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Saturday, February 16, 2008
posted by Nealie Ride | 12:53 PM | permalink


They discuss Mitt, McCain, Obama, and Hillary.
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5 Comments:


The Soros-McCain connection runs deep, very deep.

Michelle Malkin sez -> http://michellemalkin.com/2008/01/25/meet-the-open-borders-family-mccain-hernandez-soros-and-the-reform-institute/

WND -> http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=56177



Lord knows I love Ann and I know exactly how she feels about Mccain being the nom.The problem is herand talk radio started about a month too late lambasting Mccain and to a lesser extent, the Huckster. Most of the right wing pundits were taking a hands off approach as far as promoting any particular candidate. I kept tuning into Rush every day hoping he would start exposing these guys.It really didn't happen until around Florida and by then it was too late.I think what finally did it for Rush was McCain's attack on Mitt about timetables. The MSM likes to think that every republican sits in front of a radio everyday and gets their marching orders there but thats' just not the case. Isn't it funny that the last two men standing were the MSM's favorite republicans.



Looks like Mitt is still beating Huckabee for second in the Washington primary tonight.



While she may be a little out there at times I must say Ann Coulter is pretty freakin AWESOME! If she just would have jumped on bored with Mitt sooner, along with the rest of the republican pundits I think this election would have been much different and we wouldn't be stuck in this current situation of having to choose the lesser of to evils for our president.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at February 20, 2008 1:36 PM  


Rite in Mitt... There is still time.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at February 28, 2008 5:36 PM  



Friday, February 15, 2008
posted by Kyle | 7:09 PM | permalink
From the Hotline's Blogometer:

Conservative bloggers were pleased that Mitt Romney endorsed his former rival McCain:

Power Line's Paul Mirengoff: "Romney casts himself in a good light with this move, proving that his personal feelings will not stand in the way of making the decision that's in both his and the nation's interest."

Townhall's Hugh Hewitt: "If you believe Senators Obama and Clinton, they fundamentally fail to understand the consequences of withdrawal in Iraq or the contours of the menace in Iran. Neither appears to grasp the jihadist threat. Senator McCain does. Because Mitt Romney cares deeply about the safety and security of the country, he was certain to endorse Senator McCain. That he did so quickly is a testament to the starkness of the choice facing America, McCain's complete commitment to victory, and Romney's understanding of the stakes."

Commentary's Jennifer Rubin: "On one level, Romney is making good on his pledge to unite the GOP and prevent the Democrats from taking the White House in perilous times. However, he is also amplifying the contrast between himself (high-minded GOP loyalist) with the man who may be his competition in 2012 or 2016, Mike Huckabee. Huckabee seems bent on pursuing his quixotic campaign, perhaps to build a political base or perhaps to enhance his speaking fees."

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5 Comments:


Even with all the endorsements McCain's been racking up,he's still a candidate that doesn't present a vision for the country. His main selling point is he's better than a Dem.He really needs Hillary to be the Dem candidate to drive the negative turnout and surpress the bitter Obama losers.The fear and loathing of Clinton is what got him the nom to begin with.

At this point,what I'm looking for is Mitt on the trail campaigning for Mccain and what kind of crowds and enthusiam there is for him to make the case for VP. You have to wonder how Mitt would modify his stump speech to accomodate McCain's positions he disagrees with.



McCain's ego is too Napoleonic and his brain too much like Pres. Buchanan's to have someone intelligent and good for America on the ticket. The evangelical CEOs couldn't handle a Mormon looking presidential either. I remember the new interest in Catholicism when Kennedy was Pres. That could be quite a threat to the Evangel CEOs pocketbook since Mormon preachers and their church leadership don't get paid."Heaven forbid" some of their flock may find greener pastures.
For the first time since '72, I'm not voting Republican because I think that my vote is better spent in sending the party heads a message. I hope to be back in 2012.



If Mitt can suck up his pride to endorse a bitter rival for the good of the party and the country, well, then, I guess I can to.



Maybe Hillary is not so analog after all?



I'm finding it so difficult to get behind McCain. I was so enthused about Romney and his potential presidency because I felt he genuninely could fix complex problems. I don't want Obama or Clinton to take the White House, so I'll support McCain, but there's no enthusiasm or excitement. I think there are a lot of us like me out there. How are we supposed to get energized?

