People realize Iowa is not important…

6 June 2007 at 10:34 pm | In Fred Thompson, Mitt Romney, Politics, Rudy Giuliani | 1 Comment

Rudy Giuliani, John McCain, and Fred Thompson have all realized that Iowa is not that important by skipping the Ames Straw Poll. Now the only major candidate at the Ames Straw Poll is Mitt Romney, who has already spent a considerable about of time and money organizing for it.

The question remains why does Iowa have the first say when it comes to Presidential nomination races?

Iowa is not a large state.

Iowa does not demographically represent the United States as a whole.

Iowa is a swing state, but when was the last time a Presidential election hung on Iowa.

Iowa is frozen during the time of the caucus.

Copies of the emails…

1 June 2007 at 4:28 pm | In Mitt Romney, Politics | Leave a Comment

I have been asked by some readers to post scanned hard copies of the email sent by the Romney campaign on Wednesday to people in Michigan. I have also forwared the email to a number of individuals wanting to see it.

Now, I blacked out my email address, but left my name since its already public knowledge. Click on the image or follow these links to view each image:

Romney Email Page 1

Romney Email Page 2

Romney Email Page 3

I know some individuals will not believe these emails even if the person who wrote them confessed right in front of them, but this is the type of behavior that drove me away from the Romney campaign.

Talk about being desperate…

30 May 2007 at 4:53 pm | In Mitt Romney, Politics | 6 Comments

Every once in awhile I get an email or view a web-page that reminds me why I quit being involved in political campaigns. Seeing the Romney campaign has a history of engaging in sly behavior, (email or Facebook me and I will tell you about it) I should not be surprised.

Team Romney has already started attacking presidential candidates who have not even entered the race. Look at this email I found in my inbox this afternoon from the Romney campaign in Michigan:

In Case You Missed It: Fred Thompson Was Critical to McCain-Feingold

Fred Thompson Was Critical to McCain-FeingoldNEWSMAX
Ron Kessler

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2007/5/29/133920.shtml?s=al&promo_code=34AB-1

Conservatives who think Fred Thompson is the answer to their dreams should take a look at Sen. John McCain’s comments after the Senate passed the McCain-Feingold bill.

Conservatives hate McCain-Feingold almost as much as pro-choice measures. Yet Thompson, who is on the brink of announcing his presidential bid, was one of the original sponsors of the campaign finance bill.

Following the Senate vote of 59 to 41 for the bill on April 2, 2001, McCain held a press conference at the Capitol. With Thompson present, McCain named him and a few other senators as being so important to the bill’s success that it would not have passed without their efforts.

Along with Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., Thompson negotiated a compromise on the maximum amount an individual can give to any candidate per election. That limit, adjusted for inflation, is now $2,300, subject to an aggregate limit that includes other types of campaign contributions.

McCain called the compromise “critical” to getting the bill passed.

In a recent Townhall.com column opposing McCain-Feingold, Mitt Romney made the traditional conservative case against the law.

“The American people should be free to advocate for their candidates and their positions without burdensome limitations,” Romney wrote. “Indeed, such advocacy can play an important educational role in elections, helping to provide information to voters on a range of issues. Do we really want government telling us when we can engage in political speech, and what form it can take?”

Because of the $2,300 limitation, campaigns have become marathons that rely on constant fund-raisers to survive. Members of Congress are on a perpetual treadmill to raise funds. As an election nears, they often spend more time raising funds than representing their constituents.

Nor does McCain-Feingold accomplish its intended purpose of limiting undue influence tied to money. If an individual arranges a fund-raiser that brings in $1 million, a candidate would theoretically feel more beholden to that person than to an individual who wrote a check for, say, $200,0000.

Aside from McCain-Feingold, in his six years in the Senate, Thompson was the primary sponsor of only four pieces of legislation, none of any significance. “I worked for the music business for years when Fred Thompson was the senator from Tennessee,” Hilary Rosen, former chief lobbyist for the Recording Industry Association of America and now a Democratic strategist, said on MSNBC. “So I worked with him in his office fairly regularly, and I have to say, as nice a guy as he is, he is lazy. He was a lazy senator.”

