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John Cronin

Murtha pleas for $1 million after racism comments

October 30th, 2008 | 10 Comments | Posted in Congress, Iraq, Pennsylvania, Polls, Saturday Night Live, Veterans

It seems that Jack Murtha, the King of Pork, has used a weapon of mass destruction, his mouth, to get to the point where Bill Russell is within striking distance of retiring the man who slandered the Haditha Marines in one of the most shameful episodes in American political history.

If Bill Russell is successful this Tuesday night in defeating the man who said these Marines “murdered innocent civilians” only to see them exonerated or having the charges dropped, you may be able to hear me celebrating in Missouri from Pennsylvania.

~~John Cronin~~

http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/murtha-pleas-for-1-million-after-racism-comments-2008-10-30.html

By Roxana Tiron

Veteran Democratic Rep. John Murtha (Pa.) has sent out a last-minute plea for $1 million to save his hotly contested seat, endangered by his own remarks describing his district as racist.

In an e-mail sent to potential donors, Murtha’s campaign asked his supporters to maximize all campaign contributions.

“We need to raise another $1 million to compete,” his campaign fundraiser Susan O’Neill wrote in the e-mail obtained by The Hill. “We need money immediately.”

O’Neill blamed Republicans from outside Pennsylvania for Murtha’s problems. Polls show Murtha, running for his 18th term, ahead of his GOP opponent by just a few percentage points.

“Congressman Murtha is in a brutal reelection campaign,” O’Neill wrote. “The Swift Boaters have put up a candidate from Virginia and have raised millions of dollars against Congressman Murtha. In addition, other 527s and the [National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC)] have spent millions to smear Congressman Murtha on TV, radio and in newspapers.”

Murtha’s race appeared to tighten after he called his western Pennsylvania district a “racist area.” After apologizing, he added more fuel to the fire by saying the district was, until recently, “really redneck.”

Murtha’s comments have been widely repeated, and the congressman was even parodied on “Saturday Night Live.”

In a fundraising e-mail sent on Thursday, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) asked her own supporters to help Murtha. “In Pennsylvania, my good friend John Murtha — a strong supporter for me during the primaries and an important voice against the war in Iraq — is depending on your help to win,” Clinton wrote.

GOP challenger William Russell, a 46-year-old Iraq war veteran and retired Army colonel, has outraised Murtha so far. As of Oct. 15, Russell had raised $2.9 million compared to Murtha’s $2.2 million.

Political action committees can donate up to $5,000 to candidates, while individuals may donate up to $2,300.

Murtha, a close ally of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), is a welcome target for Republicans, who otherwise are headed toward what appears to be a gloomy election night.

Russell moved from Virginia to run for Congress because of Murtha’s criticisms of the Iraq war.

Murtha’s comments about western Pennsylvania being racist have emboldened Republicans to give last-minute help to Russell.

Murtha, a decorated war veteran, first won his seat in a 1974 special election by a little more than 100 votes.

The NRCC this week bought a television ad that highlighted Murtha’s remarks. Separately, former Sen. Fred Thompson (R-Tenn.) accused Murtha in a radio spot of “insulting his own constituents” and “apparently forgetting who he works for.”

Murtha is the chairman of the House Appropriations Defense subcommittee. He has been very successful in the federal earmarking process, ranking as the highest recipient of earmarks in the defense appropriations bill.

His earmarks have revitalized Johnstown, the largest city in his district, and defense companies have opened offices and facilities throughout the region he represents.

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John Cronin

GOP Runs Low, But McCain Runs Strong In Poll

As you know I have been beating the drum for us to get involved in Republican Congressional races, knowing that this looks to be a very tough year for the Party. According to the WSJ, McCain looks like he is in a position to run a competitive race, but with the approval numbers so low for the party nationwide, Senator McCain will not be able to get anything passed unless we step up to the plate and try to get back a Republican majority.

~~John Cronin~~

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120959262155757509.html?mod=hpp_us_whats_news

• The Wall Street Journal – McCain runs even with Dems even though GOP is running low in poll: “Only 27% of voters have positive views of the Republican Party, according to the latest Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll, the lowest level for either party in the survey’s nearly two-decade history. Yet the party’s probable presidential nominee, Sen. John McCain, continues to run nearly even with Democratic rivals Sen. Barack Obama and Sen. Hillary Clinton. His standing so far makes for a more competitive race for the White House than would be expected for Republicans, who face an electorate that overwhelmingly believes the country is headed in the wrong direction under President Bush.”

