Archive for the 'Gingrich' Category

Fred Thompson Solidly in Second Place in Republican Preference for President

Posted in wordpress, campaign, McCain, Tancredo, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani, Brownback, Bill Richardson on June 16th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

The Harris Poll� #55, June 14, 2007Rudy Giuliani�s Once Commanding Lead Beginning to ShrinkWhile Rudy Giuliani is still in first place in the race for the Republican preference for President, he has dropped by eight points from last month and former Senator and television star Fred Thompson is catching up. Three in ten adults who say they will vote in a Republican primary or caucus say they would vote for the former mayor while 22 percent say they would vote for Fred Thompson. Not all of Giuliani�s losses are Thompson�s gains. Mitt Romney also sees a small rise this month � up from eight percent last month to 11 percent this month. Even with all the discussion of his “2.0 version” of his campaign, Senator John McCain�s showing has not changed from last month and is still at 18 percent.
(click text for full report)

After week of jostling, straw poll lineup set

Posted in wordpress, campaign, election, McCain, Tancredo, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani, Brownback on June 16th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

It would be great if all those attending the Iowa Straw Poll would acquire surges in the polls to send a message to Giuliani, McCain, Fred Thompson, Gingrich and others to not snub the public during campaign season. In the list below the outcome of the straw poll would be fine just like that, if you remove Ron Paul’s name and move Tom Tancredo to spot two.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

After week of jostling, straw poll lineup set

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DES MOINES — After a week of jostling, Iowa Republicans appear to have a lineup for their high-profile straw poll later this summer, although there’s still enough time for more surprises as the event grows near.

A slew of other contenders, including Mitt Romney, Sam Brownback, Mike Huckabee, Duncan Hunter, Ron Paul, Tom Tancredo and Tommy Thompson and John Cox, have committed to competing.

Giuliani’s Dozen: Help or Hype?

Posted in Announcement, wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, McCain, Gore, Tancredo, Clinton, thompson, obama, hillary, romney, Edwards, Gingrich, giuliani, Brownback, Bill Richardson, Dodd on June 13th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

It sounds good but like most commitments or campaign promises reality is a President is not a King. A President cannot simply say this is what will be done and it happens. To be fair, all candidates will at some point make similar announcements. It is just part of the game. Now it is the public’s responsibility to test the candidates on such statements rather than nod in agreement or sneer in opposition.

This latest press release by Rudy Giuliani’s camp may indicate he is feeling pressure via the polls and his campaign’s exposure in the media or lack of same. What would have made this an historic proclamation by a candidate is if Rudy had addressed how he would actually get this done or what obstacles he sees in pursuing this grand plan.

Like ‘5. I will impose accountability on Washington.’ How many times have we heard that one? Currently the Democratic majority has claimed victory on draining the swamp (Pelosi) yet the ethics legislation requiring an outside entity to oversee compliance with ethics is suffocating in committee. The bill itself is a joke. The independent status of the ethics body will be entirely under the control of Congress. So, Rudy, how would your effort achieve any more success? Be specific. And offering tax breaks to solve health care issues is totally lame. That is not the problem. The mechanisms that drive the economics of health care is the problem. You get the idea, right?

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

06-12-2007

Rudy Giuliani Unveils Twelve Commitments to the American People

During a speech at the Old Bedford Town Hall in New Hampshire today, Mayor Rudy Giuliani announced Twelve Commitments to the American people, a bold vision aimed at moving America forward through change and reform, overcoming new challenges and increasing accountability in Washington.

Rudy’s Twelve Commitments are based on the principles of giving people more freedom, more power, and more responsibility over their own lives, while protecting our nation, strengthening our economy, and improving the quality of life.

“I believe America solves its problems best from strength, not weakness, and from optimism, not pessimism,” Giuliani said. “My Twelve Commitments are a promise to this generation and generations to come that we will keep the American dream alive. I believe it’s the kind of leadership and common sense accountability the American people need in Washington.”

Mayor Giuliani will travel the country this summer to detail each of his Twelve Commitments.

