Collectors Value Political Artifacts in Short Supply

Summary


The early returns are in: To turn a buck on political memorabilia this election year, items featuring John Edwards and Ronald Reagan are hot, but Howard Dean and Ralph Nader are not.

The July 6 New York Post front page that goofed in announcing Dick Gephardt as John Kerry's running mate is red hot, as is a signed copy of Bill Clinton's autobiography. And signed copies of Sen. Hillary Clinton's autobiography trade at more than $100. But most political buttons are downright cold.

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Extract


Collectors Value Political Artifacts in Short Supply

Dealers suggest focusing on candidates who won and on items that are in short supply. After the last hanging chad had been counted in the 2000 election, the must-have artifact wa...

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