“I was always politically interested and involved, but I’d never really done anything in politics before 2000,” Jeremy Horton says. After Bush’s election, Horton went online and found the Dean movement. “It was really only half about the candidate. The other half was that you could get involved in the campaign; you were allowed to do things,” Horton says. He went… return to article
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Also by Conor Kenny
- Jeremy Horton
- Paula Villescaz
- Hello, I’m a Democrat
Meet the netroots activists who have moved online and into political office - Thomas Noe: The NumismatistӔ
Thomas Noe, Ohio regional fundraising chairman for Bush in 2004, is suspected of laundering $2 million of money from the Ohio Bureau of Worker's Compensation. - Brent Wilkes: The EarmarkerӔ
Brent Wilkes is accused of illegally setting up his own lobbying firm to convince members of Congress to earmark money via appropriations bills. - Bob Kjellander and Nicholas Hurtgen: The Pension PiratesӔ
Robert Kjellander is accused of multiple qustionable state pension deals in Illinois he did while working for the Carlyle Group,
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