino Elected Officials candidate forum, Phoenix, Arizona
— June 29, 2003: Sen. Clinton attends DSCC fundraiser with Sen. Boxer in Los Angeles
— June 30, 2003: President Bush attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraisers in Miami and Tampa
— June 30, 2003: Vice President Cheney attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraisers in Grand Rapids, Michigan and Akron, Ohio
— June 30, 2003: Governor Howard Dean holds fundraiser, American Airlines Theatre, NYC
— June 30, 2003: Second campaign finance quarter ends
— June 30, 2003: Howard Dean attends fundraiser at American Airlines Theater, New York
— July 1-6, 2003: National Education Association 2003 Annual Meeting
— July 3, 2003: Government releases unemployment figure for June
— July 4, 2003: Amherst and Merrimack Fourth of July parades, New Hampshire
— July 6, 2003: President Bush's birthday
— July 8, 2003: Consolidated BCRA case plaintiffs' briefs are due
— July 9-13, 2003: Young Republican National Federation Conference, Boston
— July 11-15, 2003: National Association of Counties 2003 Annual Conference and Exposition, Milwakee County, Wisconsin
— July 12-17, 2003: NAACP 94th Annual Convention, Miami
— July 13, 2003: "Hear It From The Heartland" forum with Rep. Dick Gephardt, Dubuque, Iowa
— July 15, 2003: Quaterly campaign finance reports due to FEC
— July 15-19, 2003: National Association of Lieutenant Governors Annual Meeting, Little Rock, Arkansas
— July 18, 2003: Green Party holds 2003 conference, Washington DC
— July 18, 2003: President Bush attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraisers in Dallas
— July 19, 2003: President Bush attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraisers in Houston
— July 19-23, 2003: Association of Trial Lawyers of America convention, San Francisco
— July 21-25, 2003: National Conference of State Legislatures' Annual Meeting, San Francisco
— July 23, 2003: California county elections officers report number of recall petition signatures to Secretary of State
— July 23-26,2003: Republican National Committee meeting, New York City
— July 24, 2003: President Bush attends Bush-Cheney '04 fundraiser in Detroit (area), Michigan
— July 24-27, 2003: North Haverhill Fair, North Haverhill, NH
— July 25, 2003: Sen. Clinton attends DSCC fundraiser with Sen. Lincoln in Little Rock, Arkansas
— July 25-29, 2003: National Association of Secretaries of State Summer Meeting, Portland, Maine
— July 25-27, 2003: Iowa AFSCME Biennial Convention, Sheraton Four Points Hotel, Des Moines, IA
— July 25-27, 2003: College Republicans Biennial Convention, DC
— July 25-27, 2003: National Association of State Election Directors summer meeting, Portland
— July 27-Aug 1, 2003: United Food and Commercial Workers union annual meeting, San Francisco
— July 27-28, 2003: Democratic Leadership Council's 2003 "National Conversation," Philadelphia
— July 27, 2003: "Hear It From the Heartland" forum with Rep. Dennis Kucinich, Ottumwa, Iowa
— July 28, 2003: Bill Bradley's birthday.