“I’ve been friendly with Thompson for years,” Wall Street Journal columnist John Fund said on The Journal Editorial Report. In the Senate, Fund said, Thompson “had a reputation for being a little lazy.”

Even Thompson’s high school football coach, Garner Ezell, told the Nashville Tennessean, “He was smart, but he was lazy.”

While Thompson as senator conducted an intensive four-month investigation of campaign finance abuses, he kept a lean calendar except for meals at the Capital Grille or the Prime Rib.

Yet, as with all the candidates, the media love to dwell on atmospherics. Thompson is described as coming across as the character he plays on Law & Order: a person in charge.

That’s fine for TV, but in real life, instead of focusing on politicians’ latest statements to the press and how they come across on TV, voters should consider their track record. That’s how you would go about hiring anyone for a job. FBI profilers teach agents that the best predictor of future behavior is past behavior.

With terrorists trying to wipe out our way of life with nuclear devices, laziness is not a quality anyone wants in a president. If Thompson is the party’s nominee, opposition ads will no doubt sound that very theme.

Romney: Most Accomplished LeaderIn contrast to Thompson, looking at the leading presidential candidates from both parties, none comes close to having the accomplishments of Mitt Romney. As outlined in the April Issue of NewsMax magazine, Romney is a Harvard Business School and Harvard Law School graduate who started Bain Capital, a venture capital firm, from almost nothing in 1984.

During the 14 years Romney headed Bain Capital, its annual average internal rate of return on realized investments was more than 100 percent. It now manages assets of $40 billion.

Romney took over the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City and turned a $397 million budget shortfall into a $56 million profit. As Massachusetts governor, he turned a $3 billion deficit into a surplus without raising taxes.

Along the way, Romney developed a health insurance plan that will cover all Massachusetts residents and is now being copied by other states.

As governor, all of Romney’s actions fit the conservative mold, even more so than those of Ronald Reagan. When he was governor of California, Reagan increased the state income tax and signed a liberalized abortion law.

When it comes to abortion, Romney as governor took pro-life stands, which is far more important than statements he made in 1994 during a debate with Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. Romney vetoed bills that would have authorized embryo farming, therapeutic cloning, and access to emergency contraception without parental consent.

Nonetheless, critics have managed to come up with complaints about Romney: He is a flip-flopper. If he believes what Mormons believe, he must be gullible. And he is too perfect.

While all the leading candidates have changed position on a range of issues, Romney has made a clear change on only one issue. While he has always been personally pro-life and vetoed bills opposed by those who are pro-life, he is, like Ronald Reagan, a convert to the pro-life position when it comes to public policy.

If Romney’s Mormon beliefs make him gullible, Christians and Jews must be equally gullible. After all, they believe that men parted the Red Sea and walked on water, that Jesus paid taxes with coins from a fish’s mouth, that a drop of oil burned for eight days, and that Mary gave birth to Jesus as a virgin.

Interestingly, polls show that those most likely to say they would not vote for a Mormon as president are most likely to describe themselves as liberals, who profess to be tolerant.

As for the claim that Romney is too perfect, that’s another misconception: Romney doesn’t have a dog.

romney footer

First Republican Debate

3 May 2007 at 9:56 pm | In Mitt Romney, Politics, Rudy Giuliani | Leave a Comment

Looked Presidential:

Romney and Giuliani

Looked Angry:

McCain, Tancredo

Looked Crazy:

Tancredo, Paul

Looked Odd:

Brownback, Huckabee (evolution comment), Thompson

Looked Like a Vice President Candidate:

Brownback, Gilmore, Hunter

Key points:

Rudy Giuliani

  • Appeared very confident.
  • Did not run away from his abortion stance. Does not seem to care about the issue either way based on his “Okay” response to Roe being overturned. Finally someone who cares about issues that most Americans care about and not ones most could care less about.
  • Good and effective speaker.
  • Was pretty good on other policy issues.
  • Liked his pro-constitutional amendment for foreign born President measure. We are one of the few countries in the world with this measure and it should be abolished.
  • A little too many Reagan references.
  • Liked the Reagan like optimism though.
  • From reading the post debate discussions, it sounds like he might be the tranformative figure if nominated.