The Twelve Commitments:

1. I will keep America on offense in the Terrorists’ War on Us.
2. I will end illegal immigration, secure our borders, and identify every non-citizen in our nation.
3. I will restore fiscal discipline and cut wasteful Washington spending.
4. I will cut taxes and reform the tax code.
5. I will impose accountability on Washington.
6. I will lead America towards energy independence.
7. I will give Americans more control over, and access to, healthcare with affordable and portable free-market solutions.
8. I will increase adoptions, decrease abortions, and protect the quality of life for our children.
9. I will reform the legal system and appoint strict constructionist judges.
10. I will ensure that every community in America is prepared for terrorist attacks and natural disasters.
11. I will provide access to a quality education to every child in America by giving real school choice to parents.
12. I will expand America’s involvement in the global economy and strengthen our reputation around the world.

Romney, Clinton Secure Strong N.H. Leads in Recent Polls

Posted in wordpress, Politics, campaign, Biden, McCain, Gore, Tancredo, Clinton, thompson, obama, hillary, romney, Edwards, Gingrich, giuliani, Brownback, Dodd on June 12th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Mitt RomneyIt has been rather quiet lately on the campaign front. Oh sure, there are the obligatory reports that typically repeat what has already been said like this one is doing, but little else of any new significance is out there. Probably signs of a long campaign season or there is just nothing dramatic to report.

The opinion here is the GOP still has three announced primary contenders and one or two second tier candidates with Gingrich in his own words unlikely to jump in and Fred Thompson expected to announce on July 11 before an appearance on national TV.

The Dems have the two for one Clinton campaign. Buy Hillary Rodham Clinton and get William Jefferson Clinton for free. Take a flyer on Barack Obama or John Edwards or waste your vote on one of the others. The only entertainment that could come from the left is if Al Gore threw his hat in the ring. How’d that be for handing the Clinton’s a little payback. While there are no Al Gore fans at this website, being the only Dem to not benefit from an association with the Clinton gang, anyone could find humor in Al trying to exact some revenge by spoiling the Clinton conspiracy.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Romney, Clinton Secure Strong N.H. Leads in Recent Polls

By - Beth LaMontagne
(June 11, 2007)
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney continues to widen his lead in the New Hampshire polls over rivals U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani. A Franklin Pierce/WBZ poll conducted after the New Hampshire Republican presidential debate shows 27 percent of likely Republican primary voters would cast a ballot for Romney, 18 percent for Giuliani and 17 percent for McCain.

While this is a significant leap for Romney, who received the support of 22 percent of respondents in a similar poll conducted in March, the most drastic change was in Giuliani and McCain’s numbers. Three months ago, 29 percent of likely Republican voters said they supported the senator from Arizona. In the same poll, Giuliani was neck-and-neck with McCain, with 28 percent supporting the former mayor.

Romney, Thompson Sensing a Tell?

Posted in wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, GOP, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani on June 8th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Mitt RomneyIt is a simple case of Giuliani and McCain conceding Romney’s lead in Iowa and they never planned to spend the money necessary to compete. Fred Thompson appears to have taken the strategy of run silent, run deep. And either Gingrich is working on an extremely unique campaign strategy or he has signaled by his four to one unlikely to run announcement that he cannot see his way clear to a successful Presidential run.

If Romney’s numbers remain strong in Iowa, New Hampshire and Michigan and the South Carolina and Florida effort continue to improve, barring a perfect storm from the Fred Thompson camp if he announces as indicated recently, the momentum shift after the first couple of primaries/caucus could launch Romney Fred Thompsoninto the lead. Giuliani and McCain look too cautious to maintain the one and two spot nationally for much longer. McCain’s position on illegal immigration and repeated reminders of his role in S. 1348 may unravel his campaign. Giuliani has been slipping under the light pressure of Fred Thompson’s impending entry. The Gingrich influence will now likely fade.

It is really too early for any more speculation, but the chase for the GOP nomination would not be a shocker if soon limited to a contest between Romney and Thompson.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Politico Playbook: White flag(s)

By: Mike Allen
Jun 7, 2007 07:31 AM EST
Giuliani took the lead, smartly tipping of Thomas Beaumont of The Des Moines Register, at least letting the paper break its own bad news. An hour later, Team Rudy held a noon conference call with Campaign Manager Michael DuHaime, who took a stream of questions from reporters sportingly and even with a bit of humor. In response to one of those queries he estimated that it would have cost $3 million to do the straw poll right, and he’s now going to pour that into building support for the caucuses.

At 4:44 p.m., Liz Sidoti of The Associated Press rocked the political world with her “UPDATES with McCain’s decision.”

Can Giuliani Beat a Democrat Nominee?