— July 29-Aug-3, 2003: Chesire State Fair, Chesire, NH
— July 31-Aug 3, 2003: American Constitution Society national convention
— July 31, 2003: Gross Domestic Product figure for second quarter released
— Aug. 1, 2003: Government releases unemployment figure for July
— Aug. 1-2, American Constitutional Society National Convention, DC
— Aug. 2-9, 2003: Teamsters 100 Year Anniversary, nationwide
— August 3, 2003: "Hear It From the Heartland" forum with former Sen. Carol Moseley Braun, Waterloo, Iowa
— Aug. 5, 2003: "Hear It From the Heartland" forum with Rev. Al Sharpton, Sioux City, Iowa
— Aug. 5, 2003: Consolidated BCRA case defendants' briefs are due
— Aug. 5,2003: Mississippi Republican and Democratic Gubernatorial primaries
— Aug. 5-6, 2003: AFL-CIO executive council meets, Chicago, Illinois
— Aug. 6, 2003: Sen. Clinton attends DSCC fundraiser with Sen. Murray in Seattle
— Aug. 7-17, 2003: Iowa State Fair
— Aug. 8-12, 2003: American Bar Association annual meeting, San Francisco
— Aug. 13-15, 2003: Iowa Federation of Labor 47th Annual Convention, Waterloo
— August 13, 2003: Iowa Federation of Labor Presidential Candidates Forum, Des Moines, Iowa
— Aug. 13-17, 2003: Young Democrats of America National Convention, Buffalo, NY
— Aug. 14, 2003: Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack's Conference on Public Health with presidential candidates, Des Moines
— Aug. 15-17, 2003: Cornish Fair, Cornish New Hampshire
— Aug. 16, 2003: Amb. Carol Moseley Braun's birthday
— Aug. 16-19,2003 National Governors Association summer meeting in Indianapolis
— Aug. 19, 2003: Bill Clinton's birthday
— Aug. 19, 2003: Tipper Gore's birthday
— Aug. 19-20, 2003: Pennsylvania Republican Party state committee meeting
— Aug. 21, 2003: Consolidated BCRA case plaintiffs' reply briefs are due
— Aug. 22, 2003: California county elections officers report number of recall petition signatures to Secretary of State
— Aug. 27-Sept 1, 2003: Lancaster Fair, Lancaster, N.H.
— Aug. 28- Sept 1, 2003, Hopkinton State Fair, N.H.
— Sep. 2, 2003: Recall petitions due in California
— Sept. 3-5, 2003: The Alliance for Retired Americans holds National Legislative Conference, Washington, D.C.
— Sept. 5, 2003: Government releases unemployment figure for August
— Sept. 8, 2003: Supreme Court hears arguments in McConnell v. FEC
— Sept.12-21, 2003, Rochester Fair, Rochester, N.H.
— Sept. 13-16, 2003: Western Governors Association Annual Meeting, Big Sky, MT
— Sept. 15-17, 2003: National Restaurant Association lobbying conference, DC
— Sept. 19-21, 2003: National Federation of Republican Women biennial conference, Salt Lake City
— Sept. 21, 2003: "Hear It From the Heartland" forum with Sen. Joseph Lieberman, Cedar Rapids, Iowa
— Sept. 21-23, 2003: Southern Governors Association Annual Meeting, Charleston WV
— Sept. 24-27, 2003: Congressional Black Caucus Foundation annual legislative conference, DC
— Sept. 25, 2003: Democratic National Committee Presidential Dinner fundraiser, Los Angeles, California.
— Sept. 31, 2003: Third campaign finance quarter ends
— Oct. 1, 2003: FY 04 begins
— Oct 3, 2003: Government releases unemployment figure for September
— Oct. 4, 2003: Louisiana Gubernatorial Open Primary
— Oct. 8, 2003: Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio)'s birthday
— Oct. 9, 2003: Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.)'s birthday
— Oct. 13, 2003: Rev. Al Sharpton's birthday
— Oct. 15, 2003: Quaterly campaign finance reports due to FEC
— Oct. 20-21, 2003: President Bush attends APEC Leaders' Meeting, Bangkok, Thailand
— Oct. 25, 2003: Democratic National Committee Presidential Dinner fundraiser, New York City.
— Oct. 25, 2003: 2003 Pumpkin Festival, Keene, New Hampshire
— Oct. 30, 2003: Gross Domestic Product figure for second quarter released
— Nov. 3, 2003: First day for presidential campaigns to file in New Hampshire
— Nov. 4, 2003: General elections in Louisiana, Kentucky and Mississippi
— Nov. 6-11, 2003: National Association of Realtors annual convention, San Francisco
— Nov. 7, 2003: Government releases unemployment figure for October
— Nov. 9, 2003: Sen. Bob Graham (D-Fla.)'s birthday
— Nov. 13-15, 2003: Federalist Society 2003 National Lawyers Convention, DC
— Nov. 15, 2003: Louisiana Gubernatorial General Election
— Nov. 15, 2003: Iowa Democratic Party's Jefferson-Jackson day dinner.
