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Saturday, April 21, 2007
posted by Jeff Fuller | 10:10 PM | permalink
Romney's upward movement in Iowa continues.

He had a great trip through eastern Iowa on Thursday and Friday. He drew over 400 people here in Johnson County (the Bluest County in Iowa). That's a good sign. Here's the coverage for the event (gotta love our local little liberal paper giving the only Democrat in the room the last word in the article . . . sheez!) My wife, Laura, went to the event with two of my cousins (one, Susan Sorenson, is holding her son Randall with Mitt in the photo at the link). Mitt recognized and remembered my wife, and, after going around the rest of the table she was seated turned back to her and asked "Where's Jeff?". Pretty cool, eh? This is a political gift that not many people have. Romney's got it.

Also, former Iowa Lietenant Governor candidate (and current head of the Souixland Chamber of Commerce) Debbie Durham has endorsed Gov. Romney and will be heading up some of his efforts in GOP heavy western Iowa

Some more coverage of Romney in Iowa here, here and here.
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Friday, April 20, 2007
posted by Justin Hart | 7:58 AM | permalink
WOW!

Evidently, you feel the momentum too! Since the $23 Million announcement... MMM readers have contributed THOUSANDS of dollars to the Mitt Romney campaign through this site.

We still have a goal of $50,000. Obviously, we can go WELL beyond that goal.

Let's make it happen! Here's what you can do:
  1. Make a donation! Even the smallest amount can help!
  2. Become a fundraiser yourself!

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Thursday, April 19, 2007
posted by Justin Hart | 3:10 PM | permalink
Cross-posted at Race42008.com by HeavyM.

There’s been several dozen articles in local media outlets in the past three or four days regarding the candidates’ fundraising totals - because the FEC reports released on Sunday broke the money down by state. So instead of having to read from the local NH paper that Romney raised the most in that state or the local NV paper that Rudy raised the most there, I have sorted through the FEC reports and compiled all the data for you. I know, you can thank me later. :)

I’ll put the early primary states above the fold, and if you’re really nerdy, like I am, you can find much more information below the fold. If a candidate’s name isn’t listed, they didn’t raise anything from that particular state. And remember, these numbers may or may not tell us anything - they do not reflect the current state of the race; they are simply one ingredient with which to gauge the support of the candidates in various states. (If you want numbers from other specific states than these 5, let me know and I’ll put them in the comments section.)

Iowa
Romney outraised all other candidates combined in this state:
Romney - $40,750
McCain - $8,767
Giuliani - $8,550
T Thompson - $4,800
Brownback - $3,900
Hunter - $2,100
Paul - $450
Tancredo - $215

Nevada
Giuliani outraised all other candidates combined in NV:
Giuliani - $526,375
Romney - $397,235
McCain - $99,500
Paul - $5,500
Tancredo - $5,050
Brownback - $3,000
T Thompson - $1,000
Hunter - $600
Huckabee - $500

New Hampshire
Romney again outraised all other candidates combined in NH:
Romney - $126,450
Paul - $16,950
McCain - $13,732
Giuliani - $13,300
Hunter - $12,900
Tancredo - $6,700
T Thompson - $2,300
Brownback - $1,950
Huckabee - $1,375
Gilmore - $1,000

South Carolina
Romney - $174,525
McCain - $127,565
Giuliani - $120,650
Hunter - $18,000
Brownback - $7,612
Paul - $2,083
Huckabee - $1,350
Tancredo - $850

Florida
A close one in the Sunshine State:
Romney - $1,007,080
McCain - $999,456
Giuliani - $822,950
Paul - $39,915
Brownback - $35,194
Tancredo - $8,965
Hunter - $8,850
T Thompson - $7,600
Huckabee - $5,400

Top Fundraiser in Each State
Brownback raised the most in Kansas, as did Huckabee in Arkansas. McCain was the top money man in 7 states (AZ, DC, IL, MS, NC, ND, and VA). Giuliani was tops in 11 states (DE, HI, IN, MN, NJ, NV, NY, OK, PA, TX, and WV). Romney took the other 30 states.

Top States By Percentage of Total Money Raised

Romney
CA - 17.37%
UT - 13.94%
MA - 11.72%
TX - 5.37%
NY - 5.34%

McCain
CA - 15.37%
NY - 11.74%
AZ - 11.46%
TX - 9.15%
FL - 9.08%

Giuliani
NY - 22.32%
CA - 18.00%
TX - 16.16%
NJ - 6.87%
FL - 6.06%

Brownback
KS - 18.53%
CA - 10.26%
PA - 7.26%
NY - 7.22%
FL - 7.00%

Random Facts
Only Romney, McCain, and Giuliani raised money from all 50 states plus DC. Brownback came closest to them with 46. Gilmore wins the award for least number of states with only 14. Ron Paul surprised with money from 44 states.

