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Showing posts with label picks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label picks. Show all posts

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Romney faces question about possible VP picks

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mitt Romney may still be fighting to win the Republican presidential nomination, but he's also been fielding questions about who he'd choose as his running mate.

The question came up again Friday during a town-hall meeting in Jackson, Miss. While Romney offered no names, he says the Republican Party has many excellent governors, senators and former elected officials.

He said his most important criteria in a running mate would be a person who has shown they can be president.

Romney leads his Republican rivals in the race for convention delegates as the party's nominating contest turns to the Deep South. The former Massachusetts governor was headed to Alabama after his Mississippi stop. Both states hold GOP primaries on Tuesday.


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Monday, January 9, 2012

Huntsman picks up Boston Globe endorsement (AP)

NEWPORT, N.H. – Republican presidential hopeful Jon Huntsman on Thursday won the endorsement of The Boston Globe, marking the second time Massachusetts' largest newspaper has snubbed its former governor, Mitt Romney, ahead of the New Hampshire primary.

"There's something happening in this state!" Huntsman said announcing the endorsement at a town hall meeting attended by about 250 people.

The former Utah governor, who skipped the Iowa caucuses to focus on New Hampshire, is counting on a strong finish in Tuesday's primary to stay in the GOP race. He acknowledged earlier Thursday that the "tyranny of the clock" is working against him given his late entry into the race and his position far behind the front-running Romney, but said he'd be in first place if he had enough time to cover every corner of the state.

After criticizing Romney as the "status quo" candidate every day for the last week, Huntsman added a new jab Thursday night, noting that Romney was campaigning in South Carolina instead of New Hampshire on Thursday and Friday.

"The people of New Hampshire will not be told for whom to vote," he said. "They want people to earn their vote, as opposed to sitting down in South Carolina, so certain of victory."

The Boston Globe, which has subscribers in southern New Hampshire, endorsed Sen. John McCain over Romney for the 2008 election. On Thursday, it said both Romney and Huntsman stand out as presidential, but where Romney has been cautious, Huntsman has been bold.

"Rather than merely sketch out policies, he articulates goals and ideals. The priorities he would set for the country, from leading the world in renewable energy to retooling education and immigration policies to help American high-tech industries, are farsighted," the Globe said.

The paper acknowledged that Romney may well win the nomination, but it said he is being pushed in "unwanted directions" along the way.

Earlier Thursday in Portsmouth, Huntsman with a voter's assessment of him as David to Romney's Goliath.

Huntsman pointed to former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum's near-win in Iowa as proof that running a grass-roots campaign can pay off.

"You can't Twitter your way to prosperity. You can't Facebook your way to prosperity. You have to be in the state. You have to be felt. You have to be seen," he said.

Money is a must too and Romney has plenty of that. Huntsman, meanwhile, last week had to match donations from supporters to raise $100,000 to begin airing his campaign's first TV commercial.

The voter, John Troiano, a 50-year-old financial planner, said he had been leaning toward Huntsman before seeing him in person. He said he was walking away as a committed supporter.

"He needs to get a lot of rocks in his slingshot, so count me as one of his rocks," Troiano said, referring to the biblical story of David, who brings down Goliath with a slingshot then kills the giant with his own sword.

Troiano said he most appreciated Huntsman's sincerity, a quality he said he found lacking in Romney.

In a sign that Huntsman is looking ahead to South Carolina's primary on Jan. 21, Michele Bachmann's campaign chairman in that state said he took a call from Huntsman's campaign on Wednesday, the day Bachmann announced her departure from