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Jeff Fuller

NEVADA LOOMING: Let’s insist the media give the GOP Nevada caucus the coverage and respect it deserves

January 15th, 2008 | 5 Comments | Posted in Media, Michigan, Netroots, Nevada, New Media, Romney, South Carolina, Wyoming

Most Romney supporters were pretty peeved about how the media has downplayed his WY victory. (a recent Newsmax story addresses this) However, I can see how it was easy for the media to ignore WY results since it’s the least populous state and due to the odd caucus system they used (mostly party insiders and/or major activists.) However, their 12 delegates were as many as NH awarded, and Mitt actually got more delegates out of WY (8) than McCain got out of NH (7).

But that’s in the past already . . . but NV looms in the future and we need to insist that it should count. Sadly, we’re already seeing how downplayed NV is in the national media coverage.

Even though the the media is covering NV pretty heavily for the it for the Democratic side, they’re relatively ignoring it for the GOP. My paranoid side says: “Figures, since Romney stands a good chance of winning it . . . of course the MSM will downplay it.” I’m actually convinced that Romney will win it (and if he wins MI, Romney will win NV BIG). Unfortunate timing has the NV caucus on the same day as the SC primary (which is monopolizing the media’s coverage.)

But is SC inherently more important than NV for this nomination?

OK, so we know that in recent history, no GOP candidate has won the nomination without winning SC. But this year is very different with at least three candidates still with very credible claims to taking it all, and two others who are still considered “top-teir” candidates. Usually, someone has established themselves after IA and NH and races into SC with the mighty momentum. Or, in the past, the race has been winnowed down to two people already and SC has been the final elimination round for one of them. Not so this year. Some are arguing that FL may play the role this year that SC has played in the past.

But lets look at the two states objectively.

Both are on Jan 19th

NV: 34 delegates up for grabs
SC: 24 delegates up for grabs

NV: Important swing state/purple state (i.e. we need someone who can show/run strong in such a state for the general election)
SC: Solid Red state . . . whoever the nominee is will win SC and most of the south no matter what.

NV: First western state on the docket (and much of that region are swing states)
SC: First southern state primary . . . and the south is pretty much locked up for the GOP.

Objectively, NV looks MORE important than SC to me!

Romney supporters need to start trumpeting the importance of NV relative to SC. Let’s get this message on blogs, in comment sections on important blogs/articles/etc . . . I encourgage people to forward this message to your friends/contacts. It would be great if we could get an email campaign together focused at news organizations/journalists/prominent bloggers and asking them why it’s being ignored so much . . . demanding that it get fair coverage (at least as much as their giving to the Dems in NV. I don’t think any of us want another of Romney’s wins to be written off like WY was. LET’S MAKE NEVADA COUNT!

Jeff Fuller

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Mike Laub

More from Wyoming

January 5th, 2008 | 1 Comment | Posted in 2008, Wyoming

Today, Governor Mitt Romney convincingly won the Wyoming County Conventions as voters in the state selected the nation’s first delegates to the 2008 Republican National Convention. In a crowded field, Governor Romney won the clear majority of delegates selected by counties today. With the announcement of today’s results, Governor Romney released the following statement:
 
http://www.mittromney.com/News/Press-Releases/WY_Caucuses
 
“Today, the people of Wyoming took the first step towards bringing true conservative change to Washington.  From Gillette to Jackson and Riverton to Cheyenne, my family and I visited Wyoming many times, meeting with residents and addressing the issues most important to voters in the Cowboy State.  We worked hard to earn the support of voters here, and I am honored to have won many of the first delegates awarded this primary season.  As the Republican nominee, I promise to fight to seat all of Wyoming’s delegates at the national convention.
 
“The voters participating in today’s county conventions made it clear that the Reagan coalition of fiscal conservatives, social conservatives and defense conservatives is alive and well in the West.  In the coming weeks, I will work hard to share my optimistic vision for our country’s future with voters as ballots are cast in New Hampshire and beyond.
 
