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John Cronin

Fred Thompson Meeting With John McCain This Weekend–CNN

April 6th, 2008 | 11 Comments | Posted in F. Thompson, John McCain

This may be nothing or it could be a blockbuster. If McCain picks Thompson as his VP, I will breath a sigh of relief. I know that Gov. Romney threw his support to Senator McCain, as he should have, however, everyone who is a regular visitor at this site knows that Sen. McCain is not a favorite of mine. I just don’t want to see Gov. Romney get linked too closely with this ticket because of McCain’s recent support of the Amnesty bill.

If Thompson turns out to be McCain’s pick, this will free up Gov. Romney to become the Party’s new “rainmaker’, making good things happen for Republican candidates around the country.

I would be much more comfortable seeing Romney in that roll, rather than playing second fiddle to McCain for the next four years.

Even if a McCain/Thompson ticket makes it to the White House, based on FT’s low energy, half-hearted, quasi-campaign last year, I don’t think he could beat Romney in a primary challenge after his term as VP is over.

~~John Cronin~~

http://www.blogsforjohnmccain.com/fred-thompson-meeting-john-mccain-weekend
-cnn

CNN confirms that Fred Thompson will make a visit to McCain’s Sedona, Arizona home this weekend. Thompson, who ended his presidential bid in January, is a longtime friend of the Arizona senator.

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John Cronin

Great News from Virginia

Hat Tip to Lisarc and Matthew Clark

The good news just keep streaming in from Virginia!

~~John Cronin~~

Great news from here in Virginia . I just got a campaign update email from Randy Marcus the state Direct for Romney with the following line:

“Additionally, since Senator Thompson withdrew on Tuesday, I have personally received hundreds emails from people who have enlisted to join the Virginia Team Romney.” [Editor's note: emphasis mine]

This is great news for Romney showing that he is picking up real support among the Fred Heads. Maybe we can get to some Fred Head bloggers.

God Bless,

Matthew Clark

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Jeff Fuller

FredHeads Will Decide the GOP Nominee

January 22nd, 2008 | 16 Comments | Posted in 3-legged stool, F. Thompson

FredHeads will play a vital role in this race and WILL end up choosing the nominee, though, to their obvious chagrin, it will not be for their first choice candidate.

I’ve been watching and analyzing this race for two years now, reading and commenting nearly daily at forumns such as RedState, FreeRepublic, and Race42008. I’ve seen the slow dance of Fred’s entrance, his surge in popularity and polls, and his steady decline. I’ve debated with FredHeads about both Fred and Mitt, their strengths and weaknesses. Interestingly, there has been a significant “warming” to Mitt among FredHeads and vice-a-versa over the last several weeks. Most Mitt supporters I know have Fred #2 on their list (me included . . . though it’s a close call with Rudy because I like his executive experience).

Whether or not Fred officially drops out, it’s clear that he does not have a realistic shot at becoming the nominee. His supporters will probably join other camps shortly.

Two online polls taken in the wake of last Saturday’s results asked folks who they’d vote for in a “Fred-less” field.

Over at RedState (jokingly referred to as “FredState”) this poll was asked . . . and here are the results as of now:

Now that South Carolina is done, who will you vote for in your state?
Selection Votes
John McCain 14% 307
Mike Huckabee 6% 135
Rudy Giuliani 11% 233
Mitt Romney 68% 1,458
2,133 votes total

Over at HotAir.com (another very pro-Fred blog), the question was even more direct:

For Fred Supporters: If Fred Thompson drops out of the race, which major candidate would you support?
Selection Votes
Rudy Giuliani 15% 706
Mike Huckabee 4% 213
John McCain 7% 341
Mitt Romney 74% 3,535
4,795 votes total

There is much speculation that Fred will endorse McCain, so HotAir’s readership was asked if such an ensdorsement would effect their vote:

If Fred Thompson endorses John McCain, what impact would that have on your vote?
Selection Votes
No impact 88% 2,862
Somewhat more likely to vote for McCain 6% 205
Much more likely to vote for McCain 5% 172
3,239 votes total

Looks like FredHeads are the independent-minded voters that we’d expect of those supporting such a plain-spoken candidate.

For further evidence of FredHeads breaking for Mitt check out the comment section at HotAir (sorry, I didn’t read all 1400 of them).

Some are even calling for a Romney/Fred ticket! I wouldn’t have a problem with that personally. As Mitt supporters, we welcome any and all FredHeads into the fold.