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John Cronin

Beatty Woos Locals In Bid for Kerry’s Seat

This morning I spoke with Kate Cantwell who works in the Beatty campaign office. She had some very good news about the race for Kerry’s Senate seat.

A Rasmussen poll has Beatty statistically tied with Kerry (within the margin of error) at: Kerry 48%, Beatty 45%.

I would like to ask for your help in getting Jeff Beatty elected to the U.S. Senate. If you can donate to his campaign, please go to his website at: www.jeffbeatty.com and help this former Delta Force member in his fight against John Kerry who has $10,000,000 in his campaign coffers.

~~John Cronin~~

Jeff Beatty: ‘I’m a proud member of the middle class’

By Shaun Sutner TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
ssutner@telegram.com

When Jeffrey K. Beatty marched in Worcester’s St. Patrick’s parade, he knew he was wading into a Democratic stronghold that has always been kind to the famous incumbent he is waging a somewhat long-shot campaign to unseat: U.S. Sen. John F. Kerry.

Mr. Beatty, a 55-year-old Republican from Harwich, claims he made some headway on that chilly March 9 with a few union workers who engaged him in some friendly chitchat.

His message on the economy, he says, ought to resonate among such working, middle-class voters. He wants to cut taxes, roll-back gasoline prices and trim government spending.

He said that, in contrast, his opponent is a globe-trotter who has proposed gas tax hikes.

“He doesn’t get it,” said Mr. Beatty, who is retired from a career in the U.S. Army, CIA and FBI and running a small security business. “He doesn’t have any contact with the lives most of us lead. I’m a proud member of the middle class.”

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Ann Marie Blodgett

McCain Leading Both Obama and Clinton

Seems the nastiness going on between Sens Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are making them both dirty, and beneficiary of all the dirt is Sen. John McCain the guaranteed Republican nominee.

You can check out the article at Reuters.

Highlights:

The poll showed Arizona Sen. McCain, who has clinched the Republican presidential nomination, is benefiting from the lengthy campaign battle between Obama and Clinton, who are now battling to win Pennsylvania on April 22.

McCain leads 46 percent to 40 percent in a hypothetical matchup against Obama in the November presidential election, according to the poll.

Cross Posted at www.annmarieisme.com

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Ann Marie Blodgett

New Poll

What would you do if John McCain picked Mike Huckabee as his VP?

  • Hold My Nose and Vote for McCain (13%, 95 Votes)
  • Stay Home & Not Vote At All (8%, 61 Votes)
  • Write In Romney (57%, 431 Votes)
  • Vote for the Democrat (10%, 74 Votes)
  • Vote Third Party (5%, 36 Votes)
  • I don’t know (8%, 63 Votes)

Total Voters: 760

Vote

Loading ... Loading …

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John Cronin

Romney’s Ideal Victory

Hat Tip to Ranzel for bringing this excellent analysis to our attention. Mitt Romney is nailing down the Reagan coalition.

~~John Cronin~~

Romney’s Ideal Victory

By Chris Suellentrop

NEW YORK TIMES

Tags: Florida, John McCain, Mitt Romney

Does Mitt Romney have a victory to cling to in Florida? Joshua Trevino, vice president for public policy at San Francisco’s Pacific Research Institute (and one of the founders of the conservative blog RedState), breaks down the numbers on his personal blog.

“Mitt Romney is in a bad way,” Trevino writes. “He blew through $10 million in Iowa and lost; and outspent McCain eight to one in Florida, and lost that too. But for all this, Mitt Romney is not done yet and the reason lies in the breakdown of this evening’s Florida vote.” He continues:

CNN has the exit-poll numbers, and they reveal some surprising things:

* Romney won pro-lifers.
* Romney won the mainstream religious. (Huckabee won the very religious ­ less than one-fifth of the pool.)
* Romney won the Protestants.
* Romney tied Huckabee with Evangelicals.
* Romney won the pro-GWB voters.
* Romney is the primary second choice of Giuliani voters, Thompson voters …. and McCain voters.
* Romney won the immigration hard-liners.
* Romney won the upper-middle class, earning between $100,000 and $200,000 annually.
* Romney won the terrorism-oriented voters.
* Romney won the self-identified conservatives and the self-identified very conservative.
* Romney won the values-oriented voters.
* Romney won the white voters.
* Romney won the tax-cutting voters.

