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Monday, August 29, 2011

Romney on $1 million mystery donation: ‘No harm, no foul’ (Daily Caller)

C.J. Ciaramella - The Daily Caller C.j. Ciaramella - The Daily Caller – Thu Aug 25, 3:30 pm ET

At a town hall event Wednesday, GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney dismissed a question about the $1 million donation to his super PAC by a short-lived company, saying there was “no harm, no foul.”

In April, the company W Spann LLC made a million-dollar donation to the pro-Romney Restore Our Future super PAC. In July and two weeks before Restore Our Future made its first annual campaign filing, W Spann dissolved as a corporate entity. (RELATED: Perry responds to Republican critics, snipes at Romney)

Campaign watchdogs jumped on the story, saying W Spann was little more than a shell company created to circumvent campaign finance laws. Ed Conrad, a former top executive at Bain Capital — which was founded in part by Romney — later came forward as the creator of the company.

At the town hall in Lebanon, Massachusetts, Romney said Conrad scrapped plans to donate to other candidates, so he only donated to Romney’s PAC and then dissolved the company.

YouTube Preview Image AUDIENCE MEMBER: “I did hear that there was a company formed which gave your campaign a million dollars. Do you remember this, a few weeks ago? So, can you explain that?”

MITT ROMNEY: “Yeah, there’s a guy named Ed Conard, who had a company who was gonna’ give to a bunch of candidates and decided not to, and gave a million dollars to a PAC that supports me and said ‘Oh it’s me.’ So yeah, well there’s no need for him to have the company if he’s not going to give to other candidates, so he gave to me. He’s given to me before, one of my partners, so it’s not hidden. It’s all out in the open.”

AUDIENCE MEMBER: “See there’s the spirit of something, and then there’s the legalities of something. And it just seems that this company was formed just in relation to the Supreme Court ruling to give money to your campaign and then dissolve itself.”

MITT ROMNEY: “And, and given the fact that, that — you make the, yeah, it was a company you say was acting as a person, that may well be. You can take it up with him. But there’s actually, given the fact that he said, ‘Oh, well it’s me,’ I don’t think there was, if you will, no harm, no foul.”

Conrad did come forward, but only after two complaints were filed with the Federal Elections Commission and the Department of Justice.

Read more stories from The Daily Caller

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Republicans seek new probe of NRC chairman Jaczko (AP)

WASHINGTON – Four Republican senators are asking the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's inspector general to investigate the agency's chairman for what they say is a continued pattern of withholding information from colleagues and acting unilaterally on the commission's behalf.

Lawmakers from both parties have criticized NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko, asserting that he has an overly secretive and controlling style.

The GOP lawmakers say the latest example stems from Jaczko's declaration in March that Japan's nuclear crisis constituted an emergency in the United States.

GOP Sens. James Inhofe of Oklahoma, John Barrasso of Wyoming, Jeff Sessions of Alabama and David Vitter of Louisiana said it is not clear that Jaczko had authority to make such a declaration, which grants him additional powers, since the crisis occurred on foreign soil. The senators also said they were not certain that Jaczko has rescinded the order, despite his public claims to the contrary.

A recent report by the NRC's inspector general said Jaczko withheld and manipulated information in an effort to stop work on a proposed radioactive waste dump at Yucca Mountain in Nevada. The inspector general, Hubert Bell, said Jaczko's behavior was "wrong" but not illegal.

"We are concerned that this pattern of wrong behavior has not only continued, but expanded beyond the Yucca issue to the Fukushima review process," the lawmakers said Thursday in a letter to Bell, naming the Japanese nuclear plant.

They said Jaczko has repeatedly thwarted the five-member commission's ability to make decisions in the wake of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that crippled the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear facility.

An agency spokesman said Thursday that Jaczko acted within his authority, citing congressional testimony by the commission's top lawyer.

Steve Burns, the NRC's general counsel, told a Senate committee Aug. 2 that Jaczko's actions "were consistent with the powers that he has under the statute."

While there was no specific event at a U.S. nuclear plant, the Japanese crisis presented an overall "threat environment" to U.S. sites, Burns told the Senate Environment Committee.

Jaczko, testifying at the same hearing, said he had informally rescinded the order, adding that no formal report was necessary because he had kept commissioners informed of his actions all along.

___

Follow Matthew Daly on Twitter at http://twitter.com/MatthewDalyWDC


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Black Dem faces tough race for Miss. governor (AP)

By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS, Associated Press Emily Wagster Pettus, Associated Press – Wed Aug 24, 8:05 pm ET

JACKSON, Miss. – After making history this week as the first black candidate to win a major-party nomination for Mississippi governor, Democrat Johnny DuPree now faces the tough reality of trying to win a general election against a better-known, better-funded GOP candidate in a strongly Republican state.

DuPree, the mayor of Mississippi's third-largest city, Hattiesburg, said he's not daunted because he has usually been outspent in campaigns. He said he plans to continue running a race-neutral campaign focused on jobs and education.

"We're in the race to try to make a difference for the citizens of Mississippi," the 57-year-old DuPree said after winning the Democratic primary runoff Tuesday night. "Our first priority is not the (campaign) finances."

An expert on black political participation said Wednesday that DuPree has little chance of defeating the Republican nominee, Lt. Gov. Phil Bryant, in the Nov. 8 general election.

"My guess is if the odds-makers were putting odds on this, it would probably be something like 100-to1," said David Bositis, senior political analyst for the Washington-based Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. "Mississippi isn't ready to elect a black candidate to major statewide office."

Bositis, who has spent more than two decades researching voting trends, said Mississippi is one of several Deep South states that has developed re-segregated electoral patterns, "with the Republican Party being the white people's party and pretty much just African-Americans being the Democratic Party."

Mississippi's current governor, Republican Haley Barbour, is limited to two terms and couldn't seek re-election this year.

Republicans have held the Mississippi Governor's Mansion four of the past five terms, and the state has voted Republican in every presidential race since 1980.

With a population that's 37 percent black, Mississippi now has more black elected officials than any state in the nation, according to the joint center.

However, Mississippi hasn't had a black statewide official since Reconstruction. Decades ago, black citizens faced threats, violence and poll taxes for trying to exercise their right to vote. The political structure started to change and black voter participation began to increase after the federal civil rights and voting rights acts became law in the mid-1960s.

Marvin King, a political science professor at the University of Mississippi, said DuPree's win this week is significant.

"Even in Mississippi, you can have a statewide candidate who is black, who won a nomination, who earned his way to the top of a ticket," King said Wednesday.

Bryant, the one-term lieutenant governor, said that when he called DuPree to congratulate him Tuesday night, he noted the significance of a black candidate winning a major-party nomination for governor.

"I told him, there are children all across this state that look to him as an example now," Bryant, 56, of Brandon, said Wednesday. "I think it's a very historic moment. Now, we disagree on some issues and we'll have a debate about that."

Aaron Barksdale, a Mississippi voter who describes himself as a Libertarian, posted Wednesday night on DuPree's campaign page on Facebook: "Just remember: A vote BECAUSE he is Black is just as RACIST as voting AGAINST him because he's Black."

DuPree campaign manager Sam Hall posted a response that said "voting for or against someone because of their skin color is a ridiculous way to pick a candidate. That's why the only time we talk about race in this campaign is when the media asks about it or someone brings it up like this."