Jeff Fuller

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Neal Jones

Fred and Mitt Unite?

January 21st, 2008 | 19 Comments | Posted in F. Thompson, Mitt Romney

Fred and Mitt Unite?

I just saw this among the My Man Mitt comments:

Fred to support Mitt!!
MittandFred.blogspot.com

How legit is this? Anyone know?

I went to their site and found the following:

Developing: Fred to Drop Out, Endorse Mitt

After months of campaigning, one thing is clear: Fred Thompson is a true conservative and an excellent candidate. He enhanced the race with his humor and simple honesty- and he helped keep the issues of illegal immigration, entitlement reform, and national security at the core of the debates.

However, after the first 6 primaries, one more thing is clear: Fred is not going to win the nomination. However, with his experience, popularity, and conservative credentials, Fred still has a lot to offer in this race.

Fortunately, Fred’s platform and personality work together perfectly to shore up the Republican establishment on a Romney-Thompson ticket.

Mitt is the only other guy left in the race that embraces economic, social, and national security conservativism. And, with Fred’s support in Florida, Mitt could secure the nomination.

I’m excited about the prospects, but left to wonder about the veracity. Anyone know for sure?

Update: I left comments on their site, asking about the veracity and this is what they just posted to my inquiries:

ainge family said…
This is not verifiable. Nothing has happened yet. The purpose of the blog is to push this alliance.

Hummmm. Looks like I was fooled. So, who knows what will happen.

Update II: I left a few more comments at their site. My last one chastised them for posting misleading information. I noticed they have since changed their title to a question about Fred endorsing Mitt.

I’m all for building unity between the two camps. We’re both very conservative, in general. But, no misinformation! Respect Fred and his supporters and await the announcement.

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Jeff Fuller

Post SC/NV Evangelical vs non-Evangelical Scorecard (with NV Mormon vote analysis)

Based on Exit polling from SC, NV, MI, NH, and IA (as well as real vote tallies from the five states–apologies to WY!):

Total voters thusfar: 1,731,000

Total “Evangelical/”"Born Again” voters: 734,200

Total non-Evangelical voters: 996,800

Evangelical Numbers
Percent of total votes cast that were from Evangelicals: 42%
Evangelical Voters by candidate:


Huckabee — 36%

Romney — 25%
McCain — 24%
Thompson — 10%
Paul — 4%
Giuliani — 1%
Before SC, Romney was tied with Huckabee at 31% each with the Evangelical voters. Huckabee has an undisputed “base” among Evangelicals, but both Romney and McCain have proven that they can get a significant portion of the “Evangelical vote.”

Non-Evangelical Numbers

Percent of total votes cast that were from non-Evangelicals: 58%

Non-Evangelical Voters by candidate:

Romney — 36%
McCain — 35%
Paul — 9%
Huckabee — 9%

Thompson — 6%
Giuliani — 5%
Yes folks . . . the appeal for Huckabee to non-Evangelical voters is on par with Ron Paul’s (before this Sat he actually trailed Ron Paul among non-Evangelical votes by quite a large margin). Huckabee definitely HAS NOT proven in any contest thus far that he can get non-Evangelicals to support him in large numbers.

Huck’s best showing for the non-Evangelical votes was 14% (both in IA and SC–4th place in both instances). In MI he got 8% of non-Evangelical votes. In NH he got just 6%, and in Nevada he got a Hunter-esque 3% of the non-Evangelical votes. This does not bode well for Huckabee from Feb 5th onward (let alone how in the world he could compete in a general election). He’s yet to prove that he can move beyond his base (and his gaffe-prone campaigning the last few weeks isn’t helping with any “outreach”). Additionally MI, NV, and even SC have shown that he’s even having a hard time “locking up” his Evangelical base effectively.

I maintain my position from last week’s similar post: Mike Huckabee’s sole purpose in this race right now is to dilute Romney’s access to social conservative voters so that McCain can win and then Huck can hope to be chosen as VP.

***************

Now onto the Mormon vote in Nevada. Most media outlets seemed to delight in repeating that Romney got 94% of the LDS vote in Nevada. It was repeated time and again as I watched the coverage live and many pundits said/inferred that this factor accounted for Romney’s win. Actually, if you subtracted out every single Mormon vote for Romney he still would have won by a double digit margin and had nearly double the votes of either of his next two competitors.

But others seemed to express dismay that one religious group would be so absolutely monolithic in it’s support. However, they fail to recognize that Dems NV Exit polling shows that 3% of those participating in the Democratic caucus were Mormons. I’m guessing NONE of them voted for Romney (sarcasm intended).