In short, Mitt Romney won the Republican Party’s idea of itself ­ and that, too, is a big deal. If you’re white, Protestant, anti-abortion, go to church on Sundays, think well of the President, want lower taxes, hate terrorists, make a good living, want to do something about immigration, and live in Florida, chances are you voted Romney. The question before Florida was whether McCain could win a closed Republican race, and now we know he can. The question now is whether he can win conservatives ­ and in Florida, he did not.

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Vic Lundquist

The 900-Pound Gorilla — RELIGIOUS BIGOTRY

Flag Waving

Though I provide analysis below, I do not suggest I have answers to the questions I raise. But I do raise questions that I think are of critical importance and consideration; not just to this current presidential contest, but more importantly to America. These are questions I think nobody wants to discuss (see photo below).

Tonight (1/29), I have heard the term “lick their wounds” several times. That is not at all how I feel about the loss in Florida. It is fair to say, I believe, that America as a nation, has matured in its history to a point in which a woman or a black man can be elected President by a majority of both sexes and a majority of those of the white or black races. I believe that America has come of age to the point that the bigotry we call sexism and racism, though still engrained in some people, has been marginalized.

What about the bigotry of religious intolerance? In an enlightened age, it is known by all that bigotry of any kind is not acceptable. In this modern day, we don’t generally hear statements of bigotry in common language in ways that were pervasive as recent as the 1950s and 1960s. Religious bigotry was even out in the open at that time as evidenced by evangelical ministers that routinely and publicly denounced the idea that Americans might vote for a Catholic. Today, bigotry of any kind, as a matter of common discussion in mixed company, is simply unacceptable in today’s diverse age. As a result, we do not hear public discussion about religious bigotry. Does that mean that this form of bigotry has also been marginalized to the point America can elect a Mormon? I do not believe it has. In fact, I think it is still pervasive, if now private.

In the states in which GMR won the Silver, by how much did he miss the Gold? Usually around 5%, maybe 10%. Today, he missed the Gold by 6% in a very large state. Since I began to seriously pay attention to presidential politics for 2008 back in 2006, I have seen poll results showing that a fair number of Americans are unwilling to ever vote for a Mormon; anywhere from about 20% of those surveyed to 40% recently. Since I have always concluded that America has matured to the point at which religious intolerance has been effectively marginalized, I more or less dismissed those poll numbers as based on simple ignorance, not bigotry.

Then, as the early state caucuses and primaries became history, I started to see a trend that I saw repeated today in Florida. It is fair to say that a majority of Americans do not find McCain acceptable as President as evidenced by his votes of 35% compared to 65% to all others. But to understand whether bigotry is at work against MR specifically, we need to drill down into the numbers. Is it not also fair to say that the most conservative voters of all would not be generally attracted to McCain, who is a well-known liberal Republican, or at least a Republican that cannot be trusted?

[In order to keep this commentary from becoming longer than it is, I use only the initials of candidates’ first and last names and any time there is a number, it represents a percentage]

In Florida, among evangelicals, the votes were JM(30), MR(29), MH(29). We can conclude that the 29 who voted for MR are not bigots. My presumption is that the reason MH’s 29 did not go to JM is because they consider him way too liberal to represent their values and principles. But if MH were not in the race, would all 29 go to MR? As you think about that answer, if they would not all go to MR, why would any significant portion of them go to JM? Incidentally, as MH keeps smiling and telling the world he can be the nominee, he knows he cannot. He won exactly 4 of all non-evangelical votes; that is par for the course for him. Since day one in Iowa, there has never been broad support for MH. Why does he stay in the race?

White evangelicals voted this way: MH(31), MR(31), JM(28). I think it is fair to say that those who voted for JM would be the more moderate or less orthodox evangelicals, simply because they could have chosen an orthodox evangelical in MH, and they did not. If true, and MH were not in the race, would MH’s 31 go to JM or MR and why? Why would an orthodox evangelical vote for the more liberal, twice married, untrustworthy Republican when they have MR, whose values and principles are much closer to theirs by comparison?