DuPree leads a city that is roughly half black, half white. He does not dwell on race as an issue in the governor's election, although he has acknowledged in interviews that it's a concern for some voters. He said the color he likes to discuss is green, as in money generated from job creation.

DuPree defeated Bill Luckett, a white Clarksdale attorney and developer, in the runoff.

Luckett immediately endorsed DuPree, saying the mayor has shown a desire to help all people in the state.

Independent Will Oatis of Silver Creek is also running for governor. Rival factions of the Reform Party want to put a candidate in the race.

Barksdale, 31, of Ocean Springs, told The Associated Press in a phone interview that he posted the Facebook comment because he got tired of people treating him as if he's racist because he didn't vote for Democrat Barack Obama in 2008, when Obama was elected the first black U.S. president.

"I have nothing against Johnny DuPree. He did a lot of good for Hattiesburg," Barksdale said. "But in 2008, it was the largest black voter turnout in history and it was all because Obama was there."

Barksdale said he voted for one of the Republicans who lost to Bryant in the Aug. 2 primary, and he doesn't yet know which candidate he'll support in November.

Two other high-profile black politicians ran for Mississippi governor as independents in the 1970s. Charles Evers, brother of slain civil-rights leader Medgar Evers, ran in 1971. State Sen. Henry Kirksey ran in 1975. Neither had to go through a primary.


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Sunday, August 28, 2011

Poll: Ron Paul Could Beat Obama, More Electable Than Bachmann (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | And to think all it took was Jon Stewart chastising the national media for treating Ron Paul as if he was just an annoying voice in the room. A recent Gallup Poll not only indicates that the Texas Congressman is a viable Republican candidate for the 2012 GOP nomination, but that he is also considered more electable than the only person to garner more votes (than Paul) at the Ames Straw Poll held in mid-August -- Rep. Michele Bachmann.

Although the Gallup Poll, which was released on August 22, indicated that former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney had the best chance overall to defeat the incumbent Democratic president (Romney was the only Republican candidate to score better numbers than President Obama), Ron Paul polled only two points back of the President among registered voters (45 percent to 47 percent).

The margin of error for the survey was +/-4, which puts Paul within striking distance of a victory if pitted against Obama in a national election.

The interesting numbers in the poll seem to come from the party-affiliated respondents. A full 11 percent of Republican voters said they would vote for Obama if they had to choose between the two -- the highest percentage in the survey. The number, however, is offset by the number of Democrats who would defect and vote for Paul, which registered at 12 percent (also the highest percentage). Yet, among the important independent voters, those that candidates court more intensely due to their ability to shift an election (which would otherwise most likely remain fairly close and competitive along party lines), Paul also bests Obama by three points.

Minnesota Congresswoman Bachmann loses nationally to Obama by four points overall. She also loses the independent vote by six percentage points.

That makes him electable.

Back in February, when President Obama's approval ratings weren't as dismally low as they are currently and Donald Trump told the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) that Ron Paul could not win a national election (Paul subsequently won the CPAC straw poll), it might have appeared that the libertarian representative who also ran for president in 2008 would have a difficult time stepping outside his base of supporters, which constantly placed him with about 10 percent of the Republican electorate in polls. And that might have continued, even after Paul finished a strong second to Bachmann in the Iowa straw poll (she won by 152 votes). However, with national attention brought on by the national media's inattention to and outright dismissal of his candidacy, Paul's campaign seems to have gained political life that it did not exhibit before.

But can his campaign sustain its newfound momentum? Paul, known to be a fiscal conservative with set views on balancing the federal budget, getting America's military out of its foreign war involvements, and reducing the size and intrusiveness of the federal government across the board, would seem to be exactly the candidate that the GOP is looking for (especially given that his political positions are at the core of the tea party movement), yet has been generally ignored by his own party. If he can gain stronger support within his own party (only 82 percent; even Bachmann fares better with 86 percent) while contenders like Bachmann and Texas governor Rick Perry continue to make gaffes and policy mistakes, he may find himself in a dead-heat tie in a race for the Republican nomination with Mitt Romney.

Still, the poll numbers do not say Ron Paul will win the GOP nomination or a general election against President Obama. But they do say he can. And that's more than could have -- or even would have -- been said by most -- especially in the national media -- just a few days ago.


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Why Perry Dominates GOP Field by Double Digits in Latest Poll (ContributorNetwork)

ANALYSIS | It wasn't so long ago that Texas governor Rick Perry's staffers were fielding questions in Austin and telling everyone that the charismatic politician wasn't even considering a run for the Oval Office. But that was at the end of May and early June. Perry became a presidential candidate on August 13, and the general low-level support that had previously been shown toward a crowded field of Republican candidates -- all seemed bunched together under the 20 percent mark without a definite leader -- quickly morphed into a 12-point lead for the Texan.

According to the most recent Gallup poll, Gov. Perry leads all contenders for the 2012 GOP nomination with 29 percent support from Republican and Republican-leaning independents. But more impressively, he has opened up a lead over former national poll frontrunner Mitt Romney by 12 percentage points. Third place is held by fellow Texan, Congressman Ron Paul, who, following a tremendous amount of coverage of the fact that he was not being covered by the media (and in some cases intentionally), moved up in the poll to pull in 13 percent. Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann scored only 10 percent support for a fourth place slot despite her recent victory at the Ames Straw Poll in Iowa, not to mention enjoying second-place status to Romney in several recent national polls.

But what changed the dynamic of the grouping and their order of preference? Apparently, it was Gov. Perry's commitment to actually run, as opposed to the rumblings and the rumors that he was courting financial supporters and merely considering the possibility of a run for office. There is evidence that poll numbers reflect that to be the case.

In July, when speculation of a possible candidacy was at its highest, support for Perry in a national Gallup Poll indicated that he had 18 percent support as opposed to Romney, a declared candidate, who had 23 percent support. Romney lost six percent of GOP support in one month. Bachmann, who shares an electorate base with Perry, lost three points.

Rick Perry jumped 11 points in the poll.

At the same time, it should be pointed out that preference for particular candidates shifted, while the overall percentage showing preference remained nearly the same. This was reflected in the fact that the number of undecided voters remained relatively static. In July, 18 percent of respondents noted they had "No Preference." By August, those showing indecision or no preference was 17 percent. This would indicate that Perry's commitment to run altered Republican respondent preference for those who had a preferential candidate, a conclusion that can be bolstered by the uptick in support for MItt Romney when he announced his candidacy in early June. Polls had previously shown Romney in a neck-and-neck battle with undeclared candidate Sarah Palin (with numbers relatively unchanged from the dropping out of the race in mid-May of poll frontrunners Donald Trump and Mike Huckabee) until he declared his candidacy on June 2. Within days, as a list of polls at Real Clear Politics shows, Romney jumped to a sizeable lead of Palin.

So does this mean that Rick Perry should worry about the late entrance into the race of other candidates? Possibly. Among them is the aforementioned Palin, whose candidacy, though uncertain at present, brings with it national name recognition and a ready-made financial support system (SarahPAC). Other names being bandied about by the press are former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani, former New York governor George Pataki, and New Jersey governor Chris Christie.

The Gallup Poll is the third major national poll to show Perry with a double digit lead in the GOP nomination race. Rasmussen Reports polled Perry with an 11-point lead over Romney, while Public Policy Polling showed Perry leading Romney by 10 points.