— Nov. 21, 2003: Dubuque County Democrats Presidential Forum, Dubuque, Iowa
— Nov. 17, 2003: Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean's birthday
— Nov. 21, 2003: Last day for presidential campaigns to file in New Hampshire
— Nov. 22, 2003: Democratic National Committee Presidential Dinner fundraiser, Miami, Florida.
— Dec. 5-7, 2003: Florida State Democratic Convention, Disney World
— Dec. 5, 2003: Government releases unemployment figure for October
— Dec. 6, 2003: Presidential candidate forum with Iowa College Democrats, Iowa City
— Dec. 9, 2003: Sen. Tom Daschle (D-SD)'s birthday
— Dec. 11, 2003: Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass)'s birthday
— Dec. 13, 2003: Democratic National Committee Presidential Dinner fundraiser, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
— Dec. 15, 2003: Uber-Democrat Donna Brazile's birthday.
— Jan. 4, 2004: Des Moines Register's Democratic candidate presidential debate
— Jan.6, 2004: National Public Radio hosts a radio-only candidate forum, Des Moines (tentative)
— Jan.9, 2004: Government releases unemployment figure for December
— Jan. 19, 2004: Iowa caucuses
— Jan. 24, 2004: 100 Club New Hampshire Democratic Party Annual Fundraiser, Sheraton Tara, Nashua
— Jan. 27, 2004: New Hampshire primary
— Jan. 31, 2004: Final 2003 fourth quarter campaign finance reports due to FEC
— Jan. 31, 2004: Rep. Richard Gephardt (D-MO)'s birthday
— Feb. 3, 2004: Delaware presidential primary
— Feb. 3, 2004: South Carolina Democratic presidential primary
— Feb. 3, 2004: Missouri presidential primary
— Feb. 3, 2004: Arizona presidential primary
— Feb. 3, 2004: New Mexico Democratic caucuses
— Feb. 3, 2004: Virginia GOP caucuses
— Feb. 3, 2004: Oklahoma presidential primary
— Feb. 7, 2004: Michigan Democratic caucuses
— Feb. 7, 2004: Washington state Democratic caucuses
— Feb. 8, 2004: Maine caucuses
— Feb. 10, 2004: Virginia Democratic presidential primary
— Feb. 10, 2004: District of Columbia Democratic caucuses
— Feb. 10, 2004: Tennessee presidential primary
— Feb. 17, 2004: Wisconsin presidential primary
— Feb. 24, 2004: Idaho Democratic caucuses
— Feb. 24, 2004: Michigan GOP presidential primary
— Feb. 24, 2004: Senator Joseph Lieberman (D-CT)'s birthday
— Feb. 26, 2004: CNN/LA Times co-host Democratic presidential candidates debate
— Feb. 27, 2004: Utah presidential primary
— March.2, 2004: California presidential/state primary
— March 2, 2004: Connecticut presidential primary
— March 2, 2004: Georgia presidential primary
— March 2, 2004: Hawaii caucuses
— March 2, 2004: Maryland presidential/state primary
— March 2, 2004: Massachusetts presidential primary
— March 2, 2004: Minnesota caucuses
— March 2, 2004: New York presidential primary
— March 2, 2004: Ohio presidential/state primary
— March 2, 2004: Rhode Island presidential primary
— March 2, 2004: Vermont presidential primary
— March 2, 2004: Texas presidential/state primary
— March 2, 2004: Washington state presidential primary
— March 9, 2004: Florida presidential primary
— March 9, 2004: Louisiana presidential primary
— March 9, 2004: Mississippi presidential/state primary
— March 16, 2004: Illinois presidential/state primary
— April 25, 2004: "Save Women's Lives: March for Freedom of Choice", Washington, DC
— July 26-29, 2004: Democratic National Convention, Boston
— Aug. 14-29, 2004: Summer Olympic Games, Athens, Greece
— Aug. 30- Sept. 2, 2004: Republican National Convention, New York
— Nov. 2, 2004: Election Day

 
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