Mitt Romney

  • Appeared very Presidential and prepared. Maybe a little stiff.
  • Very good answers on healthcare and Bin Laden.
  • Too many Reagan references like Rudy Giuliani. Run as your own man.
  • Handled flip flop issue well.
  • Will appear electable to most Americans.

John McCain

  • Wants to follow Bin Laden to the gates of hell.
  • Liked the right Democrats in cabinet idea. – An attempt to look bipartisan again.
  • Looked a little angry and cranky. Maybe its a 70 year old thing.
  • Liked his talk about spending. He cares a lot about it obviously.

And other comments

  • Brownback, Huckabee, Tancredo – Do not believe in evolution.
  • Giuliani and Gilmore – Moderate on abortion.
  • Paul truly is Mr. No. He also loves the constitution.
  • Tancredo looked nuts.
  • Huckabee is a big spending liberal.
  • Brownback would make a good VP on a Giuliani for President ticket.
  • Hunter for Secretary of Defense or Homeland Security?

Overall view: Race remains Giuliani #1, Romney #2, Someone else #3, McCain #4, and then everyone else.

People need to quit being afraid to be pro-choice…

11 April 2007 at 10:50 am | In Abortion, Compassionate Conservatism, Mitt Romney, Politics, Rudy Giuliani, pro-choice republican | Leave a Comment

Formerly pro-choice Republican Fred Thompson used to be right on the abortion issue:

“Government should stay out of it. No public financing. The ultimate decision must be made by the woman. Government should treat its citizens as adults capable of making moral decisions on their own.”

What a shocking concept: The “government should treat its citizens as adults capable of making moral decisions on their own!”

Too many on both sides of the political spectrum have fallen into this game of supporting big government when it supports their ends.

Maybe we should all take Thompson’s former view to heart and return to the Goldwater Republican vision instead of this big government nanny state compassion crap we got now under President George “Without Competence” Bush.

This philosophical condundrum has pushed me to reconsider my primary vote. As much as I like Mitt Romney, he has bought too much into this religious right crap and is catering too much to them.

While I dislike the Giuliani gun stance, he is probably the most for limited government of any major candidate. Furthermore, he is not pandering to the religious right one bit. Instead, he is focusing on the issues that matter to him and keeping his convictions. I admire this a lot.

Romney releases his first campaign ad…

20 February 2007 at 11:34 pm | In Mitt Romney, Politics | Leave a Comment

Mitt Romney released the first campaign ad of any major contender on either side in Florida, Iowa, Michigan, New Hampshire, and South Carolina.

National Journal’s Hotline Blog has details on Romney’s Announcment and Michigan

6 February 2007 at 11:07 pm | In Mitt Romney, Politics | Leave a Comment

National Journal’s Hotline blog has been following the perspective Presidential candidate and how they have or are going to announce their candidacy. When Mitt announces his candidacy next week during several stops across the nation, including one in Michigan, they think:

Romney will introduce himself as the president who can see around the next corner, who will equip Americans to meet the competitive challenges of the 21st century, who will bring innovation and reform to government.

I have thought for some time the “darkhorse” issue in the Presidential primary campaign might be economic innovation and unleashing our economy to compete with the rising economic powers in Asia. If this happens, Romney is the candidate with the best shot of making this issue his own.

Considering the terrible state of the Michigan economy, this has a good chance of resonating with voters as a means to pull Michigan’s economy out of critical condition.

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