Mitt Romney appears eligible to be president, according to a copy of Romney’s birth certificate released to Reuters by his campaign.
Willard Mitt Romney, the certificate says, was born in Detroit on March 12, 1947.
Mitt Romney appears eligible to be president, according to a copy of Romney’s birth certificate released to Reuters by his campaign.
Willard Mitt Romney, the certificate says, was born in Detroit on March 12, 1947.
A new We Ask America poll in Chicago finds Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s job approval rating at 64%.
First Read looks at “this week’s 10 hottest advertising markets in the presidential campaign and notes they’re all in states that George W. Bush carried in 2004 (and three that John Kerry never contested).”
“Six of the top 10 advertising markets are in North Carolina and Virginia… (Still don’t think that North Carolina is a true battleground?) The other four markets are in Colorado, Ohio, and Iowa.”
Meanwhile, the New York Times confirms that Romney has placed “a priority on winning Florida, North Carolina, Ohio and Virginia,” plus an additional one.
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Senate Democrats “are bearing an early television advertising assault by Republican-leaning groups that is reshaping those races,” Bloomberg reports.
In Ohio and Virginia, Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) and Tim Kaine (D) “are being outspent by at least a 3-to-1 ratio on television advertising as super political action committees supporting Democrats struggle to raise money and President Obama and the national party conserve resources for the fall election.”
Boston Globe: “They make awkward bedfellows, to be sure: Mitt Romney, the strait-laced Mormon who does not gamble, drink or cavort, and Sheldon Adelson, the socially liberal casino mogul whose resorts rank among the world’s favorite places to do all three.”
“Yet Romney met with Adelson Tuesday in Las Vegas, and the billionaire has pledged to support Romney against President Obama — presumably with money earned from gambling, which ‘undermines the virtues of work and thrift,’ according to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”
President Obama’s re-election campaign is opening a new front in its war against Mitt Romney, ABC News reports.
The new effort focuses on Romney’s record as governor of Massachusetts “and the campaign promises Democrats say he left unfulfilled. Team Obama will point to Romney’s rhetoric on job creation, size of government, education, deficits and taxes during the 2002 gubernatorial campaign and draw parallels with his presidential stump speeches of 2012. The goal is to illustrate that Romney has made the same promises before with unimpressive results.”
Greg Sargent: “Obama needs to persuade voters to do more than simply accept Romney as an alternative to the economic status quo who’s worth taking a flyer on. He needs to get them to look past general impressions of Romney’s competence and to realize that Romney is offering an actual set of policies and ideas about the economy that have been tried before. His ‘Mr. Fix It’ aura — which is rooted in the pitch that he can translate private sector know-how to the public sector — is belied by his actual record as a public official.”
“Republican super PACs and other outside groups shaped by a loose network of prominent conservatives — including Karl Rove, the Koch brothers and Tom Donohue of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce — plan to spend roughly $1 billion on November’s elections for the White House and control of Congress,” Politico reports.
“That total includes previously undisclosed plans for newly aggressive spending by the Koch brothers, who are steering funding to build sophisticated, county-by-county operations in key states… Koch-related organizations plan to spend about $400 million ahead of the 2012 elections — twice what they had been expected to commit.”
Alexander Burns: “Democrats have been raising the alarm about outside spending for some
time and clearly have reason to be afraid. It’s anyone’s guess how
heavily all that money will influence the election: these groups are not
all equally effective or equally committed to the same set of message
points.”
David Dewhurst (R) and tea party darling Ted Cruz (R) were headed for another round in the Republican U.S. Senate race in Texas after Dewhurst fell shy of a majority vote in yesterday’s primary, the Dallas Morning News reports.
Politico: “The outcome marks the third victory for anti-establishment GOP Senate candidates in as many weeks. Earlier this month, state Treasurer Richard Mourdock upended 36-year Sen. Dick Lugar in Indiana, and state Sen. Deb Fischer upset two better-known candidates in Nebraska.”
