Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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As a young staffer in the Nixon White House, Mr. Cheney was invited to join the Committee to Re-Elect the President.
Mission Accomplished Paul A. Gigot 2011
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Groups including the Committee to Re-Elect Vito Fosella, Bowling for Our Majority Party and Pennsylvania for a Republican Congress also were targeted, according to court papers.
Ex-treasurer of GOP congressional committee admits embezzling more than $844,000 2010
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Kenneth Parkinson, legal counsel for the Committee to Re-Elect the President was acquitted.
The Mob and Me John Partington 2010
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Segretti, a member of Nixon's Committee to Re-Elect the President (CREEP) pled guilty to and served four months in jail for a campaign of dirty tricks.
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Kleindiest, had been removed from their posts after being accused of crimes related to the Watergate scandal, which involved the 1972 break-in of the Democratic party's headquarters and traced to the Committee to Re-Elect the President.
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I want to be clear so that these allegations made by the supporters of * BITCH* can be refuted by the supporters of the Campaign to Re-Elect Mayor Mitch: my name is Reg, I am the Minister of Munitions, and I am not gay.
Archive 2007-09-01 2007
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Can he dig up a bunch of old "Re-Elect Warner" signs?
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By sticking with its current acronym, the Islamic version of MILF is in a precarious position made famous by Richard Nixon's fundraising organization, the Committee to Re-Elect the President (CREEP).
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In a flashing signal of desperation that could have been read from the next galaxy, Bush and his surrogates spent so much time attacking the media, giving out buttons and bumper stickers saying "Annoy the Media -- Re-Elect Bush," that Republican audiences on the campaign trail were ravening at the sight of the journalists accompanying the patrician-raised Bush 41 to campaign rallies.
Marty Kasindorf: McCain-Palin's War Against The Media Echoes Failed Strategy Of Bush Sr. 2008
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These activities merged disastrously on June 17, 1972, when five men working for the Committee to Re-Elect the President were arrested in what Ron Ziegler, Nixon's press secretary, dismissively described as a "third-rate burglary attempt" at the Democratic National Committee's offices in the Watergate complex.
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