Of the 30 states Romney topped in total dollars, he raised more than all the rest of the candidates combined in 21 of them: CO, GA, IA, ID, KY, LA, MA, ME, MI, MO, NH, NM, OH, OR, RI, SD, TN, UT, VT, WA, and WY. Giuliani managed to do the same in 6 of his 11 states: IN, NJ, NV, NY, OK, and WV. McCain did so in 2 of his 7: AZ and MS.

The highest percentage of money from one state award goes to Tommy Thompson, who raised 70% of his funds from WI. Gilmore was next with 61% of his money coming from VA, and Huckabee raised over 52% of his from Arkansas.

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3 Comments:


Where are all of the MSM articles talking about how all of Rudy's money is coming from liberal New Yorkers? That statement would be more true than the MSM's statements about Romney's money all coming from Mormons and Wall Street.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at April 19, 2007 4:33 PM  


Nevada? Sin City for Rudi?

By Anonymous GeorgiaMom, at April 19, 2007 9:22 PM  


You said if we wanted info from other states to let you know and you'd put it in the comments section... How about MT and NM?

And Thanks for sorting through the FEC reports and compiling all the data for us! ;)

By Anonymous Fox from MT living in NM, at April 24, 2007 4:27 PM  



posted by Justin Hart | 1:43 PM | permalink
Governor Romney was in DC last night to receive The Ronald Reagan Award.

Watch the whole video. You'll thank me later:

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4 Comments:


I've come to thank you. That was a great video, and a great speech by Romney. Definitely worth all 8 minutes of watching. :-)

Hava
http://mittforpresident.wordpress.com/



I'm thanking you. Most appropriate treatment of a number of subjects I've seen and heard anywhere.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at April 19, 2007 8:35 PM  


Justin, THANK YOU! Awesome!

I linked to this post here:

http://www.californiansforromney.com/?p=84

GREAT WORK! Thanks



This was extremely impressive. This is the man we need to carry the conservative banner.




posted by Justin Hart | 1:20 PM | permalink
Optimism and warning. Words that describe our belated former President Ronald Reagan were apparent at an awards dinner last night in DC. Here's the report from the Hotline:

In a sea of Republican presidential hopefuls that invoke Reagan about as much as the average person references their mothers, receiving the Ronald Reagan award seems to be the Everest of accolades. And such was the case at last night’s Frontiers of Freedom Ronald Reagan gala, where Mitt Romney sought to channel the legendary leader’s charisma, optimism and folksy feel.

Just as Reagan did when he warned against the “unprecedented danger” of communism, Romney laced his speech with warnings of modern day foreign threats like North Korea. But, like Reagan, he also channeled optimism. As he often does, Romney invoked Reagan’s famous line that “I have seen four wars during my lifetime and none of them began because America was too strong.”

Romney also used his speech-- which he opened by praising the day’s “life affirming” Supreme Court decision-- to allude to his religious convictions (hint: they’re not unlike yours, Christian Conservatives). He referenced Isaiah when highlighting his foreign policy goals and cited Cain and Abel when talking about the Virginia Tech shootings. He also said that after hearing about the tragedy in Blacksburg, “the first thing I did was pick up my bible.”

Speaking before a room full of black-and-white tuxedos, Romney’s speech was, fittingly, a study in contrasts: He spoke of life and death, good and evil, small vs. big. And for a candidate who’s plagued by accusations of policy shifts and flips flops, he wanted to make one thing certain: he’s the Reagan candidate. And he’s prepared to make as many Peggy Noonan or “Shining City” references as it takes, till they believe him. [NORA MCALVANAH]

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posted by Justin Hart | 12:17 PM | permalink
<http://www.townhall.com/blog/g/026ae006-c7c5-4e78-88d9-d70d62a1eafd>

Posted by: Matt Lewis at 11:52 AM

Yesterday, former Mayor Rudy Giuliani praised
<http://hotlineblog.nationaljournal.com/archives/2007/04/rudy_decision_w
.html> the Supreme Court's decision to uphold the ban on partial-birth
abortion. As many pointed out, this was a reversal
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=giZx5i3Ntv0> of his previous position.