Posted in wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, McCain, Tancredo, Clinton, thompson, obama, romney, Edwards, Gingrich, giuliani on June 7th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Rudy GiulianiRudy Giuliani has been analyzed by pundits and opponents alike. Some give reason why Rudy would be successful as President based on his experience running NYC, dealing with the aftermath of 9/11 and his work as a US attorney. But the only downsides that get much press are his stand on liberal cause issues highlighted by a pro-abortion stance.

How about the way he ran NYC? Some have suggested in reports about the net that his style was ruthless and actually penalized some of the citizenry unfairly in his crusade to clean up crime. Most stats show that he did clean up crime but there may be more to the story.

His marriages in some ways are nothing atypical with the exception of being married to his 2nd cousin for 14 years. Some sensibilities may find that objectionable. And whether that is right or not, his potential nomination could have some weakness against a Democratic challenger without that particular baggage. Then there is the Bernie Kerik relationship and the questions that will raise.

Just as a bit of an introductory appraisal of Rudy Giuliani for President presents a puzzle as why the polls look as favorably on him as they do. However, polls released this week show Fred Thompson’s proposed entry to the race causing more problems for Rudy than for Mitt Romney. Another surprise based on previous weekly polls and pundits.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

State of their unions

By Barbara Kantrowitz , Tango Magazine (www.tangomag.com)
Sunday, May 13, 2007
In contrast, two leading Republican candidates have more complicated marital histories. John McCain and his first wife, Carol, divorced in 1980; soon afterwards, he married Cindy Hensley, heiress to a major Anheuser-Busch distributor. And Rudy Giuliani’s marital history could inspire a soap opera. His marriage to his first wife (and second cousin), Regina Peruggi, was annulled by the Catholic Church after 14 years on the grounds that the couple had not received the church dispensation required when second cousins marry. His second marriage, to actress and journalist Donna Hanover, produced two children but ended in tabloid hell when Giuliani, then mayor of New York City, announced in a press conference that the couple was kaput. Reportedly, he neglected to tell Hanover first, who fired back with her own tearful press conference.

“Giuliani definitely has a screw loose when it comes to marriage,” Pittman says.


Kerik’s Nanny Least Of Ex-Nominee’s Problems

UPDATED: 1:38 pm EST December 14, 2004
NEW YORK — Bernard Kerik’s nanny problem might have proved the least of his troubles if he had pressed ahead with his bid to become homeland security secretary.

Spokeswoman Says Giuliani Apologized To Bush Over Kerik

The past few days have seen news reports about a rash of possible personal and professional improprieties on the part of the former New York City police commissioner, including big stock-option windfalls, connections with people suspected of doing business with the mob and, on Monday, allegations he had simultaneous extramarital affairs with two women.
Citing unidentified sources, the New York Daily News said Kerik had overlapping affairs with Judith Regan, the publisher of his recent memoir, and a city correction officer. He used the same New York City apartment for liaisons with the women during his 18-month tenure as head of the nation’s largest police department ending in 2001, the paper said.
On Monday, Kerik said he wanted to apologize “to anybody who’s been brought into this unnecessarily,” including Regan and former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, a close friend and business associate who had promoted the former street cop’s Cabinet candidacy.

NYC’s Version of Giuliani’s Bio

Posted in Public Affairs, wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, McCain, Tancredo, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani on June 7th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

A BIOGRAPHY OF MAYOR RUDOLPH W. GIULIANI

In 1944, Rudolph W. Giuliani was born to a working class family in Brooklyn, New York. As the grandson of Italian immigrants, Mayor Giuliani learned a strong work ethic and a deep respect for America’s ideal of equal opportunity. He attended Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School (Class of ‘61) in Brooklyn, Manhattan College (Class of ‘65) in the Bronx and New York University Law School in Manhattan, graduating magna cum laude in 1968.

Upon graduation, Rudy Giuliani clerked for Judge Lloyd MacMahon, United States District Judge for the Southern District of New York. In 1970, Giuliani joined the office of the U.S. Attorney. At age 29, he was named Chief of the Narcotics Unit and rose to serve as executive US Attorney. In 1975, Giuliani was recruited to Washington, D.C., where he was named Associate Deputy Attorney General and chief of staff to the Deputy Attorney General. From 1977 to 1981, Giuliani returned to New York to practice law at Patterson, Belknap, Webb and Tyler.

In 1981, Giuliani was named Associate Attorney General, the third highest position in the Department of Justice. As Associate Attorney General, Giuliani supervised all of the US Attorney Offices’ Federal law enforcement agencies, the Bureau of Corrections, the Drug Enforcement Agency, and the US Marshals.