Of voters who think abortion should be illegal, the votes were MR(35), JM(29), MH (21). These are very conservative voters. We know 35 are not bigots and since MR won the majority here, we know that a very high percentage of voters know him to be strong pro-life. If MH were not in the race, would most of his 21 go to MR or JM and why? Of voters who think abortion should always be illegal, the votes were MH(32), MR(30), and JM(26). These voters are even more conservative overall. If MH were not in the race, would most of his 32 go to the more conservative candidate MR? If they would not, why not? Why would more than a handful go to JM instead of MR? Could bigotry influence their decision to go to JM?

Voters that identified themselves as very conservative were MR(44), JM(21), MH(20). It is well known by now that MR is the most conservative of both JM and MH. That being the case, if MH were not in the race, would his ‘very conservative’ voters go to the known, more conservative MR or to the less conservative, more liberal JM? And why? Could bigotry influence their decision to go to JM?

Over at Evangelicals for Mitt, both Steven Muscatello and Nancy French think MH should do “the honorable thing” and drop out. Read their excellent arguments here and here. But think of the context of my rhetorical questions above and consider this. If RG could so easily see the vanity of continuing the race, knowing he could never win, why can MH not see it? Or is it that he sees it and has ulterior motives? Think of the irony. RG, the person many have derided as ethically challenged, drops out seeing the reality; there are no ulterior motives really. MH, whose supporters consider the most ethical and upstanding man in the race, who would consider himself the most humble among them all, plans to “win the nomination” to quote him. Right. And pigs will fly for the first time in February. We now have resounding proof that MH cannot garner more than 10% of all non-evangelical votes and he has only nearly received 40% of all evangelical votes in one state. Clearly, he has no broad support, unlike GWB did as an evangelical. So, his decision to stay in the race is based on what? Ego? Vanity? Love of the sport? Is he lying to us when he says he is not running for Pastor in Chief? Or does he want to influence his voters away from MR and if so, why?

As many at this site have shown, MH revealed his stripes when he let slip his rhetorical Jesus/brother question in an interview. He also ardently campaigned in Salt Lake City to save the Mormons there from hell at the evangelical convention.

My opinion is that the frequent citing of 20 to 40 percent of all Americans unwilling to vote for a Mormon for President, the bigots are at the low end of the range. I may be naïve, but I do not believe that 40% of all Americans are religious bigots. Now, we know that when MR loses the Gold, the margin of loss is only 5% to 10%. That margin of difference is well below the 20% conservative estimate. Where are those 20% or so aligned? Are they divided among RG, MH, and JM? Are they mostly with MH or JM?

My conclusion is that the margin of victory that JM has enjoyed in any state, is a direct correlation to the reported bigotry still pervasive in America. If so, how does MR overcome this obvious bigotry, to win? These less than 20% “unwilling voters” are currently aligned with RG, JM, and MH, in some unknown mix. But knowing this does not help, does it? By definition, if they are bigots, MR will never be their choice. It cannot be argued that all 20% of these “unwilling” voters are in JM’s camp. Yet, it is he that is the beneficiary of their unwillingness to ever vote for MR. And clearly not all of the supporters left in RG’s and MH’s camp are bigots; but some are. So it is fair to say that if both RG and MH were not in the race, a fair number of their non-bigoted supporters would back the most conservative candidate in the race — MR. And why are the voters not following Rush Limbaugh’s advice to not vote for JM and MH?

So again, what is the motivation of MH to remain in a race he knows he cannot and will not win? Is his primary motivation to steer as many evangelicals to the Protestant JM, away from MR? If so, is that reason enough to not drop out of the race?

I think this issue is the 900-pound gorilla in the room with which nobody wants to make eye contact.

~ Vic

[Source of exit poll information above: CNN Politics]
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NOTE: Any comment left at this post that is primarily religious based or which contains vitriol, is antagonistic, or generally obnoxious, will be deleted without notice. Please set a standard of discussion that is productive and illuminating. If you have religious opinions, please leave them out of the discussion at this post.

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Stephanie Davis

Mitchell Poll Out Today Shows Mitt Ahead

January 29th, 2008 | 42 Comments | Posted in Florida, McCain, Mitchell, Mitt Romney, Poll, Polls

H/T to reader Marybeth!  I am generally very skeptical of the polls.  However, Mitchell polling has an excellent track record of predicting the winner.

