Project White House '08

Project White House

Project White House has teamed up with WidgetNest to provide campaign widgets for their participating candidates.

Project White House Candidates

(Listed alphabetically by last name)

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Hubbard, Libby (aka Doctress Neutopia) Libby Hubbard, who hosts the Lovolution Village show on Access Tucson under the name Doctress Neutopia, holds a doctorate in future studies with a focus on utopian thought and art from the University of Massachusetts School of Education. Her agenda: "The Neutopian presidency is riding the wave of regime change by facing up to the radical changes humanity must make if we are to survive. The Gaia regime works as a co-creative team of the best and most virtuous individuals who have an important contribution to make to the world-saving mission of building ecological cities or arcologies."

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Murphy, Sean "C.F." Sean Murphy of Tucson considers himself an old-school Republican. Like John McCain once did, he believes agents of intolerance like Pat Robertson have no place in the nation's dialogue. Like Rudy Giuliani once did, he believes that hard-working immigrants, whether they've crossed the border legally or not, are the sort of people we want in this country. Like Mitt Romney once did, he believes that a woman should decide whether to have a child, rather than leaving the decision in the hands of government. Like Ron Paul, he believes that America has meddled too much around the globe. He so believes in these principles, in fact, that he's seriously considering changing his party affiliation from Democrat to Republican so he can vote for himself on Feb. 5.

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Skelley, Charles Charles Skelley of Tucson says he offers "real solutions (that can get real results) by confronting problems which are really serious." His "new square deal" has a dozen basic points to reduce the federal debt, clean up campaign fundraising, save Social Security, provide affordable health care, reverse the trade deficit, simplify income taxes and solve the energy crisis. "I aim to simplify and clean up several serious problems in regard to the way the U.S. government functions," says Skelley, who has become one of the most prolific posters on the Project White House Blog. "This can actually be done."