Ernie




posted by Kyle | 12:41 PM | permalink
Kathryn Jean Lopez talks a little bit about her man (politically speaking), and the culture of political cynicism that was ever suspicious of him:

What a breath of fresh air the Romneys on the public stage have been. Way too often in pop culture, men are portrayed as dopes; think about just about any sitcom. The dad/husband is portrayed as a doofus. What’s wrong with having somebody in public life who’s like Mitt Romney — a capable, experienced executive who loves his country and also happens to be a God-fearing father and husband? That’s not a bad thing for Americans to see. Forgive him for being easy on the eyes.

And I’ll go one step further. I worry about a political culture that is a little too suspicious of a scandal-less, all-American-gee-whiz-this-is-the-American-dream-in-overdrive package. We should be glad that good people — who, while well-off, are not without their share of painful crosses — are willing to subject themselves to the ugliness that politics can inflict. We should be grateful that good families will make the sacrifices necessary to serve — and make those sacrifices with no guarantees they’ll succeed.

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1 Comments:


Please help us get John McCain into office.
Feel free to contact Michael Schuyler, National Co-Chair for Blog Out-Reach if you would like to join us.
His email spambot proofed is
Michael (at)mccainvictory08(dot)com
Thank you Pet Campbell
http://www.petsgardenblog.com




posted by Justin Hart | 11:29 AM | permalink
Rebecca Hagelin has an important column out today revisiting the issue of faith and in particular our man Mitt.

Hagelin refers to the excellent documentary by Brian Hall called Article VI which examines the nexus of politics and religion in great detail:
Part of what makes “Article VI” such a compelling film is that Hall and Donaldson give us historical context. They remind us, for example, that there’s a shameful tradition of anti-Catholicism in the U.S. When Al Smith ran for president against Herbert Hoover in 1928, he was pilloried for his Catholic faith. It was denounced as anti-democratic, monarchical -- not in tune with American institutions. And there’s also an appalling tradition of prejudice against those of the Jewish faith who seek high office. Remember the horrible questions the press asked of Sen. Joseph Lieberman when he ran for president? Some things never change. For many in the media, it seems, Mormonism is the new anti-semitism.
I attended a private viewing of the documentary a few weeks ago and found the subject both compelling and unnerving. Hagelin continues:
Whether it’s Mitt Romney speaking boldly of his Mormon faith, Mike Huckabee as an ordained Baptist minister, or Barack Obama taking the pulpit in churches across the country, the personal practice of deep faith by our would-be leaders must be passionately protected. As Kennedy told the Houston ministers: “Today, I may be the victim. But tomorrow, it may be you.”
In my own opinion Mormonism did indeed play a role in Mitt Romney's defeat which is sad and unfortunate. I hope, like Kennedy's faith that we can overcome these prejudices.

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Religion did play a role. But keep in mind that in more populated areas Mitt did win, even among evangelical Christians, who really do have big problems doctrinally with Mormons. But in the political sphere, for informed evangelicals, religion was set aside in this more secular matter and Mitt was embraced.

In the quad cities area of Iowa where I live in Davenport, in Des Moines, in the Atlanta area of Georgia, in Greenville SC, Mitt won those areas. And it was evangelical Christians who delivered the votes.

Yes there needs to be some more discussion within Christianity whether or not a Mormon will be admitted to the conversation, but what we've seen is a beginning. The conversation is over for a lot of evangelical Christians.

In other more rural areas of the country the conversation isn't over yet. But I think Americans will choose tolerance eventually.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at February 15, 2008 11:51 AM  



Thursday, February 14, 2008
posted by Jeff Fuller | 1:51 PM | permalink
AP broke the news a few minutes ago.

Discussions on Fox News are saying that this makes Romney a favorite for VP (helps with unifying the right and talk-radio folks, helps in Michigan and the west, helps with potenially drawing upon Romney's money).

Also speculation that Romney's delagate going to McCain get him close to the magic 1191 that will be when Huckabee drops out . . . so this could be the move that makes Huck get out of the race . . . ah, sweet justice.