Rep. Silvestre Reyes (D-TX) lost his reelection bid to challenger Beto O’Rourke (D) in the Democratic primary in Texas’s 16th congressional district, the AP reports.
“The 67-year-old Reyes was first elected to Congress in 1996. Reyes received a rare primary endorsement last month from President Obama.”
Wisconsin election officials “are predicting that between 60 to 65 percent of the voting age population, or about 2.6 to 2.8 million people, will cast regular and absentee ballots in the June 5 recall election,” the Wisconsin State Journal reports.
“That level of turnout would be higher than the 49.7 percent of voters who turned out in the November 2010 gubernatorial general election, in which Gov. Scott Walker beat Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, his current challenger, by about five percentage points. It would not be as high as the 2008 general election for president, when some 69.2 percent of Wisconsin voters turned out to vote.”
Former Rep. Artur Davis (D-AL) confirmed on his blog that he’s left the Democratic party that he’s mulling a future bid for Congress as a Republican.
Wrote Davis: “If I were to leave the sidelines, it would be as a member of the Republican Party that is fighting the drift in this country in a way that comes closest to my way of thinking: wearing a Democratic label no longer matches what I know about my country and its possibilities.”
A new Quinnipiac poll in New York finds Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) has a 71% to 16% approval rating today — the highest score for an Empire State governor since Gov. George Pataki (R) hit 81% to 12% in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Wolf Blitzer: Donald, you’re beginning to sound a little ridiculous, I have to tell you.
Donald Trump: You are, Wolf. Let me tell you something, I think you sound ridiculous, and if you’d ask me a question and let me answer it.
A new Florida Opinion Research poll finds former Gov. Charlie Crist (I) would trounce Rick Scott (R) in Florida’s 2014 gubernatorial race if Crist ran this time as a Democrat, 48% to 34%.
As the jury in the John Edwards trial continues deliberations this week, the New York Post reports the former presidential candidate “flexed his trial-lawyer charm on pretty Andrea Love, 25, at the dive Bowbarr just outside of Chapel Hill, NC, last spring.”
Said Love: “I met him by the bar. I was kind of amused by the situation. He seemed like a charming guy.”
“Love said Edwards tried to schmooze her by telling her he was looking forward to practicing law again — and wanted to represent the poor.”
Gawker: “Leering, accusatory articles such as these are just media voyeurism dressed up as concern trolling. Being very concerned about John Edwards hitting on a 25-year-old is much more perverted than John Edwards hitting on a 25-year-old.”
A new Reuters/Ipsos poll of white working-class voters across the Rust Belt — Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and parts of New York and Pennsylvania — finds Mitt Romney leading President Obama, 44% to 30%.
“I have no interest in politics. Never have. Never will.”
— First Lady Michelle Obama, on The View, when asked if she would ever run for office.
Rep. Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI) “turned in 2,000 petition signatures to get on August primary ballot, but all except 244 have been deemed invalid because of rampant duplicated copies,” the Detroit News reports.
“A review by The Detroit News of the petition signatures found full copies of a sheet of signatures that were photocopied once and in some cases two times and mixed in with the 136-page stack of signatures. In some cases, a different petition circulator’s name was signed to the duplicate copy.”
McCotter accepted the findings and will now run as a write-in candidate.
Meanwhile, the Washington Post reports the Michigan attorney general is investigating the McCotter campaign for possible fraud.
Taegan Goddard is the founder of Political Wire, one of the earliest and most influential political web sites. He also runs Political Job Hunt, Electoral Vote Map and the Political Dictionary.
Goddard spent more than a decade as managing director and chief operating officer of a prominent investment firm in New York City. Previously, he was a policy adviser to a U.S. Senator and Governor.
Goddard is also co-author of You Won - Now What? (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country.
Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.
Goddard is the owner of Goddard Media LLC.
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