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Past nemesis Kay Bailey Hutchison says she would support ‘nominee’ Rick Perry (Daily Caller)

Texas Republican Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison might have traded barbs with Texas Gov. Rick Perry during the last Texas gubernatorial election, but she insisted Wednesday that she will support whoever the nominee is, even if it is her former political nemesis.

“Of course I will be for the Republican nominee for President. We need new leadership that understands how to create jobs in America,” she said in an interview with David Asman on Fox Business set to air Wednesday night. “We have got to get rid of overregulation, overtaxation of our businesses so our private sector can thrive.”

“I will support the Republican nominee, whoever it is, because I know we can do better for our economy,” Hutchison said.

Perry is currently polling as one of the early front-runners in the Republican presidential primary race.

Despite their wranglings when she attempted to unseat him as governor in 2010, Hutchison appears to have put the past behind her.

“It was a very tough race. He had told our supporters he wouldn’t run and changed his mind. I was running for an open seat for governor, I thought, but he pivoted and decided to run again,” she said. “I thought I was unfairly criticized, but of course I would think so. (RELATED: Perry signs pro-life pledge)

“I’m concentrating on finishing my last year and a half, and trying to help get our ship of state on the right course.”

Follow Caroline on Twitter

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Obama is Already the Messiah -- so Perry Is Not Allowed to Be a Prophet (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | During an interview with FOX News Neil Cavuto, Texas Gov. and President Obama's latest GOP challenger Rick Perry committed what the liberal left is attempting to spin to the heights of blasphemy. When asked why he suffers from the "Chris Christy phenomenon," of being "very popular" outside his state but "not nearly as popular" within his state, the answer raised both eyebrows and a few hackles.

"I'd say a prophet is generally not loved in their hometown. That's both Biblical and practical."

Richard Connelly, fellow Texan and political blogger for the Houston Press surely isn't feeling the love.

"We gotta say," Richard hacked up on his blog - appropriately named "Hairballs - "we are simply in love with the idea that Perry seems to be beginning to think that all he has to do is announce his availability for the GOP nomination and everything will fall in his lap."

Well Richard, in only one week after his announcement Rick Perry is tied with Obama in the polls... and while I appreciate your opinion, isn't having confidence in your ability to win a race one of the prerequisites of entering? Besides, wasn't it you who later wrote that "You have to admit -- Texas politicians can be very entertaining. Dangerous, yes; misguided, almost always; but at least they provide lots of laughs, none of them intentional"?

Funny, for a proud Lone Star Stater whose Number One on a list of fifty reasons why "Texas Is The Best State In America" is that "Texans are so damn charming when they brag about their state," Richard sure does spend a lot of time distancing himself from and apologizing for the fact that "three of our last nine presidents have been from Texas."

The day after Barack Obama was elected president, the Chicago Tribune wrote of how 62-year old retired Coca Cola information systems worker Larry Younginer knelt in front of the congregants at his suburban Atlanta church and offered a prayer of thanks.

"Lord, we have again come to you in prayer, and you have heard our cries from heaven, and you have sent us again from the state called Illinois, a man called Barack to heal our land."

Chris Matthews, reacting like some teenage girl at a Justin Bieber concert said: "This is bigger than Kennedy. This is the New Testament. I felt this thrill going up my leg."

Overnight, the world was sniper-plastered with posters and statues of the deified Obama and worshipful cover stories full of similar encomiums filled news-stands around the world.

And you think Perry is buying into his own hype?

Still high on his trip to Berlin, Germany where thousands flocked to see the new American Messiah - oh, and perhaps the free concert offered by two popular bands who took the stage first - Obama humbly borrowed the words of (now Former Speaker of the House) Nancy Pelosi (D-San Fran) and agreed that yes, he is the one and "this is the moment that the world is waiting for."

"When the messiah speaks the youth will hear," Louis Farrakhan said of Obama in 2008. "And the messiah is absolutely speaking."

Then there is the website whose faithful truly believe that, "Obama is, of course, greater than Jesus"

In the meantime, the liberal flock is having a holy cow because Rick Perry had the nerve to insinuate himself anywhere near even the lower category on the divinity scale of "prophet".

Cenk Uygur , the uber-progressive online talk show host of The Young Turks - whose brief tenure as an anchor on MSNBC Live ended abruptly in July because he was considered too combative towards "those in power" has taken aim at Perry who threatens to obtain power.

"Rick Perry is somewhat unpopular in his own state" Uygur is quick to reiterate. "His approval rating is 41 percent and his disapproval rating is 42%. It's pretty close but an approval rating of 42 percent is not awe inspiring and if you're going to run for president and you only have that kind of approval in your own state, that's not very good."

Well Cenk, while Barack Obama still maintains approval in his home state of Illinois, Gallup says he is somewhat unpopular in a lot of other states. In fact, a recent Gallup poll shows his approval rating hit a new all time low of 38 percent with 54 percent disapproval nationwide. By your description of Perry's record it should be safe to assume that Obama's record qualifies -at best - as worse than "not very good."

"Part of the reason is he has this gigantic deficit he created," Uyugar theorized of Perry's poll woes in Texas, "$27 billion dollars - right. So that does not help."

Well, Perry's $27 billion affects only the residents of Texas. Obama racking up the national public debt to over $14,656,359,494,756 [and counting] and strapping $47,098.55 to the backs of every man, woman and child in the United States doesn't help either.

"Who's a prophet?" Cent Uygur asks.

Well, according to the American Heritage dictionary a prophet is, besides someone like Obama - "A person who speaks by divine inspiration or as the interpreter through whom the will of a god is expressed" and "A person gifted with profound moral insight and exceptional powers of expression" - a prophet can also be "A predictor; a soothsayer" or "The chief spokesperson of a movement or cause."

Perry's campaign slogan is, "Get America Working Again." Speaking at a rally in Austin, Texas, Perry said there are "One in six work eligible Americans who cannot find a full time job. Mr. President - that is not an economic recovery. That is an economic disaster."

Oh, and for those who want to believe that Rick Perry is simply "too dumb" to be president and prefer to cling to the hope that Barack Obama is one of the greatest intellects and the smartest president ever... Noemie Emery of the Washington Examiner shares these thoughts:

"Based on results, Perry," who wants to be president, "has been more successful as governor of Texas than Obama has been as president, or as anything else he has ever tried being, in the entire whole course of his life."

In the meantime, Obama has been president for almost three years, has proven to be "the political genius who shed 30 points in his first years in office - blew up his coalition in his first months in office" and "led his party to annihilation in the 2010 midterms."

Oh, and speaking of prophets, Miriam-Webster gives the example that this moniker can also be applied to "an economist who is regarded by many as a reliable prophet of future developments in the global economy."

"We cannot have four more years of these high unemployment rates," Perry said in Austin, Texas. We cannot survive four more years of "the failed stimulus', these record debts, this poor credit... it's time for a change."

Of the United States Economic Confidence and Job Creation Indexes, Gallup says we're at 9 percent and -54 percent respectively.

So what if Perry believes he can win. So what if he likened himself to a prophet. It's a hell of a lot less arrogant than saying, "I have become a symbol of the possibility of America returning to our best traditions" and that, by virtue of his election alone he is "absolutely certain that generations from now, we will be able to look back and tell our children that - this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal."

Yes, just like Richard Connely, Gov. Rick Perry "is proud of Texas" and of his accomplishments as governor.

