Posts Tagged ‘Florida primary’

Video News Update for Wednesday February 1, 2012 (4 Videos)

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Video News Update for Wednesday
February 1, 2012 (4 Videos)

Twitter Implementing
New Censorship Policy

Big win for Romney
in Florida primary

Report says Taliban preparing
to retake Afghanistan

Extreme freeze claims lives
in eastern Europe

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Romney Stays On the Offense With Gingrich (with Commentary)

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Romney Stays On the Offense With Gingrich

Romney Turns Gingrich Attacks
Relentlessly Back Against Newt
(with Commentary)

Romney Stays On the Offense With Gingrich, The NY Times, January 26, 2012, by Jim Rutenberg and Jeff Zelany, excerpts quoted verbatim:

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Mitt Romney, facing his greatest challenge of the campaign so far, relentlessly pressed Newt Gingrich on Thursday night in their final debate before the Florida primary, seeking to regain the offensive against an insurgent challenge that has shaken his claim to inevitability.

On immigration, personal finances and the grand ideas that have been the trademark of Mr. Gingrich’s candidacy, Mr. Romney gave his rival no quarter, giving prime time voice to his campaign’s all-out, round-the-clock assault on Mr. Gingrich here.

In a debate in which Mr. Romney could ill afford to allow Mr. Gingrich another triumphant night, he delivered sharp lines that gave him an advantage usually held by Mr. Gingrich: applause from the audience.

graphic link to a page with a petition to put unscrupulous Wall Street bankers in jail

Mr. Gingrich started the week with all the momentum here after his victory in South Carolina. But he has subsequently come under relentless pounding from the Romney campaign and its supporters, a battering that appears to have had some impact….

Romney Packed Debate Hall
With Supporters, Gingrich Aide Says

WASHINGTON — Members of Newt Gingrich’s campaign accused Mitt Romney’s campaign of packing the audience for the Republican presidential candidate debate on Thursday night in Jacksonville, Fla., with its own supporters to ensure that the dynamics would be favorable to Romney….

Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich
square off in Republican debate

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich sparred here Thursday night over immigration, taxes and wealth, lobbying, and colonizing the moon in a debate that underscored the potential consequences of a loss for either of the leading Republican presidential candidates in Tuesday’s high-stakes Florida primary.

Romney went on the offensive, as he had in a forum on Monday. The former Massachusetts governor said it was “repulsive” for the former House speaker to label him “the most anti-immigrant” candidate in the field. He blasted Gingrich’s moon proposal, saying that if someone had brought it to him, his response would have been “You’re fired.” He goaded his rival into a discussion of his taxes.

Mitt & Newt Spar Over
Who Is *More* Pro-Immigrant

A few debates ago, when the Republican candidates for president gathered in Florida, the then-frontrunner Rick Perry expressed compassion for illegal immigrants on stage ended up publicly apologizing and never recovering.

Lesson learned: stick to the hardline when it comes to immigration. Well, that was then. At the Thursday night’s debate — the last before Florida’s primary on Jan. 31 — Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney got into a very spirited debate about who would be nicer to grandmothers who happen to be in the United States illegally.

Mitt Romney Goes After
Newt Gingrich’s Mental State

Mitt Romney is making the homestretch of the Florida primary race in part a battle over Newt Gingrich’s mental state.

Greg Sargent snagged a copy of a Romney mailing going out in Florida that paints this in stark terms: Gingrich is “Unethical. Erratic. Reckless.” the mailer reads.

But this is just the latest in a string of less-than-veiled hits on Gingrich’s mental condition coming from Romney surrogates and Romney himself.

At a press conference in Tampa, FL Monday before the NBC News debate, Romney described Gingrich this way:

“I think as you look at the speaker’s record over time, it’s been highly erratic…You know, he voted in favor of establishing the Department of Education, and yet he gets in a debate and says we should get rid of the Department of Education and send all the education issues back to the states. He’s opposed vehemently to the Massachusetts health care system, and yet just a couple years ago wrote about what a superb system it was.

He’s gone from pillar to post almost like a pinball machine, from item to item in a way which is highly erratic…It does not suggest a stable, thoughtful course, which is normally associated with leadership.”

Commentary by Paul Evans: You know, I can’t quite decide whether or not the attacks on Gingrich’s “erratic” proposals are a brilliant tactic by Romney’s people or not. In any case I hope Obama’s people are paying close attention to these somewhat factual accusations, as it seems to me that using Gingrich’s state of mind and mental inconsistencies over the years, would be an effective line of attack in the general election. If you are a Democrat, you really have to hope that Gingrich might win the nomination. There are plenty of lines of attack there open for Obama.