Romney Takes 2% Lead Over McCain in Florida, Giuliani Takes Over Third Place Alone  

Romney 34%, McCain 32%, Giuliani 13%, Huckabee 10% EAST LANSING, Mich.— U.S. Sen. John McCain, who had a 2% lead after polling Sunday night, now finds himself trailing former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney 34%-32% according to results of a telephone poll conducted Sunday and Monday nights  January 27-28, 2008.  Rudy Giuliani, who was tied with Mike Huckabee at 12%, has now taken a 3% lead over Huckabee (13%-10%).  Ron Paul has 3%, and 7% are undecided..        

     The telephone poll of likely voters in the Florida Republican Primary Election was conducted by Mitchell Interactive, an East Lansing, Michigan and Washington, DC based national political polling and market research company.  The survey of 964 likely Republican Presidential Primary voters has a margin of error of +-3.16% at the 95% level of confidence.

        “This is basically a dead heat.  Romney gained a point since last night while McCain dropped 3%.  A major change came from those who have already voted.  On Sunday night, Romney and McCain were tied among the 33% who said they already voted.  After Monday night’s polling, Romney had a 9% lead among those voters.  Romney also cut McCain’s lead among those who say they will be “definitely voting” from 4% in Sunday’s polling to 2% at the end of polling on Monday night,” Steve Mitchell, president of Mitchell Interactive said. 

       Romney leads by less than 1% with women but has a 3% lead with men, who comprise 53% of the voters.  

        Romney leads with 60 year old plus voters by 1% (on Sunday night he trailed by 1%) and leads among 40-59 year olds by 5% (on Sunday night he led by 2%).  McCain has a lead with 18-39 year old voters, but they make up the smallest age demographic.

      “It looks as though this we will not know the winner of the Florida Republican Primary until all the votes have been counted,” Mitchell concluded. 

    Mitchell Interactive’s final poll in South Carolina showed McCain winning by 3%, he won by 3%.  In Michigan, the company was the only pollster polling during the last week to have Romney ahead.  Its final poll had Romney leading by 6%, he won by 9%.

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Paul Johnson

Defending against dishonesty

How do you defend against attacks that are purely dishonest? Barack Obama had to struggle with that issue last week when the Clinton machine went after him. Perhaps we can take solace in his resounding win in the Democratic contest that took place yesterday. But I believe the short answer to that question is: control the message (i.e., change the subject).

Readers here know what McCain said about Mitt’s comments weren’t true. I’d seen the clip McCain was referring to weeks ago, and there was nothing in there about Mitt proposing or supporting a timetable for withdrawal: it was about whether there may be a Bush administration timetable and how if there was one it was important not to share any such timetable with our enemies. So why the manipulation of the facts by McCain? As others have said here, it’s likely that he’s seen his lead slip in Florida and felt he needed to do something to change the subject. So let’s change it back.

Unfortunately, as Senator McCain likes to say when he’s not the source of the attack, “you don’t mud wrestle with a pig, because you both get dirty and the pig likes it.” Of course it’s quite hyporcritical for McCain to be doing what he did today (e.g., abandoning “straight talk” and his “principles,” going negative, criticizing Mitt for a position McCain endorsed, etc.). But it’s apparent a discussion of any topic but the economy would be an improvement for him.

So let’s remind ourselves of what Mitt’s message is:

1. Washington is broken. Nothing serves as better evidence of this than McCain’s recent attacks. If we want more of the same we can send the same sorts of people back to Washington. McCain has been there 24 years; now he wants to be President. If we obliged, it’s hard for me to see how things would change, in particular given McCain’s legendary inability to work well with others in the Senate and the vendettas / back room favors he’ll owe if he goes back.

2. The economy needs Mitt. Since the days of Clinton and before, it’s always been about the economy. You can’t have a strong national defense if we dont have manufacturing and a strong economy at home. You can’t be a strong nation if you have to buy all your equipment from your enemies. And the American economy won’t be strong if we can’t keep the jobs from flowing out to our overseas competitors. So we need to send someone to Washington who has an intimate knowledge of the economy and can fix the many manifestations of problems we’ve had recently: stock market crashes, surging oil prices, real estate collapse, mortgage melt down, etc. Unfortunately, John McCain does not have the requisite experience, and has repeatedly said he’d have to find someone else to help him with this issue. McCain didn’t support the Bush tax cuts, then he did. Then he said he wanted to cut government spending to stimulate the economy. Unfortunately in the short run cutting spending would harm the economy and make it more likely to push the country into recession, or at least offset the benefits of any tax rebates. Unfortunately, as he’s said himself, he just doesn’t know enough about economics.