However, as Governor of Texas - rather than a Hairballs blogger touting his home girl Beyonce's "specific parts" as Number Five on his list of things that makes Texas great and unlike Barack Obama, who likes to roll up his sleeves and talk about creating jobs that never materialize - Rick Perry likes to brag that his state has created 40 percent of all the jobs in this country since June of 2009... and that the credit rating for the Lone Star State went up.

Top that.

So, how did Rick Perry manage to improve the economic position of Texas while the crushing policies of Barack Obama have wreaked havoc in other states as well as around the globe?

"Don't spend all the money. Keep regulations fair and predictable. Keep taxes as low as possible and then get the government out of the way."

"You can't call yourself a prophet," Cenk Uygur, former "combative" anchor for MSNBC and uber-progressive online talk show host of The Young Turks insists.

Um, according to Miriam-Webster, Mr. Uygur - "Yes we can."


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Rick Perry zips past Mitt Romney in the polls (The Christian Science Monitor)

Washington – America, you have a new GOP frontrunner: Rick Perry has roared to the front of the GOP presidential field, according to the latest Gallup poll.

In only a short few weeks since the Texas governor announced his candidacy, Perry has gobbled up former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney’s lead in the national polls and then some, opening up a 12 percentage point advantage.

Not only that: Perry leads Romney among conservatives by a 33-16 margin, among all categories of church goers (even those who rarely, if ever, attend), and among all age groups. The only geographic grouping where Romney prevails is in the east, and even there he is ahead by a single percentage point.

(And don’t look now, but Texas Congressman Ron Paul has overtaken Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann for third place.)

Isn’t this just another tick in the horse race? Why are you telling us this, Decoder?

A campaign narrative can change in a flash. The open question with Mitt Romney was whether his slow, steady and largely silent campaign were keeping him above the fray or just lowering his profile. Now, it looks like it prevented him from putting down deep roots with Republican voters, who are, at least for the moment, flocking to the swaggering Texan.

Like your politics unscrambled? Go to DCDecoder.com


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From Sarah to Rudy, four Republicans say they are eyeing 2012 run (Daily Caller)

The GOP 2012 field may not be full yet.

A dozen Republicans are already running to challenge President Barack Obama for the White House, but at least four more could plausibly enter the contest by the end of next month.

Those four include former 2008 vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, former New York Gov. George Pataki, former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie continue to be pushed to enter the race, although both have publicly said they will not run.

As of the four who admit they’re considering a run, this is what The Daily Caller knows of their thinking:

Sarah Palin

Palin continues to tease the possibility of a run, reiterating in interviews that she hasn’t made up her mind about joining the fight for the GOP nomination and suggesting an announcement could come sometime in September.

“I’m of the mind of ABO — Anybody But Obama, at this time,” Palin told The Daily Caller while strolling through the Iowa State Fair earlier this month.

Speculation was at a high last week when her political action committee, SarahPAC, released a video teasing a Sept. 3 keynote address at the Tea Party of America event in Indianola, Iowa. That prompted Karl Rove, former deputy chief of staff to President George W. Bush, to predict she will run.

Palin was quick to respond, in a not-so-subtle swipe at Rove, saying through a statement on the SarahPAC website that any “professional pundit claiming to have ‘inside information’ … is … wrong.”

“Three years ago DC pundits predicted with glee the demise of Sarah Palin’s political career,” the statement said. “This past weekend their tune changed, citing false information that she has made a decision and set a date regarding a future campaign.”

Real Clear Politics, citing sources close to Palin, also reported that “an official announcement is unlikely” at the Tea Party of America event.

Despite these new signs that supporters say show she will run, others point to other factors that they say show Palin ultimately won’t pull the trigger.

That includes how both Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry are already filling the space she would inhabit. And it’s also been pointed out that she has not lost her Fox News contributor contract — unlike others running for president — signaling that her bosses there may not think it’s likely she will run.

The others

Palin’s entry into the race would have the biggest impact, but several others are keeping the option open too.

George Pataki, former governor of New York, told TheDC in May that he’s considering running, and New York publications are buzzing this week that an announcement could be soon.

Another sign Pataki, who isn’t well known outside his state, is serious about joining the race was the online appearance Wednesday of what looked like a draft Pataki for President website.

David Catalfamo, a spokesman for Pataki, didn’t return a phone call seeking comment.

And then there’s John Bolton, the former U.N. ambassador, who says he’ll make a decision within the next few weeks.

“Well I’m going to make a decision by Labor Day, there is no question about it,” Bolton told TheDC this week. “That’s my target date. One way or the other, I’m going to decide.”

Don’t forget about Rudy Giuliani, the former mayor of New York, who told TheDC in July that he would make an announcement about getting in the race by the end of September.

“I think there’s an obvious timeline, which would be the end of the summer,” he told TheDC then. “I got to get this decided by September.”

A spokeswoman for Giuliani on Wednesday didn’t return a request for comment.

TheDC’s Jamie Weinstein contributed to this report.

Watch:

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Saturday, August 27, 2011

AP-GfK Poll: Most Republicans happy with GOP field (AP)

By KASIE HUNT and JENNIFER AGIESTA, Associated Press Kasie Hunt And Jennifer Agiesta, Associated Press – 2 hrs 47 mins ago

WASHINGTON – After grousing for months, Republicans are growing more satisfied with their choices for president and, so far, they like what they're hearing from the newest candidate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

An Associated Press-GfK poll released Friday found that two-thirds of Republicans and GOP-leaning independents are pleased with the party's presidential field, compared with just half in June. And they're paying more attention, with 52 percent expressing a "great deal" of interest in the GOP nomination fight — compared with 39 percent earlier this summer — after a period that saw Perry enter the race and Michele Bachmann win a test vote in Iowa, the lead-off caucus state, threatening Mitt Romney's standing at the top of the pack.

The poll shows Perry — who has never run a national campaign and is just now introducing himself to most people — benefiting from wall-to-wall news coverage over the past few weeks as he became a candidate and jostled the until-then sleepy contest. Just 12 percent of Republicans and GOP-leaning independents have a negative impression of the Texas governor. And 63 percent of Republicans view him in a positive light, compared with 33 percent in June.

Beyond that, Republicans didn't change their impressions much about Romney. Nearly 2 in 3 still view the former Massachusetts governor positively, while just under a quarter view him negatively as he runs a cautious, methodical campaign that's facing its first true test in Perry.

Bachmann, the Minnesota congresswoman who won the Iowa straw poll, got roughly the same marks as Romney now that she's boosted her national profile. Both her positive and negative ratings rose in the two months since she entered the contest and started to become better known.

Broadly, the results suggest that Republicans are coming around to the idea that there may be a winner in the bunch after being less than enthusiastic for months and even though party elders continue to grouse that the field lacks a candidate strong enough to take on President Barack Obama. As recently as this week, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush — again — insisted they weren't running for president despite urging from supporters.

Sarah Palin, the GOP's 2008 vice presidential nominee, says she'll announce in late September whether she will run.

Stay-at-home mom Jennifer Bevington of Toledo, Ohio, is among those Republicans who like what they see, saying: "Out of the top three — Michele Bachmann, Perry and Romney — of who's running, they should be able to come up with a good candidate."