“Today’s results are evidence that Americans want change, and our message of strengthening America through strengthening our economy, our military and our families is resonating with voters.  I want to thank the people of Wyoming for their support and generosity, and I will continue to campaign in this important state as the remainder of its delegates are selected and through to the general election in November. This is just the beginning.”

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John Cronin

Romney Wins Wyoming Caucus!

The AP has just called the Wyoming caucus for Mitt Romney!

Romney——-7 Delegates

Thompson—–2 Delegates

Hunter——–1 Delegates

Two delegates remain to be selected as this is being written.

I have included a very gracious endorsement from one of Wyoming’s newspapers.

TRIB.COM

Romney, Obama should get party nominations

Mitt Romney stands out in the Republican race as the candidate with the leadership, experience, and conservative political philosophy to be his party’s standard bearer.

Romney traveled to Wyoming twice in the past few months, visiting Cheyenne, Gillette, Jackson and Riverton. He has organized an impressive team of Wyoming supporters.
The former Massachusetts governor has pledged to oppose any increases in income taxes and is prepared to make spending cuts in our bloated federal budget.

Romney has called for making the nation more energy-independent. That resonates well in Wyoming, a state with an abundance of fossil fuels and potential for wind and solar power.

As chief executive of the Olympics, Romney did a masterful job saving the winter games in Salt Lake City. And speaking of Utah, Romney’s family ties to that state date back to territorial days. His heritage is rooted in the West, and he’s not likely to forget it.

Romney’s critics contend he has flip-flopped on abortion, gay rights and other issues, adopting conservative views after expressing liberal ones early in his career. Do we want a politician who is never willing to change his position? There is no reason Republican voters shouldn’t believe Romney when he describes himself as a conservative, pro-life candidate who believes marriage is the union of a man and a woman.

The other major GOP presidential candidates have shortfalls that can’t be ignored. Rudy Giuliani’s campaign has been wrapped in the memory of 9-11, but he’s running for president, not mayor. His liberal roots are deeply entrenched in a long public career, and he has little in common with Wyoming Republicans.

John McCain has had a distinguished career in the military and politics, but his dogged support of the war policies of President Bush in Iraq must be viewed as a disadvantage. Mike Huckabee may have catapulted to the front in some polls, but he’s still too much of an unknown to expect much support in Wyoming.

~~John Cronin~~

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John Cronin

Romney Leading in Wyoming Caucus

January 5th, 2008 | 6 Comments | Posted in Wyoming

I’ll update as new info comes in, but Mitt currently has 75% of the delegates.

~~John Cronin~~

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Paul Johnson

Wyoming looks to be pushing Mitt into 1st!

It’s already rolling. Go to USA Today’s Wyoming site for the totals throughout the day. Right now with 67% of precincts in, Mitt has won 6 out of the 8 delegates that have been claimed (one each were taken by Hunter and Thompson), with four more up for grabs. If Mitt gets the delegates people have reported elsewhere (about 9 from Iowa), that would put him in the nominal lead as of right now, with Mitt at 15, Huck at 13, Thompson at about 6 and McCain at 5. Iowa’s system is indirect enough (and neither is technically binding, they’re based on an honor system–see the NY Times explanation) these numbers aren’t exact (one more place to look for delegate counts: the Green Papers website). But if these counts are right, the Tour de France metaphor is turning out to be correct so far in the early going. Take 2d in IA, win the stage in WY. On to the yellow jersey!

Another story: Mitt has the lead for claim of Republican National Convention’s delegates not tied to any one state. CNN ran this story before the Iowa caucuses.

Keep an eye on WY and keep calling out there in NH!

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Paul Johnson

Get out the vote in NH

Taking the Silver in Iowa.

Like Mitt said, it’s not what we’d hoped but it’s still a great finish, and preparation for the ultimate gold. We need to keep things humming along. What can you do? Make sure you make your phone calls for Mitt (if you’re not already a volunteer, contact the campaign to find out how to become one). As I said yesterday, considering where the campaign’s been and where it’s going it’s no time to get concerned about one bump in the road. Here are some facts to keep in perspective:

Wyoming’s caucuses are tomorrow, and both Mitt and McCain have big appearances on the Sunday shows. As “Richard” posted on Politico, Mitt can actually move into first place in the delegate count depending on the showing in Wyoming, and could even retain that lead with as much as a solid 2d place showing in NH.