In 1983, Giuliani was appointed US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, where he spearheaded the effort to jail drug dealers, fight organized crime, break the web of corruption in government, and prosecute white-collar criminals. Few US Attorneys in history can match his record of 4,152 convictions with only 25 reversals.

In 1989, Giuliani entered the race for mayor of New York City as a candidate of the Republican and Liberal parties, losing by the closest margin in City history. However in 1993, his campaign focusing on quality of life, crime, business and education made him the 107th Mayor of the City of New York. In 1997 he was re-elected by a wide margin, carrying four out of New York City’s five boroughs.

As Mayor, Rudy Giuliani has returned accountability to City government and improved the quality of life for all New Yorkers. Under his leadership, overall crime is down 57%, murder has been reduced 65%, and New York City - once infamous around the world for its dangerous streets - has been recognized by the F.B.I. as the safest large city in America for the past five years.

New York City’s law enforcement strategies have become models for other cities around the world, particularly the CompStat program, which won the 1996 Innovations in Government Award from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. CompStat allows police to statistically monitor criminal activity on specific street corners as well as citywide, holding precinct commanders accountable for criminal activity in their neighborhoods. Because this data is updated constantly, it enables the police to become a proactive force in fighting crime, stopping crime trends before they become crime waves that negatively effect the quality of life for neighborhood residents.

When Mayor Giuliani took office, one out of every seven New Yorkers was on welfare. Mayor Giuliani has returned the work ethic to the center of City life by implementing the largest and most successful welfare-to-work initiative in the country, cutting welfare rolls in half while moving over 640,000 individuals from dependency on the government to the dignity of self-sufficiency. In addition, Giuliani has enacted a record of over $2.5 billion in tax reductions - including the commercial rent tax, personal income tax, the hotel occupancy tax, and the sales tax on clothing for purchases up to $110 dollars. In addition, hundreds of millions of dollars have been returned to the private sector as a result of the Mayor’s aggressive campaign to root out organized crime’s influence over the Fulton Fish Market, the private garbage hauling industry, and wholesale food markets throughout the City. These reforms, combined with the fiscal discipline which enabled the Mayor to turn an inherited $2.3 billion dollar budget deficit into a multi-billion dollar surplus, have led the City to an era of broad-based growth with a record 450,000 new private sector jobs created in the past seven years. As news of the City’s resurgence has spread around the nation and the world, tourism has grown to record levels.

Mayor Giuliani is committed to nurturing and empowering New York City’s children. By creating the Administration for Children’s Services, New York City now has an accountable, proactive and effective protector for our City’s most vulnerable children that is recognized as a national model. Moreover, New York City is working everyday to find loving families for children requiring adoption. The City has completed a record number of adoptions since 1996 - more than 20,000 - marking a dramatic 65% increase over the previous six-year period. Mayor Giuliani has also been a leader in getting health insurance to children through the innovative HealthStat initiative, which uses computer technology to coordinate a citywide effort to enroll children in existing health insurance programs. To date, 96,000 eligible children and families have been given access to health insurance through the HealthStat initiative. These improvements have increased hope and opportunity for all New York City’s children and laid the foundation for our City to be even stronger in the 21st century.

To turn around the nation’s largest urban public education system, Giuliani has worked tirelessly to restore accountability and raise standards throughout the City’s schools. Student-teacher ratios are at an all-time low, while the annual operating budget for New York City’s public schools has increased from $8 billion to $12 billion. Bureaucratic roadblocks to meaningful reform such as social promotion and principal tenure have ended, while programs such as bilingual education and special education have been reformed for the first time in a quarter century. Under the Mayor’s leadership, New York City has introduced innovative new instructional programs that improve reading skills, give all students access to computers, and restore arts education as a fundamental part of the school curriculum. In the past year, these successful education initiatives have been accompanied by the establishment of 300-book libraries in every classroom and weekend classes for science and English instruction. In October 2000, the Mayor launched the New York City Charter School Improvement Fund, the first fund ever offered by a city government to help charter schools with equipment and facilities costs. The fund is the most recent example of the Mayor’s commitment to both providing quality educational alternatives to all City families, regardless of their income, and to spurring the New York City public schools to improve through competition.