Mary Parish of Troy, Tenn., had doubted for months that any of the candidates in the field were strong enough to run the country or topple Obama. Now, the retired convenience store manager says: "I like Rick Perry. I think he's a Christian, a good Christian person. I like what he stands for, and I think he's strong enough to beat Obama."

Still, while Republicans like them are warming up to the field, the overall population still has significant doubts and is largely unimpressed, which could bode well for Obama come the general election.

Just 41 percent of all those surveyed expressed satisfaction with the official and unofficial GOP candidates, about the same as in June, and only Rudy Giuliani, the former New York mayor toying with a candidacy, get significantly higher favorable marks than unfavorable ones among certain or possible presidential contenders. And no Republican candidate — declared or otherwise — is viewed favorably by a majority of people.

This GOP field has been remarkably slow to form as Republicans look to challenge a politically vulnerable Democratic incumbent saddled with high unemployment, rampant foreclosures and soaring debt.

Now, five months before the Republican nomination contests are to begin, the field is largely set with Romney, Perry and Bachmann clustered near the top of many surveys, followed by Texas Rep. Ron Paul. Nearly everyone else is languishing far behind, including former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former pizza executive Herman Cain and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum.

The poll also found:

_Among Republicans who back the tea party, 80 percent view Bachmann favorably while 74 percent see Perry positively. Among those Republicans who don't back the coalition, just 37 percent have positive impressions of Bachmann and 48 percent of Perry.

_Romney earns positive reviews from a broader group of Republicans than Bachmann or Perry do. Majorities of both conservative and more liberal Republicans hold favorable views of him, which suggests he may be able to stitch together a broader coalition of supporters than his rivals to win the GOP nomination.

_Negative impressions of Romney among all adults grew 6 percentage points, topping 4 in 10 for the first time in AP-GfK polling. That's a warning sign for Romney as he executes a strategy to run a general election campaign focused on Obama and the economy while appealing to a broad spectrum of voters.

_Huntsman's negative rankings crept upward during the first few months of his campaign, and he was the only GOP candidate viewed unfavorably by as many Republicans as view him positively.

The poll was conducted Aug. 18-22 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellular telephone interviews with 1,000 adults nationwide and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.1 percentage points. The poll included interviews with 408 Republicans and Republican-leaning independents; the margin of error for these results is plus or minus 6.4 percentage points.

____

Poll results: http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com

___

Associated Press writers Ken Thomas and Stacy A. Anderson and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.


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Gallup: Perry leading nationally, Romney second, Paul third (The Ticket)

Less than two weeks into his official campaign for the Republican presidential nomination, Rick Perry has a 12-point lead over Mitt Romney, according to a nationwide Gallup poll of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents released Wednesday. Perry, the Texas governor, received the support of 29 percent of the poll's respondents.

Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who was in first place in the previous three Gallup surveys this year,  slipped to 17 percent in the poll, just four points ahead of Texas Rep. Ron Paul, with 13 percent.

The poll's margin of error is 4 percent.

A closer look at the numbers shows that, similar to recent polls taken in Iowa, Perry's base of support lies with the most conservative voters. Thirty-three percent of self-identifying conservatives said they were most likely to vote for Perry, while 16 percent of those voters backed Romney. Among those who attend church regularly, Perry leads Romney by eight points.

Romney does have a slight edge on Perry among Republicans and Republican-leaning independents on the east coast, and Paul dominates among younger voters, carrying nearly 30 percent of the voters between 18 and 29.

Gallup poll


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How the poll was conducted (AP)

The Associated Press-GfK Poll on the 2012 Republican presidential nomination was conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Corporate Communications from Aug. 18-22. It is based on landline and cellphone telephone interviews with a nationally representative random sample of 1,000 adults and included 408 Republicans and Republican-leaning independents. Interviews were conducted with 700 respondents on landline telephones and 300 on cellular phones.

Digits in the phone numbers dialed were generated randomly to reach households with unlisted and listed landline and cellphone numbers.

Interviews were conducted in both English and Spanish.

As is done routinely in surveys, results were weighted, or adjusted, to ensure that responses accurately reflect the population's makeup by factors such as age, sex, education and race. In addition, the weighting took into account patterns of phone use — landline only, cell only and both types — by region.

No more than one time in 20 should chance variations in the sample cause the results to vary by more than plus or minus 4.1 percentage points from the answers that would be obtained if all adults in the U.S. were polled. The margin of sampling error for Republicans and Republican-leaning independents is plus or minus 6.4 percentage points.

There are other sources of potential error in polls, including the wording and order of questions.

The questions and results are available at http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_el_ge/storytext/us_ap_poll_gop2012_method/42716761/SIG=10scao8d5/*http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com/.


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Perry passes Romney among Republicans in polls (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Rick Perry has taken a double-digit lead over Mitt Romney in the Republican presidential nomination race in two polls released on Wednesday, an indication that the Texas governor could replace the former Massachusetts governor as early favorite.

Although he only formally entered the race on August 13, 29 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents said Perry would most likely be their choice to oppose Democratic President Barack Obama in 2012, according to a Gallup poll.

Perry's support among Republicans was not dented by strong comments just after getting into the race, when he raised eyebrows among some of the party's opinion leaders by seeming to threaten Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and questioning Obama's patriotism.

The first nominating contests will not begin until early next year, but most of the other Republican White House hopefuls have been campaigning for months. Romney had been first in most nationwide opinion polls.

Gallup said 17 percent favored Romney, when asked to rate the field of candidates vying for the nomination. Texas Congressman Ron Paul was third, at 13 percent, and Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann came fourth, with 10 percent.

The telephone poll of 1,040 Republicans and Republican-leaning independents on August 17-21 was the first conducted after the second Republican candidates' debate in Iowa, the Iowa Straw Poll and Perry's entry into the race.

Businessman Herman Cain was at 4 percent, former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich had 3 percent, ex-Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum was at 3 percent and former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman had 1 percent support in the Gallup poll.

Perry also had a big lead over Romney in a survey of Republican primary voters conducted by the Democratic pollster Public Policy Polling.

Thirty-three percent said they would vote for Perry, versus 20 percent for Romney. Bachmann had 16 percent support. The rest of the field was in single digits, with Gingrich at 8 percent, Paul and Cain at 6 percent, Santorum at 4 percent and Huntsman with 3 percent.

PPP surveyed 663 Republican primary voters from August 18 to 21st.

(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle, editing by Cynthia Osterman)


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Perry swipes at Romney over health care and says he won’t vacation in Martha’s Vineyard (The Ticket)

Perry (Brett Flashnick/AP)

Rick Perry took a not-so-subtle swipe Thursday at Mitt Romney for supporting a state-sponsored health care program in 2005, when Romney was governor of Massachusetts.

"I think Mitt is finally recognizing that the Massachusetts health care plan that he passed is a huge problem for him," Perry, the Texas governor and Republican presidential candidate, told radio host Laura Ingraham. "And yeah, it was not 'almost perfect.' I truly believe that you have to have the free market in play with our health care. I think Obamacare, which was modeled after the Massachusetts plan, was an absolute debacle."

Romney's plan--which included a government mandate that individuals purchase health insurance and a state health care exchange program--resembles President Barack Obama's national health care reform that that passed last year.

Switching to the topic of Obama's current summer vacation in New England at the end of the interview, Ingraham asked Perry to pledge that he will "never vacation on Martha's Vineyard."

"I'm not even sure I know where it is," Perry said.