Many have probably forgotten that in 1996, then-Mayor Giuliani got into
a public dispute over the issue with Pope John Paul II.

Here's the story: After President Clinton vetoed a ban on partial-birth
abortions, Pope John Paul II condemned Clinton's veto as "a shameful
veto that in practice is equivalent to an incredibly brutal act of
aggression against innocent humans."

As the New York Times reported on April 22, 1996,
<http://select.nytimes.com/search/restricted/article?res=F20917FA345D0C7
18EDDAD0894DE494D81> Giuliani defended Clinton -- and criticized Pope
John Paul II, and Cardinal O'Connor:

"Critics of the Pope's statements, including Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani,
questioned last week whether the church should issue opinions on
political matters.

"It is a not-so-clever way of trying to muzzle the church," the Cardinal
said of the criticisms. "If the church here in New York, the church in
Rome or anywhere else were to refrain to address such crucial issues of
public policy simply because an election campaign is being waged, then
the church would never" be able to address these issues.

"The church will not be silenced simply because of an election," he
added.

The Cardinal's remarks came a week after he equated late-term abortions
with outright infanticide, and a week and a half after President
Clinton's veto. Although Cardinal O'Connor used St. Patrick's pulpit
yesterday to broadly defend the church's right to voice opinions on
policy matters with moral dimensions, he also seemed to be responding
specifically to comments made by Mayor Giuliani on Friday.

Asked about the Pope's criticisms, Mayor Giuliani, who is Catholic,
said: "Such direct involvement in politics is not a good idea, because I
think it confuses people. I think that religious institutions, including
the Catholic Church, have every right to do everything they can to
persuade their members and others as to their moral views. That can be
done without focusing on a particular political figure, in this case the
President of the United States."

... But Governor Pataki, who also is Catholic, defined the church's role
as open-ended: "I think the church has every right to speak out on
issues that they consider to be of importance. And they have every right
to speak out and criticize political decisions and politicians who make
those decisions."

Among Catholic voters, I can only imagine that criticizing Pope John
Paul II is about as popular as criticizing Ronald Reagan. Rudy will
have a long way to go to convince voters that his statement yesterday
was sincere.


--

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posted by Justin Hart | 10:54 AM | permalink

Boston, MA – Governor Mitt Romney today announced that Arizona State Representative Mark Anderson will Co-Chair his campaign in Arizona. Representative Anderson will work closely with Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, State Senator Chuck Gray and Governor Romney's Finance Committee to continue to expand the Governor's base of support in the Grand Canyon State. Sheriff Arpaio is serving as Governor Romney's Honorary Chairman for Arizona while Senator Gray is serving as Chair.

Governor Romney's Arizona campaign also announced that it had eclipsed state fundraising goals and raised $697,082 in total receipts for the first fundraising quarter.

"For many years, Mark Anderson has been a faithful and effective voice for conservative values in the Arizona State Legislature," said Governor Romney. "I am pleased that he has decided to join my growing campaign and look forward to working with him as we add to our strength in Arizona and across the nation."

With today's announcement, Representative Anderson said, "Governor Romney is an impressive leader with a proven track record of accomplishment. On national defense, economic competitiveness and the important moral matters of our day, Governor Romney has the vision and the conservative principles needed to guide America forward."

Background On Representative Mark Anderson:

Representative Anderson Is A Leading Conservative In The Arizona House Of Representatives. First elected in 1994, Anderson represents western Mesa. He currently chairs the K-12 Education Committee and is on the Appropriations and Human Services Committees. During his legislative career he has sponsored bills to lower recidivism and supported efforts to expand abstinence education, counseling and mentoring for young fathers, and a program that encourages churches to assist in the placement of foster children in their communities.

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posted by Justin Hart | 9:03 AM | permalink
UPDATE: It's not so ominous when seen in context as Drudge makes it out to be. But in this race... you have to watch every step.



I'll post the video when it comes up (I'm sure it's out there).

But this report (noted on Drudge) recounts the following exchange at a McCain stop:

Another man — wondering if an attack on Iran is in the works — wanted to know when America is going to “send an air mail message to Tehran.”

McCain began his answer by changing the words to a popular Beach Boys song.

“Bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran,” he sang to the tune of Barbara Ann. “Iran is dedicated to the destruction of Israel. That alone should concern us but now they are trying for nuclear capabilities. I totally support the President when he says we will not allow Iran to destroy Israel.”

He stopped short of answering the actual question and did not say if he supports an invasion of Iran.


Listen, we all understand his sentiment. But you can't make light of this stuff in this way. Perhaps at some shtick press lampooning session but not in the public spotlight in serious discussion. Yikes!