“Isn’t it interesting people are making fun of Wyoming. That’s like football fans saying they don’t care about field goals. They would just as soon pass them up. Well, Mitt isn’t going to pass anything up. Since not very many people are aware, it takes 1191 Delegates to WIN the republican nomination. So far Huck has 20, Romney 18, McCain and Thompson 3, Paul 2 and Giuliani 1. Wyoming has 14 delegates up for grabs, New Hampshire 14 and Michigan 30. So, because the media looks to promote certain states, it truly is the number of delegates available. By the way, Romney, Thompson and Paul are the only ones that have been to Wyoming so watch them snatch up the delegates….”

I’m not sure these numbers are right but they’re roughly consistent with what I’ve read elsewhere. Mitt being in first place for delegates after NH is more than we could have hoped for a few months ago, and that’s a very achievable goal. We all knew it would be a close race; now we need to pitch in to make it happen! A quick stat: 2 of the 5 brothers were at the Des Moines airport early this morning, and at least one was headed to Wyoming, so Wyoming is clearly going to be feeling the love.

Mitt’s Game of 3D Chess

I happened to find my way into a Q&A Kevin Madden was giving to reporters before Mitt’s appearance at the Sheraton last night. Here are a few shots:

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Kevin may have the best tie I’ve seen so far in the campaign, even including Mitt. Try to get a good look.

Kevin told them that Mitt’s playing 3D chess versus his opponents’ checkers, pursuing a multi-front war while his opponents have largely focused on one state. And (using my words) this race is like the Tour de France: winning a particular stage isn’t the important thing, it’s standings at the end. In Lance’s seven tour wins, he won on average fewer than 3 stages per year (20 total stages in 7 wins).

Bring on NH!

McCain is Mitt’s main competition in NH as we all know. Mitt has a new ad, as does McCain. In his, McCain blatantly spins a couple half-quotes from Mitt to make false claims. In one of Mitt’s statements Mitt said foreign policy expertise is easy to find; you can go to the State Department to find someone versed in knowledge, but that expertise (like McCain’s) alone isn’t enough. But the ad twists the statement to say Mitt would rely on the State Department for leadership, which was the exact opposite of what was intended. We need to make sure we call him on this sort of false claim and twisted quotes. So much for John remaining above negative campaiging (as if he’d ever tried).

As a result, now would be a good time to reinforce Mitt’s leadership experience and executive successes (contrasted to McCain’s 20+ years leisurely creating laws after dispatching lackeys to do the research for him). We need to remind people of Mitt’s strengths and that he’s succeeded at nearly everything he’s touched. A few talking points:

1. He had the leadership to turn around the Olympics.

2. He had the leadership to turn around a collection of companies while at Bain, solving problems people before him couldn’t. Sound like a skill we could use in our President today?

3. He had the leadership and determination to keep all the campaign promises he made in Massachusetts, while working with a democratic legislature. By contrast a “maverick” has a hard time getting things done because they don’t tend to play well with others.

4. He had the leadership to organize and motivate volunteers to turn out more voters than expected in Iowa.

5. He showed grace and leadership last night in acknowledging Mike Huckabee’s success, but motivating and convincing the troops we’ll do better in New Hampshire.

6. He has shown the strength of character to think about solutions to problems before he implements them, but then to decisively execute on his plan.

7. He’s the only one that can represent the entire republican party, as the National Review pointed out in their endorsement. In looking at all the candidates, he has the best chance of winning it all, and if you listen carefully he is still the defacto front runner. All guns seem to be pointed at Mitt.

You heard it here first: if we can remind the people of NH what Mitt has accomplished, we will win in NH. People in NH know we need real leadership in Washington. A repackaging of the same old ideas and people just won’t cut it anymore. If there was anything clear in Iowa last night, change and effective leadership are what people are looking for. John McCain is a member of a Congress whose approval rating is abysmal. He has had his chance to be an agent of change as a Washington insider for the last 20+ years. If he hasn’t had shown the leadership yet to solve the problems we have in our society, how will he suddenly start showing leadership now as President? He’s had his chance. We need to tell Washington and Johnny Mac to lead, follow or get out of the way.