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Analysis: Romney's play-it-safe strategy at risk (Reuters)

BOSTON (Reuters) – Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney is running a disciplined campaign focused on slamming President Barack Obama and promoting his own skills, but pressure could mount for a more aggressive approach as his poll numbers worsen.

This week a trio of opinion surveys showed Romney trailing Texas Governor Rick Perry, who jumped into the 2012 race less than two weeks ago and generated a blaze of mostly favorable publicity.

Romney, a former Massachusetts governor and venture capitalist, has been the nominal front-runner among Republicans so far, partly reflecting his name recognition after finishing second to John McCain in his 2008 run.

Romney's second White House run, launched in June, has been designed around almost daily attacks on Obama. His campaign appearances have been relatively scarce and balanced by a heavy fund-raising schedule.

"We've stayed focused on talking to people about why Governor Romney is the best alternative to President Obama on the most important issue facing our country: jobs and the economy. That's what this race will be about," said Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul.

The Romney campaign issues regular videos on the theme "Obama Isn't Working," which highlights high unemployment. It mocked the president's recent bus trip through the Midwest as a "Magical Misery Tour," complete with tie-dye T-shirts available for a $30 campaign pledge.

Romney has led most polls among the Republican challengers this year, but with numbers well below levels that create a sense of inevitability.

Both Gallup and Public Policy Polling on Wednesday issued national surveys of likely Republican primary voters that showed Rick Perry holding a sizable lead.

"So far he (Romney) has really played it safe. I really think that strategy can't continue with Rick Perry in the race," said Krystal Ball, a Democratic strategist and former Congressional contender in Virginia.

"If Romney is going to stay in the game, he has to take more risks."

TOO EARLY FOR PANIC?

Political scientist Charles Franklin said it was too early for Romney to panic about Perry, but his campaign needs to stay on its toes.

Romney has been polite but distant in talking about Perry. In New Hampshire, this week he termed the Texan "a very effective candidate ... maybe when the field narrows down to two or three we'll spend more time talking about each other."

"So far, the Romney strategy to not be reactive to the 'flavor of the week' is smart. But it's only in hindsight when we know if someone was a flash in the pan or not," said Franklin, a professor at the University of Wisconsin.

Indeed, the 2012 Romney campaign has been shaped by a different dynamic from the wide-open 2008 race: running against an incumbent with low approval ratings who has left many of his previous supporters disappointed.

His strategists believe voters will respond positively to Romney's business pedigree as the polar opposite of Obama.

As the leading moderate among Republican contenders, Romney also might hope that his opponents simply beat each other up.

"My sense is that Romney's strategy is based on the assumption that Bachmann, Perry and others, even Rick Santorum, will fight it out among themselves," said Donna Robinson Divine, professor of government at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts.

"Then, Romney will be able to claim that he is focusing on the real issue -- capturing the White House. It has been a sound strategy. Whether he has to change it at this point is unclear."

Divine said the danger is that Romney's campaign could lose control of the message; this week's pro-Perry opinion polls could be the start of such a trend.

The Gallup survey had Perry with 29 percent support among Republicans and Republican-leaning independents. Romney was at 17 percent, down 6 points from a month ago, with Texas Congressman Ron Paul at 13 percent and Bachmann at 10 percent.

"The polls create a certain narrative that could force Romney to change tactics," said Divine.

As voting in the 2012 primaries draws closer, Romney's campaign might need to acknowledge a shift in the electorate with a sharper tone, said Ball.

In polling, Romney does better among independent leaning Republicans and moderates, but they don't typically vote in big numbers in primaries," she said.

Even compared with 2008, Republican voters are more conservative, largely because of the emergence of the Tea Party that was so influential in the 2010 mid-term elections and in the recent fractious debate over raising the U.S. debt limit.

"I think Mitt Romney really has to do some soul searching about what the Republican party is. at this point in time," Ball said. "The Republicans are looking for someone to get aggressive in attacking Obama."

Ultimately, though, strategists think Romney, who has a large campaign funding warchest, will be ready for hand-to-hand combat if he needs to.

"I suspect if he sees Perry approaching some kind of tipping point, Romney will engage him," said Divine.

(Additional reporting by Jason McLure; editing by Christopher Wilson)


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Friday, August 26, 2011

GOP Rep. Chabot criticized for camera seizures (AP)

CINCINNATI – The staff for a Republican congressman who was criticized after police seized two video cameras at a constituent meeting said Thursday that future gatherings will be open to recording.

A Cincinnati police officer confiscated cameras from two Democratic activists at a Monday evening town hall hosted by Rep. Steve Chabot.

Video of the encounter was posted on YouTube and spread quickly this week, with Democrats complaining of censorship of a public meeting in a public venue — a community recreation center. The video shows the officer politely but firmly demanding the cameras, which were returned after the meeting.

Chabot spokesman Jamie Schwartz said the cameras were taken to protect constituents' privacy. Media cameras were allowed to roll because, Schwartz said, staffers expected the news media to respect people's privacy.

In the future, cameras will be allowed, Schwartz said. Town halls will begin with an announcement that those who don't want to be filmed while asking questions can meet privately with Chabot afterward.

"He'll stay around as long as it takes," Schwartz said.

Some 100 people attended Monday's meeting, including some who are critical of Chabot on economic and health care issues.

David Little, one of the activists whose camera was seized, also criticized Chabot for answering only pre-submitted questions. Schwartz said participants in the next town hall, planned for next week, can question Chabot directly.

Chabot is in his eighth term. He served seven terms, lost the 2008 election and then ousted one-term Democrat Steve Driehaus last year.

___

Contact the reporter at http://www.twitter.com/dansewell


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The big business of Newt, Inc. (Daily Caller)

One of GOP presidential candidate Newt Gingrich’s favorite lines is that he is “running on ideas.” And indeed, he has a reputation as an ideas man in Washington, D.C.

Gingrich has an opinion on — and a plan for — everything from offshore oil drilling and immigration to infrastructure spending and spaceflight.

But ideas alone don’t fund presidential ambitions. They can’t buy plane tickets and tour buses, much less Greek cruises or a $500,000 credit line at Tiffany’s.

Gingrich’s total assets were valued at between $6.7 million and $30.7 million in 2010. He has written 23 books and produced eight documentaries with his wife. He commands between $40,000 and $50,000 per speech.

So how does Gingrich do it?

The former Speaker of the House has financed his operations by creating a large network of for-profit and nonprofit organizations which  directly and indirectly spread the gospel according to Newt. All told, the former Georgia Republican congressman held no fewer than 25 titles, positions and occupations before running for president, according to a CNN report.

The majority of Gingrich’s assets come from his numerous name-branded, for-profit groups: The Gingrich Group, Gingrich Communications, Gingrich Productions and Gingrich Holdings. He uses these companies to produce, distribute and supplement his prolific output of books, documentaries and public speeches. (RELATED: What exactly is a ‘gotcha’ question?)

Relations between the corporations are cozy. For example, in his July financial disclosures Gingrich declared a “promissory note” from the Gingrich Group, LLC to Gingrich Productions, Inc., valued somewhere between $5 million and $25 million.

The former Georgia congressman is CEO and chairman of the Gingrich Group, a communications and consulting firm he founded in 1999 after leaving office. One of the company’s first clients was Freddie Mac. A spokesperson for the mortgage lender said Ginrgich was hired “to provide strategic counsel on a range of issues that we’re facing related to policy and the industry.”

