Their strategy has been to clearly paint a rosy picture of the city and do their underhanded fighting outside the paid media.

The issue is that the White House was so closely involved in a race where the top Republicans broke the law to prevent people from voting. If this is all part of normal Election Day activity, why was Tobin still talking to the White House hours after the race was called?

If there's still a need for a runoff after the ballots are counted, we will consider our legal options.

We think we're going to do well - he's obviously run a strong, vigorous campaign.

It seemed unusual to us that Sen. Stevens would be interested in this mine in particular. He's been no friend to environmentalists.

Bloomberg cooks the books, cherry-picking statistics of certain groups rather than offering the whole, unacceptable picture.

It is our goal to hold him accountable. He's (in) leadership, and he's also been in office a very long time with minimal opposition.

They started calling the White House about 11 a.m., and didn't stop until 2 a.m..

New York's the greatest city on earth - who's going to argue with that? But with a mayor who will do something about a 50 percent dropout rate and one in five New Yorkers living in poverty, it could be greater. Who's going to argue with that?