Last Thoughts About the Iowa Caucuses

My wife and I drove to a northern suburb of Des Moines last night and attended a caucus of about 130 people. The process, though less complicated than for the dems, was still fascinating. The republican leader (clearly an untrained volunteer from the local community) had an envelope of instructions on how to run the show, and was learning along with everyone else. I felt like I was watching pure democracy, with all its wrinkles. After getting organized, representatives of each campaign were given a chance to speak. When Rudy’s name came up someone shouted “Rudy who?,” generating guffaws. Statements were made on behalf of Huckabee, Fred and Mitt (this last made by yours truly). Votes were cast on yellow ballots made from quartered sheets of 8.5×11″ paper. Ballots were hand-collected and sorted into stacks for each candidate. Votes were then counted and re-counted, then telephoned into GOP headquarters. My wife noted a number of people changing their party affiliations at the door, confirming anecdotally what the national press has observed, that someone out there was driving new voters to turn out, we believe evangelicals.

The Post-Game Party

At the final party Doug Gross, Mitt and Ann re-enthused the crowd.

Here are some pictures:

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Now off to bed so I can come back again tomorrow. It’s now after 3 a.m. central time, so I’ve been up about 23 hours straight. Keep it up everybody out there, we all know how much this country needs a man like Mitt Romney (for a reminder see Thomas Alan’s blog on this very site). One last bit of encouragement. Close your eyes and imagine Mitt raising his hand and taking the oath of office in January 2009. Now open those eyes and let’s get it done!

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John Cronin

And Now On to……Wyoming?

By: Pat Dawson

YAHOO NEWS

“Now that Iowa is done with its caucuses, get ready for the first primary of the season. No, not New Hampshire. Wyoming.”

The primaries are coming at us now with amazing speed. I will confess to not knowing anything about Wyoming politics, so if there are any Mittheads out there who are knowledgeable, please weigh in with your comments on the race.

Simpson also noted that Wyoming voters have an independent streak. “I don’t know why we get stereotyped as a solid Republican state,” he said, listing all the Democratic governors in recent years. Still, the state’s congressional delegation has been exclusively Republican for the past 30 years (Dick Cheney was elected to the House in 1978) and a Democratic presidential candidate hasn’t carried the state since 1964.

~~John Cronin~~

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David Kim

Rudy/Huck…a Horror Story

This is a comment I just left in response to a thread going on in Vic’s post “Invitation to Mike Huckabee Supporters.” I thought I would re-post it here to share with you all my nightmare-ish vision of what would happen should Huck win Iowa.

Read on, and please help!!

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

Andrew, I think you make good points. If there’s anything that we have learned from this election cycle it is that we cannot assume a static battle ground in any analysis. In my opinion, a victory in Iowa would actually help him address each of his weaknesses. The question, however, is whether a bump from Iowa would be enough.

The oft cited example of John Kerry taking a bump from Iowa all the way to the nomination doesn’t work quite as well here. He went from Iowa to his backyard in New Hampshire. The one-two punch proved to be decisive for Kerry (as it would be for Mitt as well in my opinion).

Huck, however, would only be able to land one punch in Iowa. I believe that NH would be out of reach for him even with an Iowa bounce.

So, what we could end up is a Romney who is possibly too damaged to beat Rudy and a Huck who never had a chance to beat Rudy. With this, they go to the convention, Rudy announces that Huck will be his VP and we end up with the worst of all worlds and ultimately the winner will be the Country-club Republicans who want to eliminate social/values issues from the GOP.

But, the anybody-but-a-Mormon crowd asks, doesn’t having a pro-life stalwart like Huck protect our interests?

Read the constitution….the VP doesn’t nominate judges, doesn’t sign legislation, doesn’t issue vetoes, doesn’t have the bully pulpit of the President, and so on…all Huck could do is be a tie breaker in the Senate (though you better believe that he would be voting they way Rudy tells him to, not his own views) and some of the best speeches ever deliverd at funerals of foreign heads of state.