With voting totals around 115,000 in the Dem race (I saw that number on Fox News) that would come out to approximately 3500 LDS voters NOT voting for Romney in the Dem caucus.

By contrast, 25% of the GOP caucus in NV that were Mormon with nearly 45,000 total GOP voters — therefore around 11250 LDS voters and 94% of them were for Romney . . . but that means nearly 500 were not.

So, 4000 LDS in Nevada voted “Not for Romney” and 10,750 voted for Romney. That breaks down to 73% LDS for Romney and 27% LDS that were not for Romney. Not quite the absolutely robotic block-voting group that many media outlets are trying to play up, but, still, a solid base for Romney in the western/mountain states.

An interesting counter-argument about such huge LDS support for Mitt is that LDS have absolutely NO reservations about or aversion to Romney based on his religion, and can therefore view him outside of that context (while most non-LDS cannot) and therefore judge him solely on his record, experience, and issue stances. Romney surely hasn’t “pandered” to the LDS base like Huckabee has to his Evangelical base. Historically speaking, there was no huge LDS groundswell of support for Orrin Hatch in 2000, or Mo Udall back in the 70s. Similarly, Harry Reid is a guy that only a tiny fraction of LDS would ever consider voting for based on co-religiosity. In Romney most LDS are able to see, outside of the context of him having a “weird religion,” that he is an incredibly competent, faithful, successful, and articulate leader with a record of conservative governance and broad-based executive experience.

I’ve never thought there was any “upside” for Romney or his supporters to decry the hard or soft bigotry that he’s faced because of his religion. Most of us have know it exists, but it is something difficult to quantify. It is what it is and it’s hard to change, so why focus on it, right? No one likes a “whiner” and Romney certainly can’t be criticized for being one.

However, a recent study out of Vanderbilt University provides pretty convincing evidence that religious aversion to Romney is very real, but has hidden under the cover of his branding as a “flip-flopper.” The researchers conclude that such negative perceptions and labels have “stuck” to Romney because of underlying or overt theological misgivings about his religion.

Bias against Mitt Romney’s religion is one of the reasons that the tag “flip-flopper” sticks with the former Massachusetts governor but not his Republican opponents, according to Vanderbilt political scientist[s] . . .

“We find that of those who accuse Romney of flip-flopping, many admit it is Romney’s Mormonism and not his flip-flopping that is the real issue,” Benson said. “Our survey shows that 26 percent of those who accuse Romney of flip-flopping also indicate that Mormonism, not flip-flopping, is their problem with Romney.” Benson noted that the pattern is especially strong for conservative Evangelicals. According to the poll, 57 percent of them have a bias against Mormons.

The study’s findings suggest that criticizing Romney for flip-flopping is an effective campaign strategy because it sticks with two different groups: those who are genuinely concerned about Romney’s shifts on certain issues and those who use the label as cover for the fact that they do not want to vote for a Mormon for president.

“As the campaign continues to unfold, these data become increasingly relevant as the Republicans choose a presidential nominee,” Geer said.

Again, I present this not as a complaint or “whining” about it, but in an informational sense. Like Romney, I love data and believe in it’s power. Having this new data out there might help people see deeper into the dynamics of this race and self-analyze why there may be an aversion to Romney for which he can hardly be blamed. That he has succeeded and progressed despite this “handicap” is quite impressive IMO.

Thoughts?

Jeff Fuller

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David Kim

What happens to the Fred-heads once/if Fred drops out?

Interesting comment thread over at Townhall.com. It’s still early, but it looks like Mitt could be a real beneficiary if Fred throws in the towel.

Best case scenario: Fred drops out and endorses Mitt

Second best case scenario: Fred drops out and endorses nobody

Neutral case scenario: Fred drops out and endorses McCandidate (I think most Fred-Heads are smart enough to realize McCain’s flaws)

Worst case scenario: Fred stays in, dies a slow and painful death, and siphons off enough votes to enable a McCandidate/Duckabee ticket which goes on to lose to the Dems.

Taking a page from Vic Lundquist…let’s all make nice with the Fred-heads and join forces to stop McCandidate!

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John Cronin

Are We About To Witness The End Of The Clinton’s Presidential Hopes?

As I watched the NH primary coverage tonite and saw the video of Hillary tearing up as she talked about the stress of the campaign trail, I couldn’t help but reminisce about the wild ride that the Clinton’s have taken us all on during their time on the political stage.

