41. In Louisiana, all candidates run on the same primary ballot. 42. In sum, it was easier for a candidate to run what amounted to a campaign founded on personal stature, and Eisenhower played this game to the hilt. 43. In state after state, candidates are running negative ads attacking their opponents for running negative ads, with many featuring women as the scolds. 44. In Maine and Arizona this fall, candidates are running under the new laws for the first time. 45. In New York, candidates collect signatures and enter primaries by district, so a candidate can run in some areas of the state and not in others. 46. In those elections, candidates can run with party affiliation or as independents. 47. In some places, ballots are not secret, the father votes for the whole family, or only one candidate runs. 48. In Texas, a candidate can run for president or vice president at the same time that he or she seeks re-election to Congress. 49. Instead the candidates will be running from airport to airport or, more accurately, television market to television market. 50. It is more intense than the blizzards of advertising that most candidates run on the eve of the actual voting. |