Do the Huck fans really think that their guy could go all the way? Huck will definitely be stopped in NH by Romney or McCain. He’ll probably lose Wyoming to Romney with his tax and spend track record (I’m not fooled by his Johnny-come-lately approach to the Fair Tax which is impracticle anyway and not necessarily a good idea). He’ll probably lose Michigan to Rudy or Mitt. He may win South Carolina, but will probalby lose Nevada to Rudy or Mitt. And then he’ll lose Florida to Rudy (though I believe that Florida is proportional this year, so he could still get a haul of delegates). And then, Rudy gets enough steam from Florida to do well on Super-Duper Tuesday and clinch the nomination.

The only way to stop Rudy is to have a decisive winner with overwhelming momentum in the early states. There is no way that Huck can be that person. I think he could probably get a bunch of 2nd or 3rd place victories, but other than IA and SC, he’s not likely to win any other early states.

We’ll end up with either a three-way convention fight in Minneapolis in which who knows what kind of back room deals would have to be struck in order to sort it out or a Rudy/Huck ticket which is not in the interests of the Social Conservative movement.

In scenario 1 above, this would essentially doom the Republicans for 2008. It’s going to be a tough battle as it is, but with the uncertainty and divisiveness that would come with a convention fight and not having clarity on the nominee until 1st week of September, we are almost guarranteed a loss. The only way we will win is if we figure out who our nominee is and coalesce around them quickly.

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Jeff Fuller

A Vote for Mike Huckabee is a Vote for Rudy Giuliani

See why at this blog entry at Iowans for Romney.

Jeff Fuller

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Vic Lundquist

Michigan Primary Sealed — Why Important?

Two early state primary dates were more or less uncertain until today. Michigan had to decide whether they would have a convention or primary, and today a Michigan State Supreme Court decision sealed Michigan as a primary state, to be held January 15th. New Hampshire was awaiting that decision to ensure there would be no change of the Michigan date, so NH’s expected date of January 8th is now set allowing it to stay within state law mandating that its primary be held at least seven days before the next primary. The Michigan State Supreme Court decision was a very important decision affecting all the Republican candidates in important ways (see additional comments on this below the list of states).

7 “Early” States’ Caucuses and Primaries List (from Politico):

Here is the schedule for the month of January, when the fun gets underway:

Jan. 3 — Iowa caucuses

Jan. 5 — Wyoming GOP caucuses

Jan. 8 — New Hampshire primary

Jan. 15 — Michigan primary

Jan. 19 — Nevada caucuses

Jan. 19 — South Carolina Republican primary

Jan. 26 — South Carolina Democratic primary

Jan. 29 — Florida primary

Why is the Michigan Primary decision important? Click here to read the entire Politico article —–> The Michigan Primary:

Romney has worked his native state harder than any other GOP candidate and put in place the most extensive organization. It was such that some of this rivals, namely Rudy Giuliani, were inclined to cede him a victory had the state GOP been forced to schedule a convention. The prospect of a hollow victory in a low-profile gathering of a few thousand party loyalists in late-January would have done little to boost his chances.

But a statewide primary — where independents can participate — that will likely take place directly after New Hampshire and include Giuliani offers a considerable opportunity for Romney.

If he can win both Iowa and New Hampshire, he’d have a head of steam going into a friendly large state where he does not suffer name ID problems. And coming out of the gates 3-0 would put him in a very strong position to win the nomination.

For John McCain, the decision is a mixed bag. He won the Michigan primary in 2000 — thanks in large part to indies and Dems who didn’t have their own contest — but probably would’ve had a better shot in a small-universe convention, given the support he’s picked up among grass-roots activists in the state since 2000 and the lesser price tag of such a contest. Still, McCain is a known quantity in the state and has experienced people working for him who know how to run a Michigan race.

For Fred Thompson and Mike Huckabee, this is not good news. Both would have much rather survived (or even skipped) New Hampshire to head straight to the friendly terrain and familiar accents of South Carolina. Neither has done much of anything in Michigan, and they’ll now need to play catch-up to their three rivals. Unless they decide to bypass it altogether and camp out in the Palmetto State.