That's gonna follow him around.


Here's another greatest hit of McCain (this one is funny and in the right setting)

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6 Comments:


Oh man............



I like both of those videos...

I think they both help McCain...

Ba-ba-ba-ba-baran sounds a lot like bomb-bomb-bomb-bomb-Iran!

I laughed and thought McCain was very smart, but I guess that is a very old joke that started with the 70s hostage crisis...



This will hurt McCain with most but it helps him with me.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at April 19, 2007 12:52 PM  


The joke was about as appropriate as joking about the electric chair during a death penalty trial. The statement seems unnecessarily flippant about war. I think it is very inflammatory to people around the world who already think we are a warmongers.



Well, when his campaign does finally crash and burn in an incredible blaze of glory, at least he has a new day job...



Yeah. That is hilarious. I'm definitely a Romney guy, but this kind of thing makes me McCain more likeable to me.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at April 22, 2007 8:26 AM  



posted by Justin Hart | 6:59 AM | permalink
HeavyM writes on Race42008.com:
McCain’s choice to skip the county conventions in South Carolina are really starting to hurt him. First it was a state Representative who had endorsed McCain but voted for Romney in the Horry County straw poll - and said he may switch his endorsement in the future. He was confused as to why McCain wasn’t there, which was a good question - Romney had attended the same dinner earlier in the day as McCain and still managed to make it down to South Carolina.

Now, there’s a local endorser who actually has jumped ship over to Camp Romney, in part because of McCain’s absence:

Saluda County Sheriff Jason Booth jumped to Romney’s campaign on Wednesday, and other party officials have questioned the candidate skipping their county conventions. McCain’s campaign had no immediate comment on Booth’s switch.

Welcome to the team, Sheriff Booth! McCain’s South Carolina organization is in danger right now, and by the time he makes it down there to re-kick off his campaign at the end of this month, he will have missed at least 20 more county conventions and straw polls.

And here’s the latest straw poll result from McCormick County’s convention this evening:

Romney - 35%
Cox - 19%
Giuliani - 16%
McCain - 13%
F Thompson - 8%
Newt - 3%
Undecided - 5%

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posted by Justin Hart | 6:04 AM | permalink
GOP: Romney Secures Strong Start In Iowa
via Elect Romney Blog! by john on Apr 18, 2007

DES MOINES REGISTER: Thomas Beaumont

"If you were taking a snapshot right now, Gov. Romney has got the most momentum in Southwest Iowa", said Pottawattamie County Republican Chairman, David Overholtzer.

This article speaks to the outstanding organizational ability of Team Romney. Although the author stresses that Rudy Guiliani tops the polls, his on the ground presence significantly trails MR's.

If I were Guiliani and McCain, I'd be looking in the rear view mirror and watching MR pull up to within a couple of inches of my bumper!

~~John Cronin~~

Mitt Romney Statement On Today's Supreme Court Ruling
via 2008 Presidential Campaign Blog by Mike on Apr 18, 2007

STATEMENT ON TODAY'S SUPREME COURT RULING

Boston, MA – Today, Governor Mitt Romney issued the following statement praising the U.S. Supreme Court ruling upholding the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act:

"Today, our nation's highest court reaffirmed the value of life in America by upholding a ban on a practice that offends basic human decency. This decision represents a step forward in protecting the weakest and most innocent among us."

"Californians for Romney" -- Blog
via Elect Romney Blog! by RHR on Apr 19, 2007

http://www.californiansforromney.com/

As this year progresses toward the February primary in California, please drop in to visit the Californians For Romney Blog. You will start to see much more content that is of course unique to California.

There will be many important events planned by Governor Romney throughout the State of California and these events will be covered in detail at the site as well as many other developing stories and issues distinct to CA. At the end of April, Mitt will be making a number of appearances in the state and on May 3rd, he will be in Simi Valley for the first GOP debate.

If you live in California and are aware of breaking news or know of important visits planned by Governor Romney, please leave a comment on this post with details and we will get that information to our friends over at the CA blog. As well, you can go there now and leave comments to Aaron and Paul who have posted on the site today. Any and all suggestions will be seriously considered!

Please return often to the CA site and look for new blogs by those who have just joined our team. We welcome all to visit The Land of Ronald Reagan!

