From the political dictionary: “brokered convention”
Obama Rolls Out Mobile Fundraising
Will Romney and Gingrich Split the GOP?
Rick Klein predicts that the bad blood between Gingrich and Romney could have long-term consequences for the Republican party.
“Gingrich is accusing Romney not just of liberal and moderate viewpoints, but of a craven dishonesty in his attacks — the kind of dishonesty that will make it seem strained at best when and if Gingrich throws his support behind Romney for the general election. He’s using the attacks to fuel an argument that Romney simply can’t beat President Obama in November. Sarah Palin, speaking to the tea party activists and other base conservatives, is emerging as Gingrich’s chief ally in arguing for the campaign to continue. Her voice was reinforced by that of former candidate Herman Cain, whose endorsement of Gingrich Saturday puts an exclamation point on the split between the party’s establishment and anti-establishment wings.”
Gingrich as Reagan
Walter Shapiro says Newt Gingrich may indeed be the second coming of Ronald Reagan. But it is not Reagan the governor nor Reagan the transformative president. Rather its the stubborn Reagan who bedeviled Jerry Ford all the way to the 1976 Kansas City Convention.
“None of this guarantees that political history will repeat itself as either tragedy or farce. But again and again, the largely youthful campaign press corps has sold Gingrich short. Maybe Florida is indeed the end of the line for Gingrich’s frail hopes to be the GOP nominee. But all it takes for Gingrich to prove that he is not yesterday’s man is a GOP primary electorate that remembers yesterday — and the day before.”
Bonus Quote of the Day
“Vote for Newt. Annoy a liberal. Vote Newt. Keep this vetting process going, keep the debate going.”
— Sarah Palin, quoted by National Review.
The Republican Brain
Coming this spring: The Republican Brain: The Science of Why They Deny Science — and Reality by Chris Mooney.
Doing the Job for Democrats
Newt Gingrich’s campaign has launched TalesofMitt.com, full of recent flip-flops by the Republican presidential frontrunner Mitt Romney.
It is certain that Democratic political operatives have already been
documenting many of these moments, but they have to be happy to have
Republicans lay the groundwork and soften the target with slick ads
using the material.
Romney Can’t Quote Bean Bag
Dan Amira notes Mitt Romney has spent much of the presidential campaign butchering one of the great political phrases of all time: “Politics ain’t bean bag.”
“As far as we can tell, Romney has not accurately recited the aphorism a single time during this entire campaign. Nitpicking? Sure. Romney is usually only off by one letter. Still, ‘politics ain’t bean bag’ has been repeated for over 115 years now. It’s four words long. It shouldn’t be too difficult to master.”
Super PACs Becoming Shadow Campaigns
As Super PACs raise larger and larger sums of money to put towards operations supporting specific candidates, Politico
reports that these organizations are evolving to become more like
shadow campaigns, “including phone banking, field organizing, direct
mail, polling, state-of-the-race memos and even surrogate operations.”
“The
ambitious expansion is another example of a shift in political
power away from the major parties and their candidates to deep-pocketed
outsiders. But it’s left campaign operatives and even candidates
grumbling about whether the super PACs are actually helping their
favored candidates… With advertising, campaigns and outside groups
can figure out what one another are doing by consulting spending reports
with details of buys that each is required to disclose in close to real
time. With on-the-ground organizing, it’s tougher to determine quickly
who’s doing what, while staying within the bounds of the rules.”
Why It’s Too Late for Someone Else to Run
Josh Putnam looks at the filing deadlines and notes that after Tuesday it will be mathematically too late for someone to enter the Republican presidential race and still be able to win the 1144 delegates needed for the nomination.
Of course, it’s still possible someone could run to deny one of the existing candidates the magic number.
More Proof Romney Wins Electability Argument
A USA Today/Gallup poll in the dozen most competitive states finds President Obama and Mitt Romney essentially tied while Newt Gingrich trails the president by a whopping 14 points.
The survey focuses on the nation’s most competitive battlegrounds: Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin.
Buy Obama’s Car
The 2005 Chrysler that Barack Obama leased from 2005 to 2007 is for sale on eBay for $1 million.
Santorum Exit Wouldn’t Help Gingrich
First Read: “Perhaps the most important number in the NBC-Marist poll was what happens when Santorum is removed from the race. Santorum’s vote splits off evenly if he’s removed, and Romney has an even WIDER lead over Gingrich, 49% to 33%. So, Gingrich can’t make the argument that if conservatives weren’t divided he would win. The numbers just don’t bear that out. What’s really interesting — Santorum probably could argue that if GINGRICH weren’t in the race, he’d have a better chance against Romney. Santorum’s image is as good as it’s been since the campaign began.”
Romney Ready for the Next Batch of Primaries
With the Florida Republican presidential primary wrapping up tomorrow
and likely to vote overwhelmingly for Mitt Romney, the candidates will
now turn to the seven contests in February. The AP notes, however, that Romney’s campaign has been laying the groundwork in these states for months.
“Romney has consistently dominated his opponents in fundraising,
reporting $19 million in his campaign account at the end of December.
And his campaign distributed paid staff on the ground — months ago, in
some cases — to bolster a growing network of local supporters. They
include a combined 380 Republican officials across February voting
states, eight members of Congress among them… While his opponents have
struggled to compete in one state at a time, Romney has had paid staff
in Nevada since June. He has already begun advertising there. More
recently, the campaign dispatched staff to Colorado and Arizona. Top New
Hampshire surrogates are headed to Maine in the coming days.”
Bush Troubled by Romney Immigration Stance
The New York Times looks into former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush’s (R) lack of an endorsement of Mitt Romney.
Troubled by Romney’s immigration rhetoric, Bush “voiced his concern directly to Mr. Romney, two people close to him said, urging him to moderate his oratory and views to avoid a collapse of support among Hispanic voters in the general election. In his conversations about an endorsement, Mr. Bush also conveyed to Mr. Romney and his allies that his double-digit defeat in the South Carolina primary did not warrant an endorsement and he needed to ‘earn’ it.”
Quote of the Day
“I think you can expect advisers to think that the work of advisers is very, very important, but frankly, I think if you’re to go back and look at where the sentiment changed, it was with the debates.”
— Mitt Romney, in an interview on the Today Show, dismissing the role of his advisers in his bounce back after losing the South Carolina primary.
Gingrich Looks Ahead to Super Tuesday
An internal Newt Gingrich campaign memo obtained by the Daily Caller claims “this race is just getting started.”
The memo stresses that Mitt Romney currently has just 33 of the 1144 delegates needed (Gingrich has 25 of 1144).
In addition, more than 20% of the available delegates (467) will be awarded on Super Tuesday March 6, 2012, and the memo notes that, one of the Super Tuesday states is Georgia, with 76 delegates at stake. To put that in perspective, “even if Romney wins Florida on Tuesday, he will only have 83 total delegates; Newt’s home state could effectively cancel out his entire delegate count to date.”
Kerrey Buys Home in Nebraska
Former Sen. Bob Kerrey (D-NE) tells The Fix that “he is buying property in his former home state of Nebraska, but that it doesn’t mean he will seek a return to the Senate in the Cornhusker State.”
“Kerrey left Nebraska after retiring from the Senate and at one point flirted with the idea of running for mayor of his new home, New York City, where he headed up the New School university.. That’s something Republicans are likely to use against him if he opts to run for retiring Sen. Ben Nelson’s (D-NE) seat. But if he does run, Kerrey will have a Nebraska address from which to do it. A senator must live in the state he or she represents.”