Gingrich might get away with rhetorical tricks now, or for the time being have some success with his ability to use the English language, with which he has some facility, to twist the facts around, but he is open to attacks and problems from his personal life….I can see Obama’s people “licking their chops” in anticipation. And he won’t get away with B.S. accusations such as those he’s tried to pin on Romney, nor these weird ideational flights that he sometimes comes out with, such as a base on the moon. It does seem that Gingrich comes up with these high flown ideas and doesn’t vet them, he just puts them straight out there, without proper evaluation. I suppose it has something to do with his intellectual egoism. Overall, his record strikes me as raw meat that Obama and his people would chew up and spit out in the event of his nomination.

It’s not that Gingrich isn’t intelligent, it just seems to me that he belongs in some well-funded think tank, and not really on the national stage or as the GOP nominee. Unless you are a strong Democrat, in which case you would probably be hoping for Gingrich’s success (until the general election).

Also See Newt + Tea Party = Obama Landslide, Daily Kos, January 26, 2012, by yngindpt.

2012 – Campaign Chronicles: Newt’s Florida Game Plan (Updated)

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January 23, 2012

 

2012 – Campaign Chronicles:
Newt’s Florida Game Plan (Updated)

Comment by Paul Evans: The way I see it, the fiscally conservative and rich (traditional) Republicans are basically with Romney. Tea Party types would prefer Gingrich. Socially conservative Republicans in general really don’t have much to choose from between these two candidates. One would think that Gingrich, while supporting socially conservative positions, is somewhat at risk over his own litany of three marriages, infidelity and the ethics violation from his time in the House. However, so long as he talks a good game, he seems to be getting away with the rough spots from his own personal life.

With Gingrich’s somewhat stunning win in South Carolina, Florida seems up for grabs. The South Carolina win to a good extent arises from the ($5 million) backing from one extremely rich supporter via a SuperPac, although if Gingrich wins Florida, you can see the financial backing lining up behind him and abandoning Romney, whom many Republicans consider too moderate. But it does seem to me like the race now boils down to these two candidates, and Florida’s outcome may prove decisive. At this time, Gingrich in fact has a 9 percent lead in the polls in Florida, and a win there could prove decisive for him.

Watch: Heated Charges, Counter-Charges in Fla. Debate, AP YouTube video: 2:18.

Watch: Romney to Gingrich: The Problem Is You Were An Influence Peddler, Talking Points Memo YouTube video: 2:43.

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UPDATE: See Romney’s Tax Returns Show $21.6 Million Income in ’10, NY Times, January 24, 2012, by David Kocieniewski — Paul Evans: O.K. can we all get past the fact that Romney is rich? I mean, the man is a big time Republican businessman. Are we supposed to think differently about him because of his wealth? He is what he is. He has some moderate ideas, as far as the right wing of the Republican Party is concerned, but he still projects the corporate, pro-wealthy identity that Republicans at the national level all basically embody. Still, as the following opinion piece from the NY Times claims, questions about him basically being too “nice” (and too moderate) persist. It should not be overlooked (and it cannot be stressed enough), that Romney may well be the better nominee in a race against Obama, among all voters.

UPDATE Also See Romney Can’t Rumble, NY Times, January 24, 2012, by Charles M. Blow — Paul Evans: This opinion piece appears to me to be pro-Gingrich propaganda. I’ve watched the videos of the latest debate and it appeared to me that Romney held his ground and in fact fairly successfully attacked Newt about his influence peddling. What is curious to me is exactly why a piece like this was featured in the NY Times. Basically, if not all Republicans from the neocon wing of the GOP realize it yet, Gingrich does seem to me like the proper choice between these two candidates (for them). But perhaps this is grasped by those people at a high level and yet not much written about, at least so far. It seems obvious to me, though. Romney seems reasonable (as a Republican), but Newt is a chameleon and an artist with words, and one who so far has successfully dogded questions about his past, as well as his exact postion on important matters. Why is it that nobody really seems to be talking about Gingrich’s positions on critical matters? He certainly has an admirable ability to avoid being pinned down. Attacking him based on his history and personal life is one thing, making him defend his position on important matters seems to be something that hasn’t been tried much yet. It seems to be mainly Gingrich who is attacking Romney on his (Romney’s) positions. Obviously, if Newt is the Republican nominee, both sorts of attacks on him would be fair game. That is why it is still basically valid to ask which of these two Republicans would have a better chance against Obama. Maybe that is a question that Florida voters should be asking themselves, and other voters in the South, as well.

2012: Newt’s Florida Game Plan