Under Rudy Giuliani’s leadership, New York City has become the best-known example of the resurgence of urban America. From his success at cleaning up Times Square and other public spaces around the City to closing the Fresh Kills landfill on Staten Island, Mayor Giuliani has worked tirelessly to pass New York to the next generation better and more beautiful than it was before he entered office.

New York has established itself as the City others look toward when they want to study the most innovative strategies for reducing crime, reforming welfare, encouraging economic growth, and improving the overall quality of life. In the past decade, New York City’s population has reached a record 8 million residents, confirming that New York is again a City on the rise, full of optimism and confidence that its best days are still ahead of it.

THE CITY OF NEW YORK
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
NEW YORK, NY 10007
TELEPHONE: (212) 788-3000

Gingrich on Bush, Giuliani, Romney and Thompson

Posted in Bush, wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, McCain, GOP, Tancredo, News Media, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani on June 4th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

The story referenced below is about Newt Gingrich on Fox News Sunday. Some other reports on this story show a radically different reaction. As for pounding the Bush Administration, some other reports focus on that and suggest that Gingrich was bashing President Bush. His remarks that President Bush means well and is very sincere but his relative success in getting the machinery to do the job is limited doesn’t sound like bashing.

Mitt RomneyFred ThompsonRudy GiulianiNewt Gingrich

The bigger surprise since Newt has claimed he will announce perhaps in the fall, is that his comments on the other GOP candidates sounds more like a campaign staffer than one who may run for President. One thing is for sure. Gingrich and the field of three he mentions, Giuliani, Romney and Thompson, are all very intelligent, successful and capable leaders. Anyone would be adequate to the task and one or more may be exceptional. It is less of a probability with the Democratic party contenders. They might have one.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Published: June 3, 2007 at 3:35 PM

Gingrich: Government not functioning

WASHINGTON, June 3 (UPI) — Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich says the federal government is not functioning and must face the reality of poor numbers in public opinion polls.

Looking to the 2008 presidential election, Gingrich said the GOP needs a candidate who favors “radically changing Washington and radically changing government.” He offered three people who could fill that bill: announced candidates Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani, and potential candidate Fred Thompson.

Fred Thompson’s Achilles’ heel

Posted in wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, McCain, GOP, Tancredo, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani on June 3rd, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Fred ThompsonThis column by Colin McNickle might be a dime’s worth but it is more likely a few cents short. Yes, I know, cheap, corny pun, but admit it, you thought of it too. While one can be favorably impressed by Fred Thompson or concerned about his impending announcement as it affects the 2008 race, McNickle presents an argument we find flawed. At least as far as the Achilles’ heel conclusion is concerned. And that seems to be the main thrust of the column.

As suggested in other reports, this column reiterates Thompson’s position on some general issues. taxes, less government, marriage and the 2nd amendment. On current hot buttons his stand is not different from many other conservatives. But again I emphasize his expression of sound bites and general or vague statements about issue positions that will be central to the 2008 race. So what is so remarkable and why the references to King Fred?

Then McNickle exposes what he considers the Achilles’ heel. Thompson’s stand on the first amendment complete with references to the Sedition Act. This is a bit much and over the top. In the unlikely event that Fred Thompson announces and just that soon skyrockets to the top of the polls and never looks back as he accepts the GOP nomination, way too much is being made of his potential influence on the campaign and too little being made of his stand on issues, specifically. All this will be played out in the campaign if he ever decides to enter.

Stanford Matthews
MoerWhat.com

Fred Thompson’s Achilles’ heel

By Colin McNickle
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Sunday, June 3, 2007
Fred Thompson is being hailed in many conservative circles as nothing less than the messiah the Republican Party desperately needs to retain the White House in 2008. Some even dream of long coattails that could drag the GOP back into the congressional majority. But conservatives might want to think again before crowning King Fred.

Fred Thompson on the Issues

Posted in wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, McCain, GOP, Tancredo, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani on June 2nd, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Fred ThompsonMost or all Republicans as well as conservatives of any description are enamored with Fred Thompson. Currently, Fred Thompson has succeeded in raising the reaction to his potential candidacy to frenzied proportions. It can be said no other candidate’s pre-announcement popularity has been higher. And the pundits have evaluated this as Thompson being crazy as a fox by using no resources to promote a run for President. That is all true. And this blog has a positive response to Fred Thompson as well. But let’s take a step back and see what we have here. Are we basing all this adoration on the folksy charm, the past history of a Senator or the lack of substantial specific substantial complaints about Fred Thompson’s positions on the issues?