3. Mitt stands for strong families, and he wants to appoint judges to the Supreme Court that will read the Constitution as the framers intended it, not in a manner that creates new laws without a democratic process. Not all the other candidates have this same priority. McCain in fact has gone up against his own party on the issue of judges being appointed, and has a very spotty record on issues of family values.

4. Mitt stands for legal immigration, but “turning off the magnet” on illegal immigration. McCain very recently proposed a bill that would have allowed illegal aliens to stay in the country indefinitely. His own party rejected this stance only a few months ago, but he seems ill-at-ease saying he was wrong.

We’ve got lots of positive parts of our own message to spread without getting distracted by McCain’s attack. I’m positive that staying on message will benefit Mitt incredibly (as it’s done in Florida so far), while indulging in mud wrestling allows the media to just report on the wrestling match. I’m hoping that the media really gives it to McCain today for his intentional misrepresentations, but even if they don’t, let’s keep on task and keep spreading our own message.

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Brent Koch

…Head to Head Polls…

I am in wonderment as to why the MSM pays any attention to the Head to Head polls when we have not even finished the primaries. I know that it is fun for them to speculate and it makes news, but polls on this national level mean nothing. If I was to look at this logically why would we, as the republican party, want to send McCain up against Hillary. Politically it would be like a Brother and Sister running against each other for President of the U.S. Are we so blind that we cannot see that rotating chairs in Washington with people that have been their for so many years is not a good idea. Why do you think that the most successful coporations higher their CEO from outside unless they were groomed specicially for the role. This process would not take 30 years. OOOOOOOOh I forgot this is washington, not the real world…

Brent

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John Cronin

Hill v. Mitt Will Be It

Interesting article focusing on the voters being able to cut through the media fog.

~~John Cronin~~

http://www.webcommentary.com/asp/ShowArticle.asp?id=gaynorm&date=080126

WEBCOMMENTARY.COM

BY: MICHAEL GAYNOR

The Republicans’ Florida debate demonstrated that the strong winner, Mitt Romney, has developed Mittmentum and is on course to election in November, despite the Clintons and some religious bigotry.

The United States of America’s next president won’t be its first president of Italian ancestry (as Rudy Giuliani hopes), because the Republicans won’t nominate a person who does not share the Republicans’ traditional pro-life, pro-personal morality values; or the first former prisoner-of-war (as John McCain still yearns), because now he’s too old for the grueling job and previously he was too inclined to break with most Republicans and join with Democrats (McCain-Feingold, Kennedy-McCain, Gang of Fourteen); or the first Baptist minister (as Mike Huckabee prays), because he’s not up to the job, he’s not the best choice and one president born in Hope, Arkansas was one too many.

But there WILL be big change.

The next president will be the first female president, or the first half-black president (Barack’s mother was white and ignoring that is…not right), or the first Mormon president.

Much of the media really would prefer Obama versus McCain, and have been broadcasting, reporting and editorializing accordingly, but the politically adept Clintons will do whatever it takes to win the Democrat nomination.

Nevertheless, in the end, enough Republicans will refuse to succumb to religious bigotry and reject a monagamous Mormon who shares their basic values for a man who divorced his first wife and married a rich, much younger divorcee whose family could support his political ambitions.

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gShriber

Romney’s FL Poll Numbers Much Higher Than Reported

January 25th, 2008 | 18 Comments | Posted in Florida, Polls

When you look at the polls coming out of Florida realize that the results that the media loves to trumpet are seriously biased for McCain. It’s only when you get into the internals that the true story becomes apparent. Here’s why folks like me hate polls:

HOW TO LIE WITH NUMBERS - POLLING EDITION
FIRST, tout Florida polls that show Romney and McCain locked in a neck-and-neck race for the Florida primary.

SECOND, fail to take into account that pesky little fact that Florida has a closed primary in which Democrats can’t vote.

