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 Adam Nagourney
WRITES FOR
New York Times
QUICK FACTS (via Freebase)
Adam Nagourney (born October 10, 1954 in New York City) is an American journalist covering U.S. politics for The New York Times. Nagourney was the chief national political correspondent for The New York Times from 2002 to 2010, when he was appointed Los Angeles Bureau Chief for the Times. He graduated with a B.A. in economics from the State University of New York at Purchase in 1977. Prior to joining the Times in 1996, he worked for the Gannett Westchester Newspaper (1977–83), including serving as a reporter in the Putnam County, White Plains, and Northern Westchester editions of the White Plains "Reporter Dispatch," before joining the New York Daily News (1983–90), and USA Today (1990–1993), where he covered Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential campaign and the first year of the Clinton White House. After joining The Times, Nagourney was assigned to cover the campaign of Bob Dole. After the 1996 presidential race, he went to New York as the paper's metropolitan political...... (Read more on Wikipedia)

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4 days ago
Adam Nagourney
Marriage Ban Violates Constitution, Court Rules - — LOS ANGELES - A federal appeals court panel ruled on Tuesday that a voter-approved ban on same-sex marriage in California violated the Constitution, all but ensuring that the case will proceed to the United States Supreme Court.
42 days ago
Adam Nagourney
Hawaii Democrats Are Struggling - — HONOLULU — Hawaii should be a happy outpost for the Democratic Party. It has a Democratic governor. Democrats overwhelmingly control the Legislature. It has Barack Obama in the White House and all the prestige that brings, most recently …
57 days ago
Adam Nagourney
Fewer Veterans to Remember Pearl Harbor Day - — HONOLULU — For more than half a century, members of the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association gathered here every Dec. 7 to commemorate the attack by the Japanese that drew the United States into World War II. Others stayed closer to home …
79 days ago
Adam Nagourney
Students Lose Zeal for Aiding Obama Again - — LAS VEGAS — For much of the presidential election of 2008, Barack Obama's campaign was Emma Guerrero's life. She was one of a dozen volunteers who showed up at an Obama campaign office here every night, taking time from her studies at the University of Nevada …
74 days ago
Adam Nagourney
A Tilt Away From Social Issues - — LOST PINES, Tex. — After two bleak years, Republican governors gathered here on Thursday to assess their political future — and they liked what they saw. With 37 governors' seats open in 2010, the party is looking to topple some big-name Democrats.
89 days ago
Adam Nagourney
Energized G.O.P. Looking to Avoid an Intraparty Feud - — WASHINGTON — Republicans emerged from Tuesday's elections energized by victories in Virginia and New Jersey, but their leaders immediately began maneuvering to avoid a prolonged battle with conservative activists over what the party stands for and how to regain power.
90 days ago
Adam Nagourney
A Year After Dousing, Republicans' Hope Rekindled - — WASHINGTON — The Republican victories in the races for New Jersey and Virginia governors put the party in a stronger position to turn back the political wave President Obama unleashed last year, setting the stage for Republicans to raise money …
91 days ago
Adam Nagourney
3 Contests on Election Day Could Signal Political Winds - — WASHINGTON - In this supposedly quiet off-year election, there are three contests taking place Tuesday that are filling the void. Voters in New Jersey and Virginia will elect a governor, while voters in upstate New York are filling …
92 days ago
Adam Nagourney
Off-Year Races May Provide Insight - — WASHINGTON — One year after the election of President Obama, a handful of off-year political contests — including governors' races in New Jersey and Virginia and a Congressional race in upstate New York — offer some clues about how Americans are viewing Mr. Obama …
112 days ago
Adam Nagourney
Second Thoughts in Battle for Virginia - — WASHINGTON — When State Senator R. Creigh Deeds defeated Terry McAuliffe, the former Democratic Party chairman and confidante of Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton, to be the Democratic nominee for governor of Virginia, the argument among many Democrats …
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