► Show Top 10 Hot Links

Posts Tagged ‘Rick Santorum’

Michigan and Arizona Primary results

by Phantom Ace ( 37 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, Mitt Romney, Republican Party at February 28th, 2012 - 8:50 pm

This is an open thread to discuss the results of Michigan and Arizona primaries.

Update: Romney has been declared the winner in Arizona.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Mitt Romney coasted to victory in the Arizona primary Tuesday night and vied with rival Rick Santorum for supremacy in Michigan in a Republican presidential race as unsettled as the day it began.

Two other candidates, Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul, made little effort in either state, pointing instead to next week’s 10-state collection of Super Tuesday primaries and caucuses.

Michigan is currently neck and neck.

Update II: Here are the current results in Michigan.

Santorum is right calling Obama a snob

by Phantom Ace ( 112 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Education, Elections 2012, Politics, Socialism at February 28th, 2012 - 5:30 pm

I’m no fan of Rick Santorum, but I have to be intellectually honest.  He recently called Obama a snob in a speech. The American Pharaoh wants all Americans to go to college. The reason is indoctrination. I am by no means attacking people who go to college. There are skill sets that require an education of 4-6 years. However, both Democrats and Republicans are pushing College as the solution for all our ills. This is far from the truth.

The push for college education for all is the same mentality that led to the housing bubble. The concept that a college education is a right is ridiculous. Where in the US Constitution is that right? It is not there and was invented by the Left in both parties. Santorum rightly points out that it’s snobbery to assume everyone should go to college. He calls out the American Pharaoh’s real agenda, indoctrination of the youth.

Rick Santorum is spot on here and this should be an issue that Republicans should push. There is nothing wrong in learning skills like welding, plumbing, electricians or mechanics. Studying these skills will get you ahead in life more than a degree in Imperialism in the 3rd World.

I am by no means knocking college education. It is needed in certain fields but our one size fits all mentality for higher education is not economically realistic. The truth is, this is another bubble being created by the government. Like the housing bubble, this will blow up in our faces. I applaud Santorum for speaking the truth and hope others on the Right do as well.

GOP Debate in Mesa, AZ

by Kafir ( 188 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, Open thread, Politics, Republican Party at February 22nd, 2012 - 8:00 pm

Tonight’s GOP Debate on CNN will be held at the Mesa Arts Center.

Live Stream

Latest Rasmussen Reports poll shows that Santorum leads Romney 39 percent to 27 percent

by Bob in Breckenridge Comments Off on Latest Rasmussen Reports poll shows that Santorum leads Romney 39 percent to 27 percent
Filed under Elections 2012, Headlines, Mitt Romney, Politics, Polls, Republican Party at February 17th, 2012 - 9:31 am

Numbers Suggest Santorum Could Be Romney’s Worst Nightmare

By Scott Rasmussen

In a campaign defined by Republican reluctance to embrace Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum has emerged as the latest not-Romney candidate to surge ahead. While it’s impossible to predict what will happen in this volatile election season, the data suggests that Santorum might be more of a challenge for Romney than earlier flavors of the month.

The latest Rasmussen Reports poll of the GOP race shows that Rick Santorum leads Mitt Romney by 12 points, 39 percent to 27 percent. Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul are far behind. In and of itself, that’s nothing new. The man from Massachusetts has at times trailed Michele Bachmann, Donald Trump, Chris Christie, Rick Perry, Herman Cain and Newt Gingrich in the polls.

What is new are the numbers from a head-to-head matchup with no other candidates in the race. Santorum leads Romney 55 percent to 34 percent. None of the earlier Romney alternatives could manage better than a toss-up in such a contest.

Those numbers show that Santorum picks up 16 points when other candidates drop out. Romney adds just 7 to his column. Santorum makes huge gains among conservative voters when others drop out of the race. Among non-conservatives, Santorum and Romney gain roughly equal amounts. For the first time, the numbers show that if one of Romney’s challengers drops out, the other challenger will overwhelmingly benefit. Gingrich supporters, by a three-to-one margin, would vote for Santorum over Romney if that was the final choice.

Both Romney and Santorum are well-liked by Republican Primary voters, but Santorum has a slight advantage on this point as well. Seventy-five percent offer a favorable opinion of Santorum, while 66 percent say the same of Romney.

There is a huge passion gap favoring Santorum, though. Forty percent of Republican primary voters have a very favorable opinion of Santorum. Just 18 percent are that enthusiastic about Romney.

The one thing keeping Romney afloat is that he is still perceived as the strongest general election candidate. For some Republicans, that’s enough. But to survive the Santorum challenge, Romney needs to give primary voters something more, something positive. GOP voters want a reason to vote for him beyond the fact that he has the most money and the best organization.

Team Romney needs to acknowledge that Republican voters are not only strongly opposed to President Obama’s agenda but that they don’t think much of Washington Republicans, either. They want a president who would shake up the good old boys network in Washington rather than join it. To date, Romney’s attitude signals that he’d be more comfortable leading the club than challenging it.

Santorum has a very different challenge. First, he must survive the onslaught of ads coming from the Romney campaign. Then, he must convince Republican voters that he can win the general election in November. Electability is still the most important factor for Republican voters. If Santorum can neutralize the electability argument, he could become Romney’s worst nightmare.

The next primary competitions are slated for Feb. 28 in Arizona and Michigan. If Romney wins both states, the race will probably be over. However, if Santorum can pull off a victory that day, he will be far more than the latest flavor of the month.