I remember watching Bill Clinton address the Democratic Convention in 1988. I had heard the name several times, but at that time I had never heard him speak. I remember thinking, “So this is that Southern governor I have been hearing about.” He had a very average speaking style, and it seemed to me that he mostly just strung platitudes together and gave long, “meaningful” looks at his audience. One of the things that struck me about that speech was how Bill Clinton loved the sound of his own voice. He droned on and on and toward the end, the Democratic delegates were booing and heckling him! Did that cause him to bring the speech to a swift solution? No way. If the audience had eggs and tomatoes available, I am sure they would have flung them at the Governor.

Imagine my surprise, when four years later the Left, aided and abetted by the MSM, foisted this same Bill Clinton upon an unsuspecting public!

Draft dodging, “loathing the military”, smoking but “not inhaling”, trying to define “what ‘is’ is”, Gennifer Flowers, “don’t ask, don’t tell”, Janet Reno, firing cruise missiles at aspirin factories, Monica Lewinski, “I feel your pain”, impeachment, last minute pardons of a rogues’ gallery of campaign contributors and police characters, these are and will remain Bill Clinton’s legacy.

As we begun the campaign a year ago Hillary Clinton looked formidable. The heir apparent of the White House by virtue of the backing of the vaunted “Clinton Machine”, what then appeared to be virtually limitless cash,the darling of the Hollywood glitterati and the recipient of mostly glowing articles by the liberal press, it didn’t seem possible that anyone could snatch the brass ring from her hand. But that was then and this is now.

One year later the speculation has started to percolate up into the headlines that HRC may be contemplating withdrawing from the race if she gets blown out by O’bama in the NH primary. If these stories turn out to be true and she is forced to withdraw from the race, I will breath a sigh of relief, not because I take any personal pleasure in her situation, but only because I see a threat to the well being of this country thankfully receding.

On a more upbeat note, it was good to see Governor Romney dominate the debate at the FOX forum last night and to see the way the “dial group” was so dramatically converted after viewing the forum. Huckabee looked weak and evasive to me, McCain comes across as arrogant and mean spirited, Rudy and Fred weren’t much of a factor. So that leaves the only “full spectrum conservative” in the race, Gov. Romney, as the candidate best suited to bring change to Washington and to start the process of restoring conservative principles into the way we govern.

~~John Cronin~~


I know no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves; and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion.”

Thomas Jefferson: Letter to William Charles Jarvis, Sept. 28, 1820

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Ann Marie Curling

Key Iowa Endorsements

December 31st, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Endorsements, F. Thompson, Iowa, John McCain, Mike Huckabee

MITT ROMNEY
Legislative
Sen. Jim Hahn, Muscatine
Sen. David Johnson, Ocheyden
Sen. Dave Mulder, Sioux City
Sen. Brad Zaun, Urbandale
Rep. Rich Anderson, Clarinda
Rep. Betty De Boef, What Cheer
Rep. Dave Deyoe, Nevada
Rep. Greg Forristall, Macedonia
Rep. Linda Miller, Bettendorf
Rep. Steve Olson, DeWitt
Rep. Christopher Rants, Sioux City
Rep. Chuck Soderberg, LeMars
Rep. Doug Struyk, Council Bluffs
Rep. Dave Tjepkes, Gowrie
Rep. Jodi Tymeson, Winterset
Rep. Ralph Watts, Adel
Rep. Tami Wiencek, Waterloo

Other

Doug Gross, 2002 gubernatorial nominee
Brian Kennedy, 2006 1st CD candidate
Fmr. House Speaker Brent Siegrist
Fmr. Senate Majority Leader Stew Iverson
Fmr. Rep. Jim Kurtenbach
Debi Durham, 2002 lt. gov. nominee

Newspaper

Marshalltown Times-Republican
Sioux City Journal
The Daily Nonpareil (Council Bluffs)


JOHN MCCAIN

Legislative
Rep. Steve Lukan, New Vienna
Rep. Mike May, Spirit Lake
Rep. Rod Roberts, Carroll
Rep. Bill Schickel, Mason City
Rep. Walt Tomenga, Johnston,
Sen. Larry McKibben, Marshalltown
Sen. John Putney, Gladbrook
Sen. Pat Ward, West Des Moines
Other
Dave Roederer
Chuck Larson, Fmr. Sen. and former RPI chair
Fmr. Congressman Greg Ganske
Fmr. Auditor Dick Johnson
Fmr. Sen. Jeff Lamberti
Fmr. Sen. Julie Hosch
Fmr. Sen. Pat Shey
Fmr. Rep. Ralph Klemme
Newspaper
Des Moines Register
Daily Iowan
Iowa State Daily
Quad City Times
Woodbine Twiner