To visit the site, click:
CaliforniansForRomney
.
~ RHR

Many Conservatives Were Hoping Rudy Giuliani Could Be Given Benefit Of The Doubt On Abortion - It Is Not Looking Good
via race42008.com by Republius on Apr 19, 2007

This piece from W. James Antle III of The American Spectator does a good job of summarizing the rapidly deteriorating possibility of religious and social conservatives co-existing and forming a coalition with Rudy Giuliani in the 2008 presidential race due to abortion. And while there seemed to be room for compromise between the two sides, the Mayor’s flippant plus legally and morally inconsistent recent remarks about the issue, in addition to his similarly terse and incoherent thoughts on gun control, have arguably caused an irreparable rift that is going to cost him significant conservative support.

Mayor Giuliani didn’t exactly have conservatives at hello, but many of them were listening to and considering him up until he failed to speak their language on the issues they care most about. Now, some of his staunchest supporters in the media, such as John Podhoretz and the editors of National Review, are opining that the Mayor “has tied himself in knots” and squandered an opportunity to form a broad and winning coalition over his recent pronouncements on social issues. Ah, what might have been.

HRC vs. Circuit City
via The Corner on Apr 18, 2007
Jim Geraghty has the details. . . .
Hugh Hewitt: A 5-4 Decision Against Barbarism
via Hugh Hewitt's TownHall Blog on Apr 18, 2007
The good news is that an abhorrent procedure is outlawed. The bad news is that Casey remains good law, and its holding remains elusive. Would a state statute prohibiting post-viability abortions except when the life...
Hugh Hewitt: The Looming Tower
via Hugh Hewitt's TownHall Blog on Apr 18, 2007
Lawrence Wright's The Looming Tower won a Pulitzer this week for general nonfiction. Though the Pulitzers have become the occasion for a good laugh --a sort of celebration of buggy craftsmanship in the age of the...
John Dickerson. Have you heard of the 2002 winter olympics?
via Elect Romney Blog! by myclob on Apr 18, 2007

http://www.slate.com/id/2164380/

Romney, the richest candidate, was stingiest with his staff members' salaries and often had them fly discount airlines and double up on accommodations like the Super 8 Motel. Instead of free drinks and food at the campaign, they're only subsidized (sodas at 25 cents a can; snacks in the vending machine are 50 cents). His [religious] ties appear to be paying off. So far, Utahans have contributed more than residents of any other state except California.

Click here for the complete article.

Hey John Dickerson, you ever hear of the 2002 winter olympics? Do you know where they were held? Do you know who ran them? Perhaps this had something to do with it?

Also from the piece:

Clinton: ($26 million raised; $30 million on hand.) The senator owes $277,000 to Penn, Schoen & Berland, the polling firm run by her chief strategist, Mark Penn. No candidate in either party spent more on polling, which will not undermine her image as a calculating politician. The senator is also a thorough politician. The filings also show she made a $4,000 donation to House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, the senior Democrat in Congress from South Carolina, a key 2008 primary state. All the campaigns are heavily courting the so-far unaffiliated Clyburn; Clinton is the only one to use her presidential committee to make donations to him.

...John Edwards has a hair weakness. His FEC filings show two $400 haircuts, which raise at least two issues. The first is: what can you get for a $400 haircut, anyway? The second is, given Edwards' past trouble of looking like he cares too much for his hair, couldn't he have put the trims on his personal account?

McCain...$16,317 in catering costs for an event at the swank Beverly Hilton hotel seems more politically problematic, especially since it may come to symbolize the trouble the campaign finds itself in after having raised only $13 million in the first quarter while spending $8 million...McCain has campaigned for years as a pork buster and someone who hasn't been tainted by the profligate spending ways of Washington.

~ Mike

Got this comment:

I serve on the Mass. GOP State Committee, and it was long a joke that we went from catered dinners to a glass of ice water and a peppermint for refreshment when Mitt became Governor! Heck, it took two months to get coffee served!

I especially remember one event - the Rooftop of the Ritz Carleton in Boston - and the refreshments were stale blue corn chips and watery salsa. On the other hand, our state party chair announced that we raised $200,000 that evening - so you be the judge!

And we all went back for those events again and again.

SC: McCain Endorser Votes For Romney in Straw Poll, May Withdraw Endorsement
via race42008.com by HeavyM on Apr 18, 2007

All of you who read my post from earlier this week know that McCain has managed to receive the endorsements of a majority of the state legislators from the state of South Carolina.

And all of you who read an even earlier article know that it is straw poll time in South Carolina as each county holds their county conventions this month. As a result, many of the candidates are down in South Carolina for extended stays: Giuliani, Brownback, Hunter, and Romney were/are all down there, and probably some of the other candidates as well.