It is understandable that most or all candidates or politicians do not risk saying too much or painting themselves into a corner on issues. To protect one’s self from the anticipated attacks by the political opposition is necessary. But there are other ways to express an indication of positions on the issues but the method is usually vague and ambiguous. Not unlike the excerpt below and the author’s description as Thompson ‘hit hard at the problem of illegal immigration.’

Thompson Puts More Distance on Immigration With the White House
In his remarks to the audience of 600-plus Republicans at the Stamford Sheraton, Thompson hit hard at the problem of illegal immigration as a classic case of what he considers the “biggest problem” Republicans have — the “disconnect” between Washington and the people. It has been twelve years ago, he noted, that a fence along the Mexican border was first proposed as a means of curbing illegal immigration and it is still far from complete. Why trust the government now, he asked his audience. Thompson’s 25-minute address was punctuated by several prolonged invasions and shouts of “Run, Fred, Run!”

That’s not hitting hard on the problem of illegal immigration. This is not a complaint directed at Fred Thompson as much as it is notice that whatever we know about Fred, specific issue positions are not part of it.

On the issues of low taxes and free trade there is some indication as referenced below:

Presidential Candidate Still Needs To Fill in Blanks
The former Senator supports low taxes and free trade. On May 13, 2007 he told the ABC radio audience that “[Globalization] works to our benefit. We innovate more and invest in that innovation better than anywhere else in the world. Same thing goes for services, which are increasingly driving our economy. Free trade and market economies have done more for freedom and prosperity than a central planner could ever dream and we’re the world’s best example of that.”

ThinkingHe has not made his position on abortion clear yet, but he has said that he opposes government funding of abortion, and characterizes himself as being pro-life. He has not called abortion murder yet, but has supported some pro-life legislation.

Above, on the abortion issue he leans pro-life based on this report. Free trade agreements have been under fire for a long time. Their relative value has been debated without drawing clear conclusions and it may be fair to say in their present form are not a positive economic development. Thompson appears sold on free trade but offers no details. Everyone likes cutting taxes but can we afford it with the massive national debt, deficits and unlimited spending?

The only issue that seems clear with reference to Fred Thompson is he opposes gun control. On most other issues there are many blanks to fill in. It will be easier to draw conclusions on Fred Thompson for President once enough is known about his positions, in detail. But even without that, as it stands now, he would be a preferred candidate against any Democratic contender.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Romney Opposes Amnesty

Posted in Bush, wordpress, campaign, election, McCain, GOP, Immigration, thompson, United States, romney, Congress, Border Control, Gingrich, giuliani on June 2nd, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Mitt RomneyThe report below should have been titled ‘Romney Opposes Amnesty’. As the excerpt below plainly expresses especially with the phrase, ‘that everyone would be allowed to stay indefinitely’, Romney has it right. The single most important reason to oppose S. 1348 is amnesty. And Romney makes other good points. The term ‘amnesty’ means different things to different people, but what everyone needs to understand is amnesty is allowing someone to break the law and not face any consequences for doing so. That is unacceptable.

In an earlier post here, the question of Romney’s stance on amnesty was unclear. One problem solved. His opposition to S. 1348 includes, quite clearly, he opposes amnesty and that is a good thing. But then there are a lot of good things about Mitt Romney and the one concern has been erased.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Amnesty issue stays with Romney in Iowa swing

By Bret Hayworth Journal staff writer

Asked his definition of amnesty, Romney said “it is such a loaded term and we probably ought to get a lawyer to say. And I understand that in some respects this (SB 1348) is not technically amnesty, because it does come with some penalty. It comes with a $5,000 penalty, so technically lawyers would probably tell us that’s not amnesty. On the other hand, it has one of the key features of amnesty — and one that I find not fair — that is, that everyone would be allowed to stay indefinitely. Whether or not that is technically amnesty, it is amnesty-lite, amnesty in form, and it is something which I don’t support.”

