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Posts Tagged ‘Rick Santorum’

Romney’s best choices for Veep

by Mojambo ( 144 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, Mitt Romney at April 12th, 2012 - 2:30 pm

I know Pawlentey is not very exciting but he would probably be the safe, reliable bet – although with Obama running again we might need someone with a bit more pizzazz.  No way Huckabee or Santorum would do, and don’t even think abut picking anyone with the last name “Bush”.

by Hugh Hewitt

With Mitt Romney all but universally acknowledged as the GOP certain nominee, attention has quickly and rightly turned to speculation about the former Massachusetts governor’s running mate.

[……]

The latter consideration is what Romney has often said will guide his deliberations, and anyone with even a passing knowledge of Romney’s earnestness accepts this as a given. There are thus three names which have to be at the top of “the list” along with the usual suspects of Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell, Senator Rob Portman of Ohio, Congressman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and Senator Marco Rubio of Florida. Indeed, there are good reasons for the odds-makers to put these three atop the leader board ahead of those four.

Former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty is to the 2012 GOP veepstakes what Romney himself was to 2008 competition to be John McCain’s running mate: the obvious, safe and in some important respects, a compelling choice to be the #2.

Pawlenty knows full well what the national campaign feels like and requires. His family is ready for it having embarked upon it once. His wonderful and able spouse would be a great asset to the campaign, and his circle of close advisors and supporters is talent rich and very loyal.

Pawlenty also knows how to win blue states and brings a compelling personal story, deft sense of humor and superb media skills. The nay-sayers chirp that he is dull, but dull may well be the new cool in a year in which the U.S.-as-Greece is on many voters’ minds. Minnesota is a reach, but Pawlenty has cross-border appeal in both Wisconsin and Iowa, key swing states.

And Pawlenty has a solid indeed spectacular eight years of governing under his belt, years that included crises like the collapse of the I-35W bridge and many legislative showdowns, as well as many visits to war zones and a superb record on judicial selection.

Next in line: New Jersey’s Chris Christie. In addition to his obvious flair for campaigning and message management, Christie’s issue set is in the zone for 2012: experience with massive deficits and runaway public sector costs, a brass-knuckled willingness to mix it up with the professional left and, often overlooked, a long and very successful tenure as the United States Attorney in New Jersey which would set him up to take on Eric Holder’s abysmal record at DOJ and to anticipate and prep the political battlefield for the election fraud sure to mark the Chicago Gang’s playbook. Christie also has experience prosecuting terrorists and can hold the president to account for his serial pratfalls in this area, and even if New Jersey is thought by many to be out of reach, adding Christie to the ticket instantly stretches the map to the Jersey shore and makes the Romney campaign a very serious player in the Philly media market which helps tilt the already close competition for the Keystone State towards the GOP.

[…..]

Like Pawlenty, Christie was with Romney early and all-in. Like Romney and Pawlenty he’s a family man with deep value sets that play across the country. And contrary to what the Green Room elites believe, his girth is a potential connection to ordinary Americans who can look at and listen to Christie and say “regular guy who really gets it.”

Finally, one more hard-to-fathom name for the Manhattan-Beltway media elite: former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, the man with the alleged radioactive last name, who also happens to have the most popular parents in America, a brother and sister-in-law who have the intense loyalty of tens of millions, an extraordinary record as a very successful two term governor of the most important state to the GOP, and a genuine connection with the emerging Latino electorate that no one else who isn’t himself or herself Latino can claim.

And ready to be president if called upon? Is there anyone else in America more prepared for that job on a minute’s notice?

There are many more names on the VP list, from relative long-shots such as New Hampshire Senator Kelly Ayotte, Congresswoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers, New Mexico Governor Susana Martinez and South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley to former Romney rivals Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum.

But these trio of governors with long records of executive experience –and executive success—make the most sense from both a ready-to-be-president perspective and from the campaign manager’s much narrower view as to how to get to 270 electoral votes.

Read the rest – The short-list of  three

Breaking news: Rick Santorum suspends his campaign

by Phantom Ace ( 11 Comments › )
Filed under Breaking News, Elections 2012, Republican Party, Special Report at April 10th, 2012 - 2:28 pm

Rick Santorum is announcing today that he is suspending his campaign. His daughter Bella was recently hospitalized, so this is probably a factor in his decision.

(CNN) – Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum will announce he will suspend his campaign on Tuesday at an event in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, a senior adviser to the campaign told CNN.

Santorum spoke to GOP presidential front-runner Mitt Romney prior to his expected announcement, according to a Republican source.

This leaves Mitt Romney virtually unopposed for the Republican Party. This sets up a fall match-up of Liberal Rockefeller Republican Mitt Romney vs. 3rd World Liberation Democrat Barack Hussein Obama. This is a terrible choice for this nation and either way we are doomed.

Virginia going for Obama

by Phantom Ace ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Elections 2012, Headlines, Liberal Fascism, Mitt Romney, Progressives, Republican Party, Theocratic Progressives at March 24th, 2012 - 3:36 pm

Recent polls show Obama holding a substantial lead among all Republicans. This is big turn around from just a few months ago, where he was unpopular. The Virginia GOP decided to focus on social issues by trying to pass the abortion ultrasound which was shelved turned off independents, whom the GOP needs to win. Santorum’s holy crusade against porn and contraceptives hasn’t help the GOP’s perception either. The Obama regime also has its campaign up and running on the ground. This is huge warning sign, since Virginia is a state the GOP should carry.