For an excellent article on how each candidate is spending in the early states, click here ——> PRIMARY TACK

To see the latest Iowa and New Hampshire Polls, click here —–> RealClearPolitics

The folks here will likely have all the details over the next week or so. Click here —-> MICHIGANDERS FOR ROMNEY

~ Vic

“Two things fill my mind with ever-increasing wonder and awe: the starry heavens above me and the moral law within me.”

Immanuel Kant, Prussian geographer and philosopher (1724-1804)

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Thomas Alan

Romney Not Ignoring Wyoming

November 9th, 2007 | 3 Comments | Posted in Wyoming

Our Nate may have forgotten Wyoming nuzzling itself into a 1/5 date, but Gov. Romney hasn’t.

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney plans to make campaign stops in Gillette, Riverton and Cheyenne on Nov. 18.

Romney plans to appear at the Flightline building at the Gillette airport, then at Riverton Middle School later in the afternoon. He will wrap up at Little America in Cheyenne.

No state shall be overlooked. Even if it is last alphabetically.

~~~Thomas

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Jeff Fuller

Pro-Rudy/Anti-Mitt Polling Conspiracy?

OK, “conspiracy” is probably too strong. However, consider the following figures in early state polling courtesy of Real Clear Politics’ and Pollster.com’s 2008 Polling sites (other resources used: Electoral Votes from FEC website; Primary calendar from About.com):

Iowa–Jan 3rd (7 electoral votes) has been polled:

  • 9 times in the last 7 weeks.
  • 27 times in the last 6 months– 4.5X/mo
  • Romney leads RCP average by 14%

Wyoming–Jan 5th (3 electoral votes–only a fraction of state’s primary delegates up for grabs on this date though):

  • No polling that I could find
  • Conventional wisdom is that Romney will win here solidly (he just got 61% of vote in a straw poll last weekend)

New Hampshire–Jan 8th (4 electoral votes) has been polled:

  • 10 times in the last 7 weeks.
  • 27 times in the last 6 months– 4.5X/mo.
  • Romney leads RCP average by 8%

Nevada–Jan 12th (5 electoral votes) has been polled:

  • 2 times in the last 7 weeks.
  • 6 times in the last 6 months–1X/mo.
  • No RCP average calculated . . . but Romney leads Rudy by 1% over last 6 polls (though many expect Romney to do much better in the caucus format than Rudy)

Michigan–Jan 15th (17 electoral votes) has been polled:

  • 2 times in the last 7 weeks.
  • 7 times in the last 6 months–1.2X/mo.
  • Romney leads RCP average by 5%

South Carolina–Jan 19th (8 electoral votes) has been polled:

  • 6 times in the last 7 weeks.
  • 19 times in the last 6 months– 3.2X/mo.
  • Statistically a 3 way tie for first (Romney,Rudy, Fred)

Florida–Jan 29th (27 electoral votes) has been polled:

  • 11 times in the last 7 weeks.
  • 27 times in the last 6 months– 4.5X/mo.
  • Rudy leads RCP average by 11%

Some observations:

  1. The traditional “Big Three” early states (IA, NH, SC) have a long history of being frequently polled and this remains the case.
  2. MI and FL seem like they should be polled similarly to me (the two largest states prior to Feb 5th). However, where Romney leads and is expected to win there is a paucity of polls but where Rudy leads and is expected to win there’s over a poll per week (and nearly two per week over the last 7 weeks)
  3. There seems to be a polling firm “blind spot” to WY (completely) and Nevada (relatively) when these are two of the first 4 contests . . . and (”coincidentally”???) where Romney is leading polls or expected to win.

Now, moving on to Feb 5th (”Tsunami Tuesday”) some of the polling trends borderline on comical. Here are all the states going that date:
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado (caucuses), Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota (caucuses), Oklahoma, Tennessee, Utah

New Jersey (15 electoral votes) has been polled:

  • 5 times in the last 7 weeks.
  • 12 times in the last 6 months– 2X/mo.
  • Rudy leads by OVER 40%!!.

WHY IS NJ BEING POLLED MORE THAN MICHIGAN?!?!? Rudy’s never led by less than 32% in any of these copious NJ polls. Who’s wasting all this money polling a state that’s never been close when it’s just another Feb 5th state? Something’s fishy there.

California (51 electoral votes) has been polled:

  • 5 times in the last 7 weeks.
  • 15 times in the last 6 months–2.5X/mo.
  • Rudy leads RCP average by 19%

CA is the biggest prize and so I see why it’s polled frequently

Moving on:

Pennsylvania–April 11th (YES, that’s over 2 months AFTER Tsunami Tues!; 21 electoral votes) has been polled:
3 times in the last 7 weeks.
11 times in the last 6 months– ~2X/mo.
Rudy leading by about 22%
Again, why in the world is this state being polled more than MI!? Don’t you think the results of the early states and the results of Tsunami Tuesday just might have a little effect on how Penn votes on April 11th? That’s called wasted money.

Conclusions/Questions:
So, is this ample evidence that there is an over-abundance and over-representation of polls for states where Rudy leads strongly? Or is there an ignoring of non-traditional early states where Romney is leading? Is this an attempt to get repeated positive news/headlines for Rudy and/or to downplay/diminish Mitt’s potential?

Why the huge disparity between MI and FL? Why more NJ and Penn polls than MI? Why is NV being largely ignored? Am I missing something? Am I doomed to become a “conspiracy theorist?”

Thoughts? Comments?

Jeff Fuller

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Thomas Alan

A Wyoming Straw-poll win

November 5th, 2007 | 2 Comments | Posted in Polls, Straw Poll, Wyoming

It’s sometimes easy to forget about Wyoming during the busy primary calander, but they’re still insisting on running on 1/5. Gov. Romney looks to do well in at least the county of Teton where he won a straw poll with a rather impressive 61% of the vote.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney ran away with 61 percent of the vote in what the Teton County Republican Party was touting as one of Wyoming’s first straw polls Saturday night.

County GOP Chairman Joe Schloss called Romney’s showing remarkable considering the number of other candidates. About 100 people voted during the party’s Elephant Jam event Saturday at 43 North. The get-together and fundraiser celebrated the one-year countdown to the presidential election.

A straw poll is a nonbinding vote taken before an election to gauge support for each candidate.

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani took second, with 12 percent of the vote. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee had 10 percent, U.S. Sen. John McCain of Arizona and U.S. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas each received 5 percent, U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter of California had 4 percent, and lawyer, actor and former Sen. Fred Thompson got 2 percent. Other candidates received 1 percent or less, Schloss said.

It would make a decent pick-up after a win in Iowa on the way to New Hampshire.