One man conspicuously absent from working the county conventions is John McCain, and the grassroots folks are taking note. Some are even comparing it to his missing the CPAC, Club for Growth, and the Heritage Foundation conferences earlier this year. And his absence might cost him, too, in the areas of not only grassroots activists but endorsers as well:

State Rep. Thad Viers of Myrtle Beach was one of 40 Statehouse Republicans who earlier this year endorsed McCain. But Saturday, Viers was at the Horry County GOP convention wondering where McCain was and listening to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

“He gave a great Reaganesque speech. I liked him so much I voted for him in the straw poll,” Viers said.

Viers hasn’t yet decided to withdraw his support for McCain, but will if McCain’s doesn’t steer away from an immigration law compromise he’s been developing with Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. “I think he is taking people for granted,” Viers said. “You can’t assume that people are voting for you.”

McCain is continuing his strange tactic of avoiding places where conservatives are gathered (and where the rest of the candidates are). His answer to all who are wondering where he is?

McCain’s camp says his calendar precludes him from attending, and that the candidate prefers to speak to smaller crowds for longer times than conventions allow.

While some question McCain having prior commitments during the SC convention season, he is doing two things to try and soften the blow of his absence: sending proxies and counting on his money buying support:

His campaign has contacted delegates with mailings, staffed tables at the events and sent surrogates to speak for him. The stand-ins include former Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating, who is to speak for McCain at conventions in Spartanburg, Laurens and Richland counties this weekend… Boling said McCain’s campaign…is instead focusing on building a support network in part by donating money to local GOP groups and candidates. He said the campaign made $180,000 in donations before the November election.

As we await more straw poll results, it will be interesting to see if McCain’s lack of campaigning at the county conventions will continue to cost him support in the state

Romney Outlines National Energy Policy
via Law Students For Romney by Marc on Apr 18, 2007
Here's Mitt from a town hall meeting in Massachusetts and posted in the Hill yesterday.
McCain Dominant in South Carolina Straw Polls
via race42008.com by LJ on Apr 18, 2007

Speaking of straw poll results, there’s this from the Hotline:

[It] seems that Sen. John McCain has won five South Carolina straw polls: Spartanburg, Dillon, Florence, Clarendon and Greenwood. [links are mine]

McCain had planned to hold a series of townhall meetings at American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) posts around the state yesterday, but canceled his travel itinerary due to Monday’s horrible events at Virginia Tech. I’m sure they’ll reschedule as soon as possible. Later today, he’ll attend a $2,300/person fundraiser in Charleston, SC. He also plans to stop in South Carolina on April 26th as part of his official 4-day campaign kickoff.

State Rep. Thad Viers of Myrtle Beach was one of 40 Statehouse Republicans who earlier this year endorsed McCain. But Saturday, Viers was at the Horry County GOP convention wondering where McCain was and listening to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

“He gave a great Reaganesque speech. I liked him so much I voted for him in the straw poll,” Viers said.

HeavyM and Rep. Viers wondered where he was on Saturday? Why, he was in Des Moines, Iowa giving a speech at the Lincoln Day Dinner. Kavon even provided photographic proof. Now, you don’t have to convince me that John McCain is an amazing human being, but even he is incapable of being in two places at once. I tend to think that that qualifies as a scheduling conflict. Let’s be fair and not forget Mitt’s own “scheduling conflict” last month either.

The notion that he is deliberately avoiding conservative conventions is, quite frankly, ridiculous. Just last week McCain attended the Ottawa County, Michigan Convention and South Carolina is at the center of the entire McCain campaign for the Presidency. If he doesn’t win the state, he doesn’t win the nomination. It’s really that simple.

2008 Race Rankings: The Democrats
via Hotline On Call by hotlineblog on Apr 18, 2007

There is no Democratic front-runner. Hillary Rodham Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards all have a plausible claim on the nomination.

The usual metrics are all jumbled. Clinton leads the money race, leads in New Hampshire, and tops the national polls. Obama led in one recent South Carolina poll we saw, in media love, and in enthusiasm. Edwards has the tightest message, the best organization in Iowa, and the lead in Iowa.

These rankings are ordered by likelihood of winning the Democratic Party primary and are based on a number of factors, including organization, money, buzz and polling. Click here for Republican rankings.


1. No One -- Help wanted. Perhaps the "winner" of the first debate will nudge above the rest.

2.(tie) Hillary Clinton -- New York senator Last Ranking: 1 -- Has a solid lead in national polling ev