I noted a week or so back that Virginia was one of six states that the GOP had to win in November if they were going to win the Presidential election. Well it’s early, but things are not looking good in the Old Dominion at the moment. Two polls out this week have the President beating both Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum in the state after a period in which the prospective November race in the state was much closer and more favorable for the GOP.

[….]
President Obama appears to be widening his lead against all Republican presidential hopefuls, including Mitt Romney, among voters in the swing state of Virginia, according to a new poll.

The Quinnipiac University poll released Tuesday shows Obama beating Romney, 50 percent to 42 percent, his biggest lead over the former Massachusetts governor in this election cycle.

[….]

President Obama now clears the 50% mark in support against his top two potential Republican challengers in the battleground state of Virginia.

The latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey of Likely Virginia Voters finds the president leading former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney by nine points – 51% to 42%. It was a six-point race a month ago – Obama 49%, Romney 43%. Four percent (4%) now prefer another candidate in the race, and four percent (4%) more are undecided.

[….]

This isn’t an automatic win for Obama either, of course, and the numbers are likely to tighten when the General Election race actually starts. However, without having access to the crosstabs for either of these polls, I would suspect that the past two months or so of the GOP doing everything it can to alienate independent voters and women is partly behind these numbers, and if Republicans don’t drop that nonsense quickly Virginia won’t be the only state they’ll have problems in.

If the GOP wants win Virginia in 2012 and the election, they need to focus on Economic/Fiscal issues. They should drop the social issues until after the election. Get in power first, then do the social stuff after you have addressed the fiscal and economic stuff. Social Conservatives need to mimic the Democrats and mask their agenda. Even if Social Conservatives are right about some issues, they have spent 20 years picking fights over nonsense that voters automatically get turned off. Adults don’t like ton be lectured by politicians. They want solutions to their problems.

Without Virginia the GOP is toast in 2012. Personally I don’t see the Republicans pivoting back to fiscal/economic issues in time. Too many of the base care more about moralizing over people’s personal lives rather than the nation’s fiscal situations. Go ahead and bash me all you want, but this is the reality. Most Americans hate to be lectured to and moralized.

The curse of the G.O.P. retreads

by Mojambo ( 145 Comments › )
Filed under Election 2008, Elections 2009, Elections 2010, Elections 2012, Mitt Romney at March 21st, 2012 - 2:00 pm

As I have said many times, we are seeing the fruit of the disasters of  the anti Bush/Republican backlash  of 2006 and 2008 with the pathetic crop of candidates we have now.  We have a phony (Romney), a whiny, religious nut (Santorum) , and a has-been, back stabbing over the hill hack (Newtie).

by Noemie Emery

There are many flaws among the current Republican candidates and they are all too well known. Romney is too close to the center and all of the others are much too eccentric.

They can’t reach the base, or they can’t reach beyond it. Romney’s too bland and Santorum and Gingrich are all too exciting — in fact, they seem borderline nuts.

No one addresses the big, urgent problems. Romney has problems closing the deal, but his rivals can’t close their cases against him. This is a field out of phase with the party around it, caught on the wrong side of time.

The Republican Party as it exists in the moment is the product of three different things: the fiscal implosion of 2008, Obama’s wide and expensive expansion of government, and the sudden collapse of the welfare state culture of Europe.

[…..]

In 2009, the Tea Party movement began the resistance, flowed into and through the Republican Party, and pulled off a series of stunning electoral triumphs, starting early with Chris Christie, Bob McDonnell and Scott Brown, and cresting in 2010 with a bumper crop of insurgents dedicated to cutting entitlements, curbing unions and helping small businesses thrive.

These are outsiders who are now the establishment, who appeal to the base and to independents, and have been winning the battle against Obama whenever they take to the field.

These are the people who ought to be running, but time is against them: the first class, like McDonnell and Christie, have little more than two years now as national figures; and the second wave — Marco Rubio, Kelly Ayotte and Susana Martinez — have even a year less than that.

They are too new to run, and their esprit is not found in our current contenders, who have nothing to do with our more recent battles, and quite clearly are blasts from the past.

Gingrich scored his big coup in the 1994 midterms, lost power in 1998, and since then has passed time having Breakfast at Tiffany’s while churning out mountains of books.

Rick Santorum came to the Senate in 1994, lost by 18 points a dozen years later, and since then has concerned himself with Satan’s grip on the country, and JFK’s failure to spend his tenure as president spreading the creed of his church far and wide.

Romney, who lost his first race in 1994, and left the one office he has held six years ago, has been endorsed by McDonnell, Christie and South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, whose campaign he backed in its earliest stages and has secondhand Tea Party cred.

But he is running the campaign he ran four years earlier, largely stressing his business experience, with no sign of additional urgency and few indications that too much has changed.

Still, he’s more in touch than Santorum or Gingrich, who are pushing a rigid and retro conservative vision that appeals to only a slice of the country, and disdains independents who swung back from Obama, and elected impure reformers like Christie and Brown.

There is a chasm between the GOP of 2012, revved up by the wins of the 2009-2010 cycles, and its candidates of the 1994-2006 vintage, who don’t understand and can’t harness its energies.

You call can it the Retreads’ Revenge.

Read the rest – The curse of the Republican retreads