FRED THOMPSON
Congress
U.S. Rep. Steve King
Legislative
Rep. Clel Baudler, Greenfield
Rep. Royd Chambers, Sheldon
Rep. Sandy Greiner, Washington
Rep. Jeff Kaufmann, Wilton
Rep. Kraig Paulsen, Hiawatha
Rep. Jamie Van Fossen, Davenport
Rep. Gary Worthan, Storm Lake
Other
Bill Salier, 2002 Senate nominee
Fmr. Sen. Bob Brunkhorst
Newspaper
Ottumwa Courier

MIKE HUCKABEE

Legislative
Rep. Dwayne Alons, Hull
Rep. Carmine Boal, Ankeny
Sen. David Hartsuch, Bettendorf

Other
Bob Vander Plaats
Chuck Hurley
Fmr. Rep. Danny Carroll
Urbandale Mayor Bob Andeweg

Newspaper
Iowa City Press-Citizen
Sheldon Northwestern Iowa Review
Valley News Today (daily)

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Thomas Alan

SotR: Oddsmaking

December 30th, 2007 | 3 Comments | Posted in F. Thompson, John McCain, Mike Huckabee, Rudy Giuliani

We’re about 110 hours away from the voting beginning in Iowa! And it’s time for me to play the odds for the nomination:

Gov. Romney: 40%

Well, I’m a realist, and I know that a hundred things can go right and wrong between now and 2/5. However, this shot is better than I would have given even two days ago. I don’t trust the ARG poll showing Gov. Romney up by nine in Iowa, but the momentum is decidedly in Gov. Romney’s favor heading into the home stretch while Gov. Huckabee has become a gaffe machine on any subject of substance. Gov. Romney’s path to victory seems strong Iowa->Wyoming->New Hampshire->Michigan->S. Carolina for the final test.

Sen. McCain: 25%

Prediction: If Gov. Huckabee wins in Iowa, Sen. McCain will be our nominee. The media is getting to crown their prince again, and, like it or not, they have the power to do it sometimes. Gov. Romney will have an outside shot, but not a good one. However, I don’t believe it will come to that and Gov. Romney will win Iowa. Will he still win New Hampshire? A week ago I thought he’d walk to a victory there with a win in Iowa. Today I’m not 100% on that. It’s possible that Sen. McCain can win there and set up a Romney/McCain race. But, even then, Gov. Romney’s resources gvie him the advantage.

Gov. Huckabee: 14%

Wow, what an impressive bust Gov. Huckabee has been as a frontrunner. This, ladies and gentlemen, is why candidate explosions without the proper vetting are so dangerous (see Sen. Kerry for example #2). I question whether Gov. Huckabee could defeat Sen. Edwards in the general. He still has an outside shot at the nomination because he might still win in Iowa and pull off some sort of a run in the southern states, but I’m detecting a definite slacking in enthusiasm here.

Giuliani: 5%

Giuliani should have contested heavily in the early states. He’s waiting for Florida and is hoping that people remember him after a series of 5th place finishes for a month. Good luck with that strategy.

Sen. Thompson: 1%

Sen. Thompson has no clear path to the nomination. The best scenerio I can think of begins with a 2nd place finish in Iowa and then…I don’t know. In good news, thanks to the writers’ strike his acting career really hasn’t taken that much of a hit.