Thompson talk threatens to overshadow Romney at GOP dinner

Posted in wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, McCain, GOP, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani on June 2nd, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Mitt RomneyThe article is written by a staff writer from a Tennessee paper about a Tennessee event involving a Tennessee politician and his overshadowing Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney. See the attempt to counteract the comments that Fred Thompson would overshadow Mitt Romney as a GOP dinner in Jack Daniels country? Much has been made about Fred Thompson long before the mention this week of an exploratory committee. There have been lots of those with varying results. But the fact is Thompson has received a great deal of attention while doing nothing. Soon, providing he actually declares as a candidate, that will change. He will actually have to do something to earn favor.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Thompson talk threatens to overshadow Romney at GOP dinner

By BRAD SCHRADE Staff Writer
Friday, 06/01/07
He’s a presidential contender and the main attraction at tomorrow night’s annual fundraiser for Tennessee’s Republican Party. He’s raised more money in the state than any other Republican hopeful. Some of the state’s most influential Republicans signed on early to help get him elected.

Romney’s Got Brains, But Where’s The Love?

Posted in Public Affairs, wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, McCain, GOP, Tancredo, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani on June 1st, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Mitt RomneyIf you want reassurance that Mitt Romney is Presidential material, the article below from the Politico’s Jonathan Martin is just what you are looking for. The consistency, message, ability to connect with people and ‘think on his feet’ are just a few of the positive attributes that people are seeing in Mitt Romney everyday.

Personable without being ‘gushy’ or appearing shallow. Answering inquiries from the general public with the command and presence of an experienced problem solver. Calm and precise even under adverse conditions as when the caustic self-proclaimed liberal grabbed headlines for his thoughtless insult.

With the exception of needing some clarity on his immigration position, there is little if anything Romney has left vague or ambiguous. The calm and thoughtful reactions to events on the campaign trail continue to trend the characteristics of a man anyone could vote for in 2008.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Romney’s Got Brains, But Where’s The Love?

SIOUX CITY, Iowa, Jun 1, 2007(The Politico)
By The Politico’s Jonathan Martin.
A lesser politician may not have been able to pull it off.

To laughs, applause and not a few “oohs” at the naughtiness of the question, Mitt Romney was asked at a town hall meeting in the conservative corner of this polite-to-a-fault state if he would “take the gloves off” were he to face Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., in the general election next year.

The former Massachusetts governor began his answer to the lunchtime crowd by saying that he had already experienced something similar.

“I’ve already run and won against a female candidate under difficult circumstances, and I understood the unique delicacies involved in such a race.”

That was the message, anyway — but of course Romney didn’t put it quite like that.

Trackposted to The Virtuous Republic, Perri Nelson’s Website, The Pet Haven Blog, Leaning Straight Up, The Amboy Times, Pursuing Holiness, Pet’s Garden Blog, Rightlinx, third world county, Wake Up America, Woman Honor Thyself, The Uncooperative Blogger, stikNstein… has no mercy, Pirate’s Cove, Nuke’s news and views, The Right Nation, The Pink Flamingo, Dumb Ox Daily News, Right Voices, The Random Yak, A Blog For All, DeMediacratic Nation, Adam’s Blog, Maggie’s Notebook, The Bullwinkle Blog, Cao’s Blog, Jo’s Cafe, Conservative Cat, Diary of the Mad Pigeon, The World According to Carl, Blue Star Chronicles, Gulf Coast Hurricane Tracker, High Desert Wanderer, and The Yankee Sailor, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

McCain Makes Fundraising Stop In Mississippi

Posted in wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, McCain, Tancredo, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani on June 1st, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Sen John McCainThis brings up an interesting question. How nasty will the GOP candidates get toward each other? McCain and Thompson have history. Mitt Romney has been quoted as saying he likes Democrats. He was after all the governor of the bluest state in the country. So when will it stop being polite and nice? We could all do without negative campaigns.

Stanford Matthews
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McCain Makes Fundraising Stop In Mississippi

WLOX, MS -
Mitt Romney. Thompson supported McCain in his failed 2000 bid for the Republican nomination and the two worked together on key issues in the Senate. …

Will Thompson’s Star Power Fill the Void?

Posted in wordpress, campaign, election, McCain, GOP, Tancredo, thompson, romney, Gingrich, giuliani on June 1st, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

With an incredibly long campaign season for 2008, name recognition should not be a problem for any candidate. If they cannot figure out who you are in this much time, the vote wasn’t yours to begin with. They called Romney unknown and his support has grown by leaps and bounds. Maybe they don’t know Fred in a survey, but show them a picture and you can bet they’ll get it. It is not the star power that will count, it is substance and the big bag of money.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Will Thompson’s Star Power Fill the Void?

About - News & Issues, NY -
Fred Thompson, who despite his acting role on prime time television, is known by less than 4 out of 10 Americans, and Mitt Romney, whose name ID remains …