SourceWatch needs your financial support to survive and thrive. If you've found this information on the people, organizations, and issues shaping the public agenda helpful, please make a tax-deductible donation now.

Lauren Wolfe

From SourceWatch

Jump to: navigation, search
Image:Sdtp-banner.jpg
This profile of a 2008 Democratic superdelegate from Michigan was part of the Superdelegate Transparency Project, a collaboration of LiteraryOutpost, OpenLeft, DemConWatch, HuffPost's OffTheBus and the Congresspedia community to build an open-source tally and informational resource on the 2008 Democratic superdelegates. (More about superdelegates.)
See all the Michigan members of Congress, candidates and blogs at the Michigan portal.
This article is a stub. You can help by expanding it.
File:Laurenwolfe.jpg
Lauren Wolfe is a superdelegate in the 2008 Democratic nomination.

Lauren Wolfe is the president of the College Democrats of America, and a superdelegate in the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination.

Contents

Bio

2008 Superdelegate

Before Hillary Clinton conceded the race, Lauren Wolfe, as a superdelegate, had endorsed Barack Obama for President.

For more information and sources, see the state page for this superdelegate linked to in the blue box above.

After calling on her constituents (college students) for guidance on April 27, 2008[1], Lauren endorsed Senator Obama via YouTube on May 13, 2008 along with College Democrats of America Vice President Awais Khaleel[2].

Money in politics

Committees and affiliations

Affiliations

Endorsements

Articles and resources

Related SourceWatch articles

Sources

  1. "Tell Lauren & Awais How To Cast Their Superdelegate Votes!", YouTube, April 27, 2008
  2. "College Democrats Superdelegates Lauren & Awais Endorse...", YouTube, May 13, 2008

External resources

  • DemConWatch - A very comprehensive list of superdelegates and known commitments. Please use this as a starting point and double check by doing a news search to make sure the data is accurate. If you have a tip, let them know.
  • WashingtonPost.com - Web site with full listing of superdelegates broken out by state and then type.

External articles

Personal tools

Be a SourceWatcher!

Enter your e-mail address to get the Center for Media and Democracy's free weekly e-newsletter.