No One: 15%

The stars might just align and give us something we haven’t seen in decades: A party convention that actually matters. Giuliani is probably going to win a ton of delegates in New York/New Jersey no matter what happens to his candidacy. If Gov. Romney and a rival not named Giuliani start splitting up the country, the arithmatic for a brokered convention starts getting more and more likely.

~~~Thomas

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Ann Marie Curling

Romney Catching Huckabee In New Iowa Poll

According to the new —>Strategic Vision Poll out of Iowa, Governor Romney is a mere 2% behind Huckabee.

Here are the Results:

1. If the 2008 Republican presidential caucus were held today between Rudy Giuliani, Mike Huckabee, Duncan Hunter, John McCain, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, and Fred Thompson, for whom would you vote? (Republicans Only; Names Rotated)
Mike Huckabee 29%
Mitt Romney 27%
Fred Thompson 15%
John McCain 14%
Rudy Giuliani 4%
Ron Paul 4%
Duncan Hunter 1%
Undecided 6%

Keep in mind of the Undecideds above at 6%.

Thought it was very good news for Governor Romney considering the following Huckabee has garnered of late.

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David Kim

Romney is the Real Deal

Great article from Ronald Kessler over at Newsmax on why Mitt is the best candidate. The whole thing is worth a read.

More »

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Jeff Fuller

Re-Re-Update on King Endorsing Fred . . . I think he even surprised himself

I know I posted a link to this Iowans for ROmney post earlier today . . . but have since added 2 updates (one that gives my theory behind it and how it may effect the Iowa race, and the other that quotes an NBC article where a reporter who was there thought the endorsement was written for Romney as well . . . also a link to the audio of the press conference)

Jeff Fuller

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John Cronin

Romney Wins Southern California Straw Poll

From our fellow Romney supporter over at Free Republic, RedGirlInABlueState, the results of the So. Cal. voting.

“First in the South”
Southern California Straw Poll Results

(SAN DIEGO) — Last night the Republican Party of San Diego County held its “first-in-the-south” Southern California Presidential Straw Poll at the Rancho Bernardo Inn Golf Resort and Spa as part of its annual Salute to Republican Elected Officials.

512 Republican enthusiasts of voting age from Orange, Imperial, Riverside and San Diego Counties RSVD’d to participate in the event and the Presidential straw poll.

Balloting systems were provided by Unisyn Voting Solutions, a new state of the art voting systems manufacturer. Official results of the straw poll:

Of those attending, 313 cast ballots.

* Mitt Romney 37% 117 votes
* Ron Paul 23% 73 votes
* Rudy Giuliani 16% 51 votes
* Duncan Hunter 12% 36 votes
* Mike Huckabee 4% 14 votes
* John McCain 4% 12 votes
* Fred Thompson 3% 10 votes
* Tom Tancredo 0% 0 votes

Republican Party Chairman Tony Krvaric noted, “We are very pleased with the high level of interest in our straw poll. Straw polls demonstrate the organizational strength and unity of purpose between grassroots enthusiasts, donors, and the campaign organization. The high activity by supporters from the various Presidential campaigns shows the passion with which Republicans will campaign - united - for our eventual nominee to go up against the Democrats.”

~~John Cronin~~

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John Cronin

Religion As Red Herring

As I read headline after headline about Mitt Romney’s faith and his upcoming speech I can’t help but come to the conclusion that all this hand wringing, in the final analysis, comes down to this: It’s mainly a red herring to distract us from the real issues.

I have tried to be moderate in my criticism of Evangelicals who say that Romney shares their core values……but…..

You know what’s coming after the pause.

I hate to say it, but I am getting embarrassed by these folks who say they are pro life, pro family, pro military and who profess to want to see this country led by someone of similar values.

And yet their constant criticism of the only candidate who agrees with them on all of their “hot button” issues is really becoming tedious. The level of agreement in so high, that the only thing that they have left to criticize is Romney’s religion.

It’s not only a political mistake, it’s morally wrong. I’m picking up a very condescending tone in their pronouncements. As Christians we are instructed to “judge not, lest ye be judged.”

They give the impression that they and they alone posses the moral high ground. As they survey the political landscape they bemoan the situation that no candidate can quite scale the heights that they have climbed. No one, with the possible exception of Mile Huckabee. BTW, I am including Huckabee amongst those who have nominated themselves for Pastor-in-chief. I’m tired of candidates who, if the reports are true, have some ethical problems of their own, yet still feel free to look down their noses at other denominations.

The bottom line is simply this. Huckabee will take us down to defeat because he is so wrong on the immigration issue. Giuliani will take us down to defeat because he is so wrong on several other issues. Fred Thompson will take us down to defeat because he has become a laughing stock.

That leaves Mitt Romney as the only “firewall” we have against a Clinton presidency. I hope that some of the people in the Evangelical bloc of voters who are wavering in their commitment to a Romney candidacy will reassess their position and come to the realization that they must put this red herring behind them and wake up to the fact that they are being manipulated into handing this election to the people who will dismantle everything that they have accomplished over the last decade.

~~John Cronin~~

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Ann Marie Curling

Past post that I wanted to bring to your attention, regarding Fred and The Huck

December 1st, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Ann Coulter, F. Thompson, Mike Huckabee, Mitt Romney

Click here —–>Ann Coulter on Fred Thompson and Mike Huckabee.

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