Jeff Fuller
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10 Comments:


Do you realize that it was just a week ago that Mitt announced that he was stepping aside? What a wild week it has been!!!

By Anonymous Anonymous, at February 14, 2008 2:15 PM  


I don't know what to think of this. I don't think that it will sway me to vote for McCain. I'm still firmly in the protesting by not voteing camp. I'm even conflicted about the VP talk. Does Mitt need to get tangled up with that slimeball? I guess that it might get me out to vote, because McCain looks like he might be showing up in the obits within four years.



Very, very interesting. It would get me to vote for McCain. It's sad political manipulation, but in the end I think it will be better for Romney's political career, and yea maybe McCain will kick the bucket...? Sad, but it might be the best possible thing for this country...



I'd be shocked if Mitt was the VP pick but I'll take it if it happens.Not sure how I'd fell if Mitt embraces some of McCain's not so conservative positions. At least I'd be interested in the race again. Watching Obama's stimulus proposal,McCain starts to look better.But the thumb in Huck's eye would be halarious to say the least.



Disgusting. I don't like Huck, but really? Why, Mitt, why? I thought you were serious when you pointed out your differences between yourself and the VERY LIBERAL maverick. I give up.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at February 14, 2008 4:34 PM  


Is it bad to hope for a McCain heart-attack? That would = a Romney presidential bid after all! With Obama and Clinton tearing apart the Democratic party, it would be a win!



I hope Romney does not become, or even is suggested as the McCain VP.
1) If McCain wins, that would saddle Mitt with all the McCain liberal policy decisions in 2012.
2) We all know that McCain is going to loose, possibly a land slide, to Obama. I don’t want Mitt to be any more a part of that than the “good of the party” move he’s making today.

We all know how much Mitt disagrees with McCain’s policies! He’s doing this ONLY to stop Hillary/Obama from a disasterous pull-out from Iraq… period. He does not agree with McCain on more than two or three issues (cut spending, earmarks, and military strength). I hate how all the pundits (I’m watching FIX - oops, I mean FOX) are spinning this as Mitt loosing with conservatives by supporting McCain against the dems. McCain’s the man right now! There is no chance for any other to become the nominee! Mitt has to support the Republican nominee because the dems would be “a disaster” (Mitt’s own words).

I firmly believe that Mitt is doing this solely to get Huck out of the way so McCain can start concentrating on beating Hillary/Obama … though I see that as a long shot … but Mitt’s doing whatever he can to defeat them at this point. Not necessarily to curry favor with McCain or to gain a VP spot.

It’s not so much supporting McCain, as it is doing all he can to stop the dems.

I think we’re going to have 4 years of the first black president. I think it will be a terrible 4 years and that the country will wake up to, Mr. Fix-it, the best candidate to ever run in 2012.



Yes, Darrell, I firmly believe the same----Mitt is doing this to get Huckabee out of the way so McCain can start his national campaign. The day after Mitt suspended his campaign, I can't tell you how sorrowful it was for me, but I do see now that he was acting almost totally selflessly in pulling out. It is obvious that all this is for the good of our nation, and shows the OUTSTANDING character of Mitt Romney, that he could be so genuine, after being treated very poorly by McCain, and endorse him. I am not sure I could have been so 'Big' in the same circumstances. (I wanted someone to smack McCain down a few notches!)

Currently, it would be real big of McCain to apologize for the lies and dirty politics he played against Romney during the Florida primary. I might actually vote for him, but I am not holding my breath---as Ann Coulter said, they are mirror opposites.

By Anonymous Michelle, at February 14, 2008 8:28 PM  


why mccain-romney makes the most sense.



Even with Romney's Endorsement of McCain we need to send the message to the GOP and McCain that Conservatives still want Romney. We want him as our VP. If we continue to vote for him in the upcoming primaries we will be able to convey that message effectively. Romney continued to get votes even after his suspension, and I have NO DOUBT he will continue to get votes after the endorsement. This will continue to gain delegates for him, even though ultimately the delegates will most likely vote for McCain at the Convention. At which point, we hope we have a McCain-Romney ticket. HELP US! WE NEED ROMNEY FOR VP!
www.unitethegop.com




posted by jason | 1:42 PM | permalink
Reported on Fox News and CNN.