THIRD, conveniently omit the detail that among actual Republicans and conservatives Romney is polling way ahead: 29.9% (Romney) to 22.6% (McCain) according to InsideAdvantage on 1/24, 33% (Romney) to 24% (McCain) according to Survey USA on 1/24, and 35% (Romney) to 15% (McCain) according to Rasmussen on 1/23.

This isn’t exactly hard stuff to find (it’s sitting right there on the Internet) so why not report results that accurately reflect the likely outcome in Florida? Simple - because it shows Romney trending ahead.

UPDATE - Take a look at this quote cited in the post below:
“Polls have shown the race tightening between the two men in the Sunshine State in recent days, with the two of them alternating leads.”

UPDATE 2 - A Fox News example:
McCain Cranks Up Attacks on Romney as Fla. Polls Put Them in Dead Heat
“Rudy Giuliani, who’s staked his campaign on Florida, has recently been idling in third in state polls. But poll averages show McCain and Romney just fractions of a point apart.”

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Chris Kopchak

Florida Trending Romney!

January 25th, 2008 | 16 Comments | Posted in Politics, Polls

Polls are very interesting, but it’s hard to get an idea of what is going on within certain polls. I much prefer to look at the TRENDLINE WITHIN certain polls. This way, its very easy to see who has the MOMENTUM within a poll and who is losing steam. I do this, because, each polling organization has a certain set of parameters and it does not change poll to poll.

With that said, let’s take a look at 3 big polling outfits who have been polling FL since Jan 1.

Insider Advantage (5 polls taken from 1/1 - 1/25)
: Romney -6, Even, Romney +6, Romney -1, Even.

Survey USA (4 polls taken from 1/1 - 1/25)
: Romney -10, Romney -7, Romney -6, Romney -2

Rasmussen (3 polls from 1/1 - 1/25)
: Romney -1, Romney +5, Romney +4.

So, what it looks like to me is Romney was behind in early Jan..however as of late he has made a surge and is leading in 2 out of 3 polls and DEFINITLY has the momentum to overtake McCain.

Couple this with the intrade #’s showing Romney at 60% and McCain at 35% to win FL…and I think we have the recipe for a Romney Florida Win.

I think the McCain camp knows this also, as they must have gotten internals that show Mitt is cleaning the floor with them with the economic issue. This is why McCain is attacking Romney today about the Economy.

Bad bad move on team McCain’s part, as this is Romney’s strong suit.
It feels much much like Michigan did 4 days before their primary

Romney 27%
McCain 23%

Onward and upward. Godspeed, Mr Romney.

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Ann Marie Blodgett

After Freds Departure California Poll Has Romney Nipping At McCain’s Heels

Check Out This PDF

Results:

McCain - 23%
Romney - 21%
Giuliani - 13%
Huckabee - 12%
Paul - 7%
Other - 1%
Undecided - 23%

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Nate Gunderson

Poll #17 - Have You Done Any of the Following to Support Mitt?

January 21st, 2008 | 14 Comments | Posted in Fundraising, Mitt Romney, Polls

This is the poll is the brain-child of David Kim, which is good as I have been having a hard time thinking of good polls recently. The purpose of this poll is two-fold: help you see what others have done, and to educate people on all the different ways they can help make a difference for Mitt. If you have questions about any of these please ask in the comments and we’ll update the post to answer your questions.

#17 - Have you done any of the following to help support Mitt? (Check all that apply)

  • Read Elect Romney in 2008 daily (65%, 290 Votes)
  • Talked to 5 or more family/friends about Mitt (85%, 383 Votes)
  • Made a donation to the campaign (55%, 246 Votes)
  • Registered as an official fundraiser (16%, 72 Votes)
  • Put a bumper sticker on your car (33%, 146 Votes)
  • Put up a yardsign at your house (19%, 84 Votes)
  • Phonebanking/Call @ Home program (22%, 99 Votes)
  • Volunteered for Get Out the Vote activities in an early state (14%, 63 Votes)
  • Left a pro-Mitt comment at a blog (58%, 262 Votes)
  • Called a talk radio program to support Mitt on the air (12%, 55 Votes)
  • Written a pro-Mitt ‘letter to the editor’ to a newspaper or magazine (10%, 45 Votes)
  • Attended a pro-Mitt rally/Townhall meeting (20%, 90 Votes)
  • Cast an actual vote for Mitt (34%, 154 Votes)

Total Voters: 448

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Anyone get all 13?

~Nate Gunderson

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