Meet AP’s Political Reporting Team
More than 500 AP staffers make-up the 2008 team covering the elections and counting the vote. Here is a selection of our news staffers covering the current campaign.



J. David Ake
J. David Ake is AP’s assistant chief of bureau for photos in Washington. He has more than 25 years of photo experience, including six covering the White House during the first Bush and Clinton presidencies. Ake joined AP in 1997 in Chicago as state photo editor. In 2001, he was named a senior photo editor in New York, where two years later he was promoted to deputy director of photography. Ake, who previously worked for Agence France-Press, directed AP's photo coverage of the Sept. 11 attack on the World Trade Center, the 2004 presidential campaign and Hurricane Katrina. He has also covered war and disasters across the globe and has extensive experience covering premier sports events. Ake’s work has been honored by the National Press Photographers Association and The White House News Photographers Association.

Charles Babington
Charles Babington is a political reporter covering the 2008 presidential race for AP. He has spent much of the last year traveling with and covering Sens. Barack Obama, John McCain, Hillary Clinton and John Edwards. He mostly writes analysis pieces but also covers breaking news events and trends, including Obama’s efforts to win over Clinton supporters. Prior to joining AP in 2007, he worked for the Washington Post as well as daily papers in North Carolina and Texas reporting on government and politics. He has covered five Republican conventions and three Democratic conventions. Babington has an undergraduate degree in Islamic History from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Donna Cassata
Donna Cassata is AP’s political editor, based in Washington. This is her fourth presidential election, and, in her current position, she is responsible for overseeing coverage of the 2008 presidential campaign and AP's political reporters based in Washington, as well as working with the bureaus in all 50 states. Cassata joined AP in 1983 in Albany, N.Y., and moved to Washington in 1986 where she later covered defense and foreign policy. In 1994, she went to the Congressional Quarterly magazine. She also worked as a copy editor for The Washington Post. In 2003, she returned to AP and was the political editor for the 2004 presidential election and the 2006 congressional election. She is a graduate of Barnard College.

David Espo
David Espo is a special correspondent for AP who has covered every presidential campaign since 1980. Espo, who joined AP in 1974, moved to Washington in 1977 after stops with AP in Cheyenne and Denver. He covered Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's bid for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1980 and was assistant bureau chief in Washington from 1989 to 1993 before returning to reporting. A graduate of Haverford College, he was awarded the prestigious White House Correspondents Association Merriman Smith deadline reporting prize for his 1992 election night writing. He also won the Everett Dirksen award for distinguished congressional coverage in 2000.

Beth Fouhy
Beth Fouhy is a political reporter covering the 2008 presidential campaign. Earlier this summer, she completed her assignment as the AP's lead reporter on the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign. She also covered the former first lady during her Senate re-election in New York in 2006. Previously, Fouhy covered politics and the administration of California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and was one of two lead reporters covering the historic recall election against California Gov. Gray Davis. Before joining AP, Fouhy was a political reporter and producer for CNN for 13 years. She was part of the political unit, and served as its executive producer during the 2000 presidential election. A graduate of Oberlin College, Fouhy was a Knight Fellow at Stanford University in 2001-2002.

Ron Fournier
Ron Fournier is AP’s Washington bureau chief. He has worked for AP for nearly 20 years, with a one-year hiatus as editor-in-chief of an issues-driven social network site. Fournier has covered the White House and national politics for the AP in Washington since 1993. He won the Society of Professional Journalists' 2000 Sigma Delta Chi Award for coverage of the 2000 election. Fournier won the prestigious White House Correspondents Association Merriman Smith award for his coverage of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks – the judges praised his reports from inside the evacuated White House, which were filed as a Secret Service agent requested he leave. He had won the award twice before: while covering the Clinton White House and in 1997 for exclusive coverage of President Clinton's second-term Cabinet selections. In 2005, he was appointed as a Harvard Fellow at the Kennedy School's Institute of Politics. Fournier began his journalism career at the Hot Springs, Ark., Sentinel Record in 1985. He transferred to the Arkansas Democrat in 1987 and began covering then Gov. Clinton a year later.

Recent coverage from Ron Fournier >


Jesse J. Holland
Jesse J. Holland is AP’s labor writer, focusing on the role of unions in the 2008 election. He joined AP in 1994 in Columbia, S.C., after interning at AP and The New York Times. In 1999, he transferred to the Albany, N.Y., bureau, and a year later he began working in Washington. A graduate of the University of Mississippi, he was editor of the campus newspaper, The Daily Mississippian. He also interned for The Oxford Eagle, in Oxford, Miss.; The Birmingham Post-Herald, Birmingham, Ala.; and Meredith Corp. in Des Moines, Iowa. In 1996, his coverage of the Susan Smith trial and other stories earned him APME’s John L. Dougherty Award, which recognizes an outstanding AP reporter with less than three years experience. He is the author of the book, "Black Men Built The Capitol: Discovering African American History In and Around Washington, D.C."

Jim Kuhnhenn
Jim Kuhnhenn is a national political reporter for AP covering money and the media. His focus in 2008 is on fundraising and corporate influence at the political conventions, as well as advertising by the campaigns and outside groups. Kuhnhenn, who joined AP in 2006, covered his first presidential campaign in 1980. Most recently, he worked at Knight Ridder, where he covered Congress and politics in the 2000 and 2004 presidential campaigns. A graduate of Penn State University, he has received the Keystone Award from the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association and shared a James K. Batten award for community journalism while at the Kansas City Star.

