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    Shelly A. Sanford and Alex Barlow: Getting Out the Vote in Ohio

    November 4th, 2008
    Founding Partner, Shelly A. Sanford Displays Her Election Credentails

    Founding Partner, Shelly A. Sanford Displays Her Election Credentails

    Founding Partner, Shelly Sanford, is in Cleveland, Ohio, at a polling station in the heart of “Obama Country.”  She has been working with the Ohio Voter Protection Team for several days now. As the morning progresses, Shelly has noted that there are many first-time voters, and this makes the day all the more exciting.  

          No Republican candidate has ever won the White House without winning Ohio.   Nonetheless, many states remain at play in this election, with record numbers of early voters pointing to heavy voter-day traffic at polls across the nation.  The polls are already closed in Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, where for the first time since 1968, the town has voted for a democrat . . . doing so overwhelmingly.  

    World Interest is Evident as a Canadian News Crew Interviews an Ohio Voter

    World Interest is Evident as a Canadian News Crew Interviews an Ohio Voter

    With a new administration coming, regardless of the outcome of today’s election, Shelly, Chris and Tony, attorneys at Sanford Pinedo LLP, joined with other attorneys across the nation in the Tuesday Morning Believer’s Caucus, to pray that God would direct this nation.


    Obama on Tort Reform: What is His Record?

    October 26th, 2008

    What do we know of Senator Obama’s commitment to open courts for Plaintiffs?  Obama is a democrat, and as such ought to be much more concerned for the rights of citizens to come to the courts with their concerns about unsafe consumer products and to challenge large corporations to keep our environment clean for generations to come.  The Democratic Party understands that access to the courts in a foundational principle in this democracy, and Democrats in Texas know that nowhere is this principle more enshrined than in the Texas Constitution.  But this access has been under fire from Republicans (Bush led the way as governor in Texas and for the last eight years as president).  They use the same failed logic that underpins their economic policies to justify the idea of preventing consumers from suing large corporations. Apparently, if we force big corporations to produce responsibly this will hurt the American consumer.  I call this trickle-down corporate responsibility.  Everyone saves money when we do not hold corporate American responsible for its products.  By that logic, we ought to continue to import cheap dog food and baby formula from China . . . we would all save a few dollars.

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