~~~Thomas

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Thomas Alan

HeavyM, Laying it All Out

January 13th, 2007 | 3 Comments | Posted in Netroots, Wyoming

Over at the interesting (if rather pro-Giuliani) race42008.com HeavyM from the crucial primary state of Wyoming (funny that we don’t have a category for that state) has layed out in detail why he’s backing Gov. Romney.

Vision Casting
This is the foundational reason I am excited about a Romney candidacy. Ever since Reagan, we have been clamoring for another Great Communicator. Not just so we wont have to worry about our guy flubbing up a debate, but because great communicators inspire us with their vision of what America can be. They change peoples minds with their rhetoric and persuasive abilities. They are able to advance a conservative agenda by advancing a conservative philosophy. That is where Reagan excelled, and it is where, I believe anyway, Romney can excel as well.

Romney can reach across the aisle and get things done not in a mushy pandering sort of way, but just like he did in Massachusetts: by describing his vision for things. He got a Democrat-controlled Congress on board with his decision to eliminate government jobs, reduce government spending and waste, and to not raise taxes. Friends and family that have heard him speak are impressed with him and willing to consider his views. He is a charismatic, likable, persuasive speaker. I am excited for what that could mean for the future of America and for the future of the Republican party.

~~~Thomas

UPDATE: We now have a category for Wyoming!

Ann Marie

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