Stephen Ohlemacher
Stephen Ohlemacher has spent the last year overseeing AP’s delegate count, ensuring AP has the latest, most accurate information. He is also focusing on the role Hillary Clinton’s delegates are playing at the Democratic National Convention and the role they will play during the election. Ohlemacher joined AP in 2005 from The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer where he covered the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections from a state perspective. A graduate of the Ohio State University, he holds a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University. He also attended Columbia as a Knight-Bagehot fellow in business journalism. In 1997, he was part of a team of journalists at The Hartford Courant that won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for breaking news. Most recently, he won a 2008 Oliver S. Gramling Achievement Award, an AP staff recognition honor, for an in-house delegate analysis that ultimately allowed AP to declare Obama the presumptive Democratic nominee eight hours before any competitor – and made AP’s delegate count the standard among media organizations.

Walter R. Mears
Walter R. Mears retired from AP in 2001 as vice president and Washington columnist. During his 45-year AP career, Mears won a Pulitzer Prize and covered every presidential campaign and election from 1964 to 2001. Mears joined AP in Boston in 1955 while a student at Middlebury College in Vermont. He was AP’s first Montpelier, Vt., correspondent before transferring to Washington in 1961. In Washington, Mears served as a special correspondent, chief political writer, chief of bureau and chief of the Senate writing staff. He won the 1977 Pulitzer Prize for national reporting for coverage of the 1976 presidential campaign and election. In 1978, he was named an AP vice president. Mears served as executive editor of AP from 1984 to 1989 before returning to the Washington bureau. He is the author of “Deadlines Past: Forty Years of Presidential Campaigning, A Reporter’s Story” and the co-author of “The News Business,” and “The New News Business,” with former NBC anchor John Chancellor.

Julie Pace
Julie Pace is AP’s national politics multimedia reporter/ producer. She is responsible for coordinating AP’s premium political coverage for online video, which includes behind-the-scenes campaign photography and a daily “Race Rundown,” which previews daily campaign events. Prior to joining AP in 2007, Pace was as a multimedia reporter in Tampa, Fla., working for The Tampa Tribune, WFLA, and TBO.com. She also previously worked as a reporter for eTV, a television station in South Africa, and as a freelancer in Zambia. Pace holds a degree from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism.

Nedra Pickler
Nedra Pickler is AP’s lead political reporter covering Barack Obama’s presidential campaign. In the past year, she has crisscrossed the country with Obama as AP followed his victory in the presidential primaries to the Democratic convention. She also broke the story that John Edwards was quitting his campaign. This is her second presidential campaign; in 2004, she spent 10 months on Sen. John Kerry’s campaign plane covering his race for the presidency. Pickler joined AP in 1998 in the Detroit bureau. She later covered the statehouse in Lansing before coming to Washington, where she has been the past eight years. A graduate of Michigan State University, Pickler won the APME John L. Dougherty Award, which recognizes an outstanding AP reporter with less than three years experience.

Tom Raum
Tom Raum has been covering presidential campaigns for AP since 1976. In the 2008 race, he has covered Barack Obama, John McCain, Hillary Clinton and the other presidential hopefuls on the campaign trail and in more lengthy analysis pieces. He joined AP in 1971 and worked for two years in Tallahassee, Fla., before transferring to Washington. In Washington, he held numerous positions, including chief congressional correspondent, AP economics writer and White House reporter. A graduate of Lehigh University, Raum previously worked at the Tampa (Fla.) Times as a political columnist.

Liz Sidoti
Liz Sidoti covers the 2008 presidential race for AP and has spent much of the past two years on the campaign trail. She reports on both John McCain and Barack Obama. She has spent her entire journalism career working for AP, with the last five years in Washington, where she primarily covered national politics. An Ohio native, Sidoti joined AP in 1999 in Cincinnati upon graduating from Ohio University with a bachelor's degree in journalism. A few months later, she transferred to Columbus to cover the Ohio Statehouse. In 2003, she joined the AP's Washington bureau and the national political team covering the next year's presidential race. She also did a stint covering Congress, including the 2006 mid-term elections, before returning to the presidential politics beat for 2008.

Jesse Washington
Jesse Washington is AP’s national writer for race and ethnicity. During the 2008 presidential campaign, he is focusing on the ramifications of the possibility that Barack Obama could become the nation’s first black president. Previously, Washington was AP's entertainment editor, supervising an expanding team of journalists covering film, music, television, theater, books, pop culture and celebrities. Before that he was managing editor of Vibe magazine and founding editor-in-chief of Blaze, a magazine focusing on hip-hop culture. His first novel, "Black Will Shoot," was published this year. Washington joined AP in Detroit in 1992 and transferred to its national editing desk in New York the next year. He also served as assistant bureau chief in New York City.

Cal Woodward
Cal Woodward is an enterprise writer in AP’s Washington bureau, where he has worked since 1994. He has covered presidential elections for AP since 1996, and now writes about presidential campaign issues, trends and personalities. In 2007, he co-authored a chapter about AP’s White House reporters for a new history about the company: BREAKING NEWS: How the Associated Press has Covered War, Peace, and Everything Else.” Woodward began his news career in Canada, reporting for Canadian Press in Halifax, Nova Scotia, then in New York and Washington, before joining AP. He is also the co-author of a history of the Washington bureau, published in 1998, “Washington (AP): Witness to Power and Politics.”

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