Beckel Talking about this setting Mitt up for the VP spot.

Fox reporting announcement at 3:30est in Boston.

Mitt as VP:

Pros:
1. Balances ticket very well
2. Shows Unity in GOP
3. Maybe McCain will agree to one term
4. Keeps Huckabee out

Cons:
1. Will the US ever want 3 GOP presidents in a row?
2. Can a loosing VP candidate come back and win nomination later? I can only think of Ford as the only example.
3. Doesn't help McCain in the south...maybe... I have a feeling if you put McCain's and Romney's numbers together in south, you have a huge majority.
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9 Comments:


For an example of losing VP's we have John Edwards, of course that is on Dems side.



Dan,

Edwards has never won the nomination. That's my point. It seems to be a political cul-de-sac. It might be a nice end, but it's still the end of the road once you get there.



Edwards had the wrong identity this time to excite the Identity-Politics party. Mitt as VP would at least get me to vote Republican, but its highly debatable if it would be a good move for Mitt. I'm pretty sure the Dems are taking this in November regardless.



I'm totally with you in this Bigmo. I will be very conflicted (almost resentful) if Mitt takes the VP spot. But such is life, I would find a way to deal with it.



Yea thats what I meant just as another example.



Mitt getting the VP spot would raise his profile,stature and validate him as acceptable to the party as a whole.At this point McCain offers no vision to the country and that is what's needed to excite the base.With Mitt on the ticket it makes Mccain look like a simple placeholder but it gives voters something futuresque to look forward to. In this scenerio though,you have to hope McCain is good enough on social issues to win the evangelical south. The evangelicals continued to vote for Huck hoping it would solidify him as the VP picks but Huck's continued presence in the race has alientaed him from the party structure.



Romney is a much roader spectrum candidate than edwards who got off on the wrong foot this year with a poverty pimp based campaign.One thing about Romney being the VP though is you would have a sore loser Huck on your hands and god only knows how that would play out with his base.



WE NEED ROMNEY FOR VP! Even with Romney's Endorsement of McCain we need to send the message to the GOP and McCain that Conservatives still want Romney. We want him as our VP. If we continue to vote for him in the upcoming primaries we will be able to convey that message effectively. Romney continued to get votes even after his suspension, and I have NO DOUBT he will continue to get votes after the endorsement. This will continue to gain delegates for him, even though ultimately the delegates will most likely vote for McCain at the Convention. At which point, we hope we have a McCain-Romney ticket.



McCain won't choose Mitt because he would continually be upstaged by him ... Plus I don't think Mitt needs to be the #2 choice, especially considering how difficult it's going to be for Republicans in November. Mitt needs to keep his distance from the impending political avalanche. It ain't gonna be pretty.




Wednesday, February 13, 2008
posted by Kyle | 10:15 PM | permalink
From the Hotline:
Given the choice of Huckabee, McCain, Ron Paul and Mitt Romney, 26% of VA GOP voters and 27% of MD GOP voters chose Romney as the most qualified candidate to manage the economy, despite the fact that he suspended his campaign nearly a week ago.

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3 Comments:


Will you sign this pledge?

I promise to not take down this blog until mitt romney becomes the next POTUS.

There are still many out there that are crazy about Romney, and we need outlets. Please, Please, dont take down this blog.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at February 14, 2008 12:44 AM  


QUESTION? What is Mitt going to do now that he has suspended his campaign? We are all wanting to know what his plans are for the next 4 years. Please respond if you have any first hand knoledge or if you just want to comment. thanks from: millions of Americans in California

By Anonymous Anonymous, at February 14, 2008 2:25 AM  


Just saw where the Huckster is headed to the Cayman Islands this weekend to give a personal fundraiser speech (those pesky mortgage payments again) You have to wonder if he isn't using his presidentail run to get his speaking fees up. If so it really makes a mockery of the system. Also seeing where people are saying ah what the heck the guys having fun and not hurting anybody. Yes he is,he's hurting the Republican brand as a kook.

Listening to the Tuesday primary post-mortums,I got tired of hearing how he was the conservative's choice. This is baloney. He was the religious right's choice.