Gingrich later criticized the bailouts of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, saying it was “a tragedy” that the lending giants “had so many politicians beholden to them.”

Gingrich Productions, which “provides talent for audio, video and photographic productions,” paid its namesake more than $2.4 million in distributions last year and is valued at between $500,000 and $1 million. Gingrich’s wife, Callista, heads the company and is the creative force behind its many documentaries, all of which feature her and Newt.

The films have been financed in part by Citizens United, the conservative nonprofit group that last year won the Supreme Court case establishing corporations’ right to free speech through political contributions. (RELATED: Gingrich says scrap super committee, extend payroll tax holiday)

Gingrich also collected approximately $72,000 last year from a Florida talent agency, The Lubbers Agency, Inc., which also lists him as a director. Lubbers, presumably, refers to his daughter Kathy Gingrich Lubbers, who also leads Gingrich Communications.

Gingrich Communications is the marketing and media arm of Gingrich’s operations. It publishes The Americano, an online news site offering “a more balanced view on all the issues that concern American Hispanics today.” The Americano’s editor-in-chief, Sylvia Garcia, also works on Hispanic inclusion issues for Gingrich’s presidential campaign.

And then there are the think tanks, nonprofits and political organizations that Gingrich either founded or supports.

The largest is American Solutions for Winning the Future, a “527? political action committee he founded in 2007. There are no limits on the fundraising of such organizations, but they may not advocate for specific candidates or coordinate with any candidate’s campaign.

Gingrich’s 527 group works “to create the next generation of solutions that will ensure that the United States remains the safest, freest, and most prosperous country in the world.”

Its first major campaign called for increased offshore oil drilling and energy production. It raised $28.2 million in 2010, including money from its donors: energy companies like Las Vegas Sands, Peabody Energy and American Electrical Power.

American Solutions spent all the money it raised — $28.4 million, to be exact. In fact, it was the single biggest spender among 527 groups in the 2010 election cycle.

But more than half the money the group collected went to soliciting more donations and paying staff. It spent $15.6 million on fundraising and $9.6 million on administrative costs. Much of the rest paid for travel and events featuring Gingrich. For example, $3.2 million went to Moby Dick Airways, a charter jet company based near Washington, D.C.

That would be the same Moby Dick Airways the Gingrich campaign dropped FEC report. GingrichCenter for Health Transformation, a for-profit think tank Gingrich founded in 2003. The Center pushes for free-market reforms to American health care system, and has been critical of President Obama’s health-sector overhaul.

In its own words, the Center is “a high-impact collaboration of private and public sector leaders committed to creating a 21st Century Intelligent Health System that saves lives and saves money for all Americans.” The organization doesn’t lobby, but its clients — big names like Blue Cross Blue Shield and GE Healthcare — pay fees ranging from $10,000 to $200,000 per year for access to its policy ideas.

Gingrich also founded and helped fundraise for Renewing American Leadership, a nonprofit organization formed to “preserve and promote America’s history and America’s Godly heritage.”

Launched in 2009, that charity aimed to build a united front of social and fiscal conservatives. It prominently featured Gingrich on its website and in its fundraising letters, which were written on Newt Gingrich letterhead and signed by the former speaker.

Gingrich got in hot water when an ABC investigation revealed the charity paid $220,000 over two years to Gingrich Communications. It also purchased cases of Gingrich’s books and copies of DVDs produced by Gingrich Productions.

Long-time Gingrich spokesperson Rick Tyler ran Renewing American Leadership. He also said he was the recipient of the six-figure payments the charity made to Gingrich Communications. ABC also learned that the list of people who sent checks to that charity was provided to Gingrich for future use.

The Gingrich campaign released a statement saying the ABC News report “did not find any activity that was not fully supported by the law.”

“That’s because both [Renewing American Leadership] and Gingrich Communications took great care to make sure all resources were being used legally and ethically,” the statement reads.

After the ABC report broke, Renewing American Leadership stopped using Gingrich in its promotional materials. Tyler did not return calls for comment.

It wasn’t the first time Gingrich has been accused of playing fast and loose with his finances. In the late 1990s, the House Ethics Committee censured and fined the then-speaker for allegedly drawing money from a tax-exempt organization to help finance his political activities. The IRS later cleared him of the charges; the House, however, still ordered him to pay a $300,000 penalty.

But never let it be said Gingrich doesn’t have a charitable streak. The Gingrich Foundation, an Atlanta-based charity, has donated almost $700,000 to charities since 2004. The foundation has given $2,500 to the Atlanta Ballet, $10,000 to the Atlanta-based Arthritis Foundation and $100 to the Birthplace of John Wayne in Winterset, Iowa.

And in the midst of this all, the idea machine rolls on, as steady as ever. Gingrich released his twenty-third book this summer, and he took time off the campaign trail to screen his and Callista’s latet documentary.

He also made time to announce his newest project: drafting and introducing a bill in Congress strictly enforcing the Tenth Amendment.

The project is called Team 10 and will be, in typical Newt-speak, “a crowd-sourced, participatory effort meant to listen, learn and work with the American people, both online and in person, to develop ideas for enforcing the 10th Amendment and returning power back home.”

Read more stories from The Daily Caller

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NH GOP chair, tea party activist, says won't quit (AP)

CONCORD, N.H. – The state's embattled GOP chairman says he won't resign despite pressure to quit from top party leaders.

Jack Kimball, a tea party activist, says he represents a movement that's much larger than him and that's crucial to the party's future.

Kimball held firm even as U.S. Sen. Kelly Ayotte and a majority of the party's executive board called for new leadership in a letter dated Wednesday. The board will vote Sept. 1 on whether to remove Kimball.

Some Republicans are unhappy about recent GOP losses in special elections for House seats. Some raised concerns about the lack of cash in the party's accounts. Two events in recent weeks coalesced support for Kimball's ouster.

At a special election in Barrington two weeks ago, Kimball signed a petition he thought was in support of giving a Libertarian Party candidate access to a ballot line. It was actually a petition to give Libertarians broader access to ballots in general.

Last week, Kimball fired popular GOP executive director Will Wrobleski.

Former GOP state chairman Fergus Cullen said Kimball's signing of the Libertarian petition was "a critical tipping point."

"Firing Wrobleski compounded the problem," Cullen said. "Both got people saying he's got to go."

Rep. Shawn Jasper, a Hudson Republican, said he found it "horrifying that a Republican Party chairman thought it was a good idea to have another candidate, not a Republican, run against a Republican."

"That was simply it for me," Jasper said. "It appears quite frankly to me at this point that he's trying to destroy the Republican Party."

Kimball says ousting him will create a deep divide in the party. He says the party's lean coffers are a result of his efforts to retire old debt.

At a press conference Thursday, Kimball stressed his tea party affiliation and blamed the rift on differences between the tea party and what he described as "the establishment."

"One of the major goals of my chairmanship is to help the party move into the future, but sadly there are some who are still stuck in the past," Kimball said.

Ayotte was joined in her call for Kimball's resignation by the party's top echelon, including congressmen Frank Guinta and Charlie Bass, Senate President Peter Bragdon, House Speaker William O'Brien and GOP national committeeman Steve Duprey.

In a joint statement, Ayotte and the others thanked Kimball for his time and effort but added, "To ensure that all of the party's energy and resources are solely focused on electing Republicans, we believe it is time to move beyond this serious distraction."

