Vice President Joe Biden says he's "absolutely comfortable" with gay couples who marry getting the same civil rights and liberties as heterosexual couples, a stand that gay rights advocates interpreted as an endorsement of same-sex marriage.
Published News » Politics
Biden OK with equal rights for married gay couples
From http://news.yahoo.comAyotte: I have better experience than Obama had
From MSNBC.com
On Meet the Press Sunday, Sen. Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, possibly a VP candidate, said she is more ready to be president than Barack Obama was four years ago.
Who's who? Obama, Romney projecting mirror image
From http://news.yahoo.com
He's a smug, Harvard-trained elitist who doesn't get how regular Americans are struggling these days. More extreme than he lets on, he's keeping his true agenda hidden until after Election Day. He's clueless about fixing the economy, over his head on foreign policy. Who is he?
Biden: I'm 'absolutely comfortable' with gay marriage
From MSNBC.com
Vice President Joe Biden on Sunday said that's he's "absolutely comfortable" with married same-sex couples being granted the same rights as heterosexual pairs.
Gingrich: Romney has earned the GOP nomination
From http://news.yahoo.com
Former White House candidate Newt Gingrich says Mitt Romney has "earned the right to represent the Republican Party" against President Barack Obama and that he'll help Romney's campaign in any way he can.
Obama draws on spirit of '08 at campaign launch
From MSNBC.com
President Obama launched his bid for a second term by working to mobilize supporters with a forward-looking message in the face of challenges that include sluggish economic recovery.
Clinton to press India on Iran oil imports
From http://news.yahoo.com
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will use a two-day visit to India this week to urge further reductions in Indian imports of Iranian oil.
Obama launches re-election campaign with warning
From MSNBC.com
Analysis: The president tries to paint this campaign as a choice between a Republican rival set on undoing his first-term agenda and an incumbent trying to build on his achievements.