As far as McCain goes ,he's a minority candidate.If I had to take a stab at a figure, I'd guess he won the nomintaion with about 35% of the party's vote. I guess it depends on how you factor in independents vote.He has no party mandate but he's acting like he does. All thse GOP people falling in behind him only validates his apostate positions and greatly weakens the conservative wing of the party,what's left of it.

Still it all comes down to votes in order to win and it's very probomatical whether enough of the Republican vote will show up in Nov.

I got a reminder this morning of how he went into Mass. two days before Super Tuesday and campaigned in Romney's back yard. This was a totally classless act and it shows what a chump McCain really is.




posted by Kyle | 9:56 PM | permalink
Look, she may be a little extreme, but she says what we all want to say in our heart of hearts. Coulter is still hammering McCain and praising Romney:
In fact, McCain and Romney are mirror opposites: As Romney had to tailor his conservative views to the liberal voters of Massachusetts, McCain has had to tailor his liberal views to the conservative voters of Arizona. While Romney's record in a liberal bastion is as bad as it will ever be, McCain's record from a conservative bastion is as good as it will ever be. Which isn't very good.

In the immortal words of -- well, me, actually: Always choose a strong conservative from a blue state over a lukewarm conservative from a red state.

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posted by Timotheus | 3:33 PM | permalink
Even for the most die hard Romney fan who is still ambivalent about McCain in so many ways, this quote is really, really good:

“Hope, my friends, is a powerful thing. I can attest to that better than many, for I have seen men's hopes tested in hard and cruel ways that few will ever experience. And I stood astonished at the resilience of their hope in the darkest of hours because it did not reside in an exaggerated belief in their individual strength, but in the support of their comrades, and their faith in their country.”

"[But] to encourage a country with only rhetoric rather than sound and proven ideas that trust in the strength and courage of free people is not a promise of hope. It is a platitude.”

I heard the audio this morning and it was even better. If someone notices a YouTube of this pop up, send me the link.
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Tuesday, February 12, 2008
posted by Kyle | 1:33 PM | permalink
There's been a lot of opinions written lately about Huckabee staying in the race. Most of the people that take the time to write something about the topic are pro-Huckabee types. Not that there's anything wrong with that.Personally I'm agnostic about Huckabee's continued presence in the race. However, I thought this piece by George Neumayr over at Human Events deserved some responding to, especially from us Romney Republicans.

Huckabee and Neumayer make the argument that there needs to be competition, as if this were some sort of ongoing marketplace and not an elimination process. Huckabee has been mathematically eliminated from getting the nomination, yet he continues to press forward as if he has not been. Huckabee has countered, notably at CPAC, that he did not major in math (which seems to be stating the obvious), but in miracles. Well, Huck, I cannot deny you a continued faith in miracles, but it seems a poor substitute at this point for an honest self-assessment.

Neumayr also makees the argument that Huckabee's continued presence "stimulates much-needed debate about pervasive liberalism in the party." It seems ironic that Huckabee's presence would stimulate debate about pervasive liberalism in the party. It is true that Huckabee's continued campaign stimulates that discussion, only not in the way that they would like to think. Most conservatives, and especially us Romney Republicans, see Huckabee as a liberal on taxes, government spending, government programs, immigration, and even seems to have those tendencies on foreign policy. Truly Huckabee's campaign does spark debate, but it is about how Huckabee represents liberalism on so many issues.

The truth is that Huckabee's campaign has not about issues. His whole platform has been personality and identity based (I guess you could count the Fair Tax, but that's another discussion). I think the same elements of personality keep Huckabee in the race. It is more about self than about the people.

So, by all means, Huckabee, stay in the race. I do not begrudge you the chance to make your presidential campaign last as long as you like. However, dispense with the false notions that the campaign is about competition or issues. Your continued presence is about self. Just admit it. After all, they say honesty is the best policy.

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11 Comments:


I don't like calling names, but it's difficult to view Huckabee as anything other than a charismatic, egotistical dope. I hope that his refusal to pull out of the race lowers him to the status of a right-of-center John Edwards: very, very annoying, but ultimately, irrelevant.

Gosh, there must be something weird in the drinking water of Arkansas!

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