Kimball said the request for his resignation "comes as quite a shock to me." He remained adamant that he will not step down.

"You've got a small core of folks who are not happy I got elected," Kimball said.

Kimball defended his fundraising capabilities. He said he raised $191,392 in the first half of this year, calling it the second-best performance for the first two quarters in the past eight years.

He confirmed he'd been visited by O'Brien and Republican activist Jennifer Horn, who sought his resignation and told him the Republican Governors Association was prepared to donate $100,000 to state GOP coffers if he resigned.

"I won't stand for that kind of deal-making, and neither will the voters," Kimball said Thursday. "They deserve to know the truth."


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Romney sticks with strategy despite Perry's surge (AP)

DOVER, N.H. – Despite a new rival's surge, Mitt Romney is campaigning as though he's still the GOP presidential front-runner, focusing his criticisms on President Barack Obama, taking few risks and keeping most proposals vague enough to leave ample maneuvering room.

That may change soon, however, as events shift the contest to a higher gear. September will bring several GOP debates that will include Texas Gov. Rick Perry for the first time, as well as renewed attention to the question of how to create desperately needed jobs.

The former Massachusetts governor may be pushed out of his comfort zone even sooner if Perry's fast rise seems real and lasting.

For months, Romney has largely floated above the sparring. He let Michele Bachmann knock her fellow Minnesotan Tim Pawlenty out of the race in Iowa, for instance, and refused to be drawn into tit-for-tat exchanges over policy details. Perry, the sudden favorite among Republicans according to a Gallup poll, may force Romney to turn his focus away from Obama and sharpen his differences with fellow Republicans.

This week, however, Romney stuck to an easygoing, business-as-usual air as he campaigned in New Hampshire, which will hold the first primary in about five months. He took a cautious stand on climate change, downplayed GOP differences on jobs policies, and shrugged off suggestions that Perry may have overtaken him.

"If you're running for president, your focus should be on the person who is president and his failures, and how you're going to make America better," Romney told reporters in Claremont.

About the only thing he changed this week, he said with a laugh, was his shirt.

He cut short a question about the Gallup poll. There are many polls, Romney said, although he conceded, "Rick is a very effective candidate."

Romney still enjoys a big lead in fundraising and organization over Perry and the others. For now, he seems eager to blunt rather than highlight his differences with them, a classic front-runner's strategy.

At a packed forum in Keene on Wednesday, Romney noted that he and all the other contenders have vowed to reject a deficit-reduction package if it contains even $1 in new tax revenues for every $10 in spending cuts. Obama called that pledge irresponsible pandering.

"We all have said taxes are off the table," Romney said. He later told reporters they should not be surprised if his job proposals hardly differ from his rivals', because Republicans share many values on that issue.

Romney repeatedly called for a balanced federal budget, but like many other politicians he offered few details on how to achieve it. He embraced House Republicans' demands for unspecified cuts in discretionary domestic spending.

When a man in Keene asked what sacrifices Americans should make, Romney offered a largely pain-free roster.

Americans should "work hard" and create new businesses, he said, but they need not "give more money to government." Young people should study harder and "demand more from teachers," he said, and learn that esteem comes from "living with integrity and getting married before they have kids."

"The sacrifice I look for is for Americans to reach for excellence and greatness," Romney said to applause.

Romney often asked voters to trust him to make good decisions as president, with details to come as events unfold.

"I'll find the right approach" to ending sanctuary cities if legally possible, he said. Sanctuary cities take a hands-off approach to pursuing illegal immigrants, and Romney said he opposed them as governor.

On Thursday in Exeter, Romney said he would look "at the widest array of options" to shore up the long-term fiscal health of Medicare and Social Security. At other stops he said the retirement age for eligibility possibly could be raised over time.

Asked what he would do as president if he had a GOP-controlled Congress, Romney immediately veered to unrelated praise of right-to-work states, which ban mandatory union participation.

He took a noncommittal stand on climate change at a forum Thursday in Dover. Humans probably contribute to global warming, he said, but "I don't know by how much."

"Could be a little, could be a lot," Romney said. He noted he's not a scientist and said he didn't want to spend trillions of dollars on carbon-reduction programs for something not fully understood.

Some voters asked Romney about health care, reminding him of his successful push for mandatory health insurance coverage in Massachusetts. At every stop he said he would overturn "Obamacare," a sure-fire applause line. But he skated over similarities between the president's health delivery overhaul and his own push in Massachusetts several years ago.

Romney said the state law was needed because some people took advantage of a system that let them get free treatment in emergency rooms without buying insurance. That's also an argument Obama made for requiring health coverage nationwide.

The Massachusetts law isn't perfect, Romney said, and voters can overturn it by referendum if they like. The Obama-backed law, he said, reaches far more deeply into health affairs for all Americans, and would reduce Medicare spending.

In Dover, Romney said he hopes Obama or the State Department warned Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi months ago that the United States would "come after you in a major way" if Gadhafi attacked his own people. Last month, Romney criticized Obama for saying Gadhafi should be removed from power. Romney told reporters Thursday that the U.S. could have attacked the Libyan dictator "in a major way" without necessarily removing him from power.

Many New Hampshire voters seemed satisfied with his proposals and answers.

"I thought he did a fantastic job," said Greg Ford, 35, an orthopedic surgery resident who attended a forum in Lebanon. Romney offers practical solutions to health and financial issues, Ford said, adding, "I'm a 100 percent supporter of eliminating Obamacare."

The crowds were almost always friendly, although Romney grew testy when a woman in Lebanon pressed him to acknowledge that many Americans depend on government programs Republicans want to cut. In four events in two days, the only question he got about his plans to greatly expand his Southern California house came from a reporter. Romney, a multimillionaire, said he wants room for his 16 grandchildren.

The press corps turned to other matters.


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Ron Paul on Libya: ‘Victory for Empire, but loss for American Republic’ (Daily Caller)

C.J. Ciaramella C.j. Ciaramella – Thu Aug 25, 6:59 pm ET

GOP presidential candidate Ron Paul today denounced the United States’ intervention in Libya, criticizing the operation as unconstitutional and costly.

The longtime Texas congressman, who is in third place in the GOP nomination race, according to Gallup polls released this week, wrote in a statement that while the recently deposed Moammar Gadhafi was a dictator, the United States was in no position to meddle in Libyan affairs.

“The current situation in Libya may be a short term victory for Empire, but it is a loss for our American Republic,” Paul said. “And, I fear it may be devastating to the Libyan people.”

“There is no doubt that Moammar Gadhafi is a bad guy, and that he has brought harm and misery to his country,” Paul continued. “However, our involvement in another country’s civil war is costly and unconstitutional.”

Paul said the he fears the the country will be taken over by another dictator or descend into sectarian anarchy, rather than peacefully transitioning to a democracy. Meanwhile, he said the United States has spent money overseas while in the midst of a debt crisis.

“We have spent over $1 billion on a war that this administration has fought not with the consent of Congress, but under a NATO flag and authorization from the United Nations,” he said. (ALSO ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL: Financial disclosures: Herman Cain worth between $2.9 and $6.6 million)

“And so, our government continues to spend trillions of dollars in overseas foreign wars while we face unsustainable debt, a looming dollar crisis, and our Constitution seems to lose any meaning,” Paul continued. “These actions will sink our country if we do not reverse course.”

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