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Campaign marks top 10 news stories of the year

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Mitt Romney (left) and President Barack Obama spar during the second presidential debate at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y. (AP file photos)

Big Bird, Etch A Sketch and Clint Eastwood addressing an empty chair.

All were memorable moments of the contentious 2012 presidential election, the top story of 2012 as decided by the Northwest Herald editorial staff. For 10 months, few things dominated daily discussions like the race of who would be in the White House for the next four years.

And it wasn’t just because of the flashpoint moments such as those mentioned above: The race revealed the ugly political divide pushing the political parties further to the left or right.

From mass shootings that broke our hearts to storms that left billions of dollars of damage in their wake, here is the Northwest Herald’s list of the top 10 most newsworthy events of 2012.

1. The presidential election

The 2012 presidential campaign was the most expensive to date, with Barack Obama and Mitt Romney spending more than $1 billion each to get their respective messages out.

It was the campaign that found Romney dissing 47 percent of the country’s population on government assistance, Obama claiming that entrepreneurs did not build their own businesses, Newt Gingrich sharing a vision to colonize the moon, and any number of pot-stirring comments coming out of Donald Trump’s mouth.

But while the numerous tactical gaffes might have provided fodder for the online water cooler of social media, the campaign also highlighted how bitterly divided the country is ideologically.Both parties tried to cater to either the far left or right in hopes of securing votes.
It culminated in Obama’s decisive, Nov. 6 victory.

2. Shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary leaves 28 dead

The Dec. 14 shooting at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., ripped the country’s heart out after a gunman killed his mother at their home, then forced his way into the school and killed 26 – including 20 children – before taking his own life.

As the nation continues to mourn and questions remain as to why the 20-year-old targeted the school, the tragedy led Obama to demand proposals by January to reduce gun violence.

3. Aurora, Colo., shooting hits home

Movie theaters became another place Americans felt less safe after the July 20 shooting at a midnight screening of “The Dark Knight Rises” in Aurora, Colo.

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