Where is Barack Obama going to talk next in Las Vegas?

Where is Barack Obama going to talk next in Las Vegas? If anyone can help, do you know where the next event will be held, where Obama is giving a speech?

Public Comments

  1. Try his website: http://barackobama.com
  2. Don't know but I won't be there!
  3. don't know and I definitely don't care! I don't vote for pro-amnesty tax-raising socialists!
  4. Are you bored and uninspired? Just read a book that will save you the trouble.
  5. dont bother, as he will just repeating saying change, change, change in his speech
  6. If you are interested in Obama's likely position in Nevada primary, the comparative positins may be as under : Clinton’s surprise win sets up Nevada scorcher Jan. 19 caucus is suddenly wide open after upset in New Hampshire Tiffany Brown By J. Patrick Coolican Wed, Jan 9, 2008 (2 a.m.) Nashua, N.H. — Sen. Hillary Clinton’s victory over Sen. Barack Obama in the New Hampshire Democratic primary means the next contest, the Jan. 19 Nevada caucus, will be an intense battleground in the fight for the Democratic nomination, as each tries to capture momentum going into South Carolina and then the 22 states with primaries Feb. 5. Clinton and Obama are now engaged in a fight for the soul of the Democratic Party, not so much over issues, on which they are much in agreement, but over political style and vision. Clinton promises to be a bare-knuckle fighter who will deliver victory against the Republican attack machine in November, while Obama seeks to attract new and disaffected voters and build a progressive governing coalition. The slim victory, which served as an elegant coda to the mutual love affair between the Clintons and New Hampshire that began with Bill Clinton’s surprise second-place showing in 1992, changed the Democratic race overnight. Some weekend polls had indicated a double-digit lead for Obama, and the Clinton campaign was rife with backbiting and second-guessing. But famously independent New Hampshire voters rejected the polls, as well as the dominant media narrative that had Obama, playing to big crowds, winning in a runaway. Nevada is now a toss-up, with each campaign able to point to advantages. The Obama campaign hopes that when the 60,000-member Culinary Union announces its endorsement today, it will give the nod to the first-term senator from Illinois. In his concession speech, Obama said his message would now be heard by Americans in the South and West, including textile workers in South Carolina and, in a reference to Culinary workers, dishwashers in Las Vegas. The Culinary is the state’s largest and most politically active union and has a vaunted political operation with a reputation for delivering victory to its favorite candidates. Paired with the Obama field organization, which has attracted thousands of volunteers, the Culinary endorsement would give Obama a credible claim to advantage. The caucus, which requires participants to show up at their precinct meeting at 11:30 a.m. on Jan. 19, puts a premium on organization and trained volunteers. It’s a contest perfect for Culinary’s style of door-to-door, member-to-member organization. Obama’s support among black voters in South Carolina skyrocketed in the past week, according to recent polls. Those voters could make up as much as 20 percent of Nevada caucusgoers, so if the pattern from South Carolina holds in Nevada, that would be another Obama advantage. But Clinton’s New Hampshire victory has created a new national story, that of Clinton breaking out of her carapace of caution and finding her voice. At a debate Saturday night, she was full of directed and apparently effective anger at what she perceived to be the free ride given her chief opponents and their relatively thin political resumes. She tossed most of her stump speech in the trash and took questions, any and all, from appreciative audiences. She made the case that although her opponents, and Obama especially, are skilled orators, she’s the one who gets things done. She convinced New Hampshire Democrats, and she’ll take the message to Nevada. The Clinton team can point to other advantages. She’s won the endorsement of almost the entire Democratic establishment, including members of the Clark County Commission and other local officials and a bevy of state legislators. The Clinton campaign has been building a massive organization of its own, including paid staff, thousands of volunteers and offices and phone banks across the state. Also, according to exit polls, Obama did best with college-educated voters, young voters and voters earning more than $50,000 per year. Nevada has a smaller percentage of voters who fit those profiles than New Hampshire, which is filled with well-educated, relatively affluent liberals. Political analysts have used a shorthand to describe this campaign from the beginning: Obama is the “wine-track” candidate, meaning the candidate of wine-drinkers, while Clinton is more the “beer-track” candidate, meaning the candidate of beer drinkers. The beer-track candidates have a more successful history in Democratic politics. One unknown: the role of former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, who finished a distant third in New Hampshire. Edwards now has significant staff in Nevada, as well as the endorsement of the 12,500-member carpenters union. His voters would tend to fit the demographic and socioeconomic profile of Clinton’s, but his message of change overlaps with Obama’s. Clinton and Obama will likely send top staff and flood the state with TV and radio ads, and both candidates could be in the state this week. The Obama campaign has sent its seasoned Iowa pros to Nevada and increased its TV ad spending. In his concession speech, which seemed to have been written for a presumed victory, Obama congratulated Clinton before hitting his themes of hope and renewal. He returned again and again to the refrain “Yes, we can,” which was a subtle response to a recent Clinton statement warning not to give Americans “false hopes.” “It was the call of a King who took us to the mountaintop. Yes, we can,” he said, referring to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. “We are one people, we are one nation, and together we will begin the next great chapter in the American story with three words that will ring from coast to coast, from sea to shining sea: Yes, we can.” But it was Clinton’s night. “I come tonight with a very full heart. I want especially to thank New Hampshire. Over the last week I listened to you and, in the process, I found my own voice. I felt like we all spoke from our hearts and I am so gratified that you responded. Now together, let’s give America the kind of comeback that New Hampshire has just given me. “We’re going to take what we learned here in New Hampshire and we’re going to rally on and make our case. We are in it for the long ride,” she told a wildly cheering crowd. “So tomorrow we’re going to get up, roll up our sleeves and keep going.”
Powered by Yahoo! Answers