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  • NPR's Melissa Block talks with consumer activist Ralph Nader, who ran for president as the Green Party candidate in 2000, about the possibility of his running for president in the 2004 elections.
  • On his first full day in office, President George W. Bush started the day at Sunday service at Washington National Cathedral. NPR's Emily Harris reports that the party's over and the real work begins.
  • Former Congressman Mickey Edwards (R-OK) says there IS life after losing an election, although losing is no fun. Edwards says the winner of the presidential election will have to reach across party lines, but he thinks Congress will revert to business as usual.
  • NPR's Madeleine Brand reports on yesterday's rally in Washington, D.C. for Green Party Presidential candidate Ralph Nader. Nader spoke to 10-thousand of his supporters.
  • A senior writer for the Washington Post, he covered the presidential election for that paper. He talks about the outcome of the presidential election and recounts the pivotal moments in the parties campaigns.
  • NPR's Peter Overby reports on the efforts of both parties to finance the recount battle in Florida. Donations for the recount are not governed by campaign finance law. There are no disclosure requirements and individuals can give any amount.
  • Scott talks with Anne Boyle, Chairwoman of the Nebraska State Democratic Party, about her efforts to encourage President Clinton to visit Nebraska. After nearly eight years in office, President Clinton has visited every state in the union except Nebraska.
  • As part of our ongoing series of stump speeches, we broadcast an excerpt of Libertarian party candidate Michael Badnarik.
  • Commentator Pam Varkony is a lifelong Republican and lives in the swing state of Pennsylvania. Unlike the national Republican party, she is in favor of gay marriage.
  • For young conservatives invested in the Republican party, Trump's drama — legal and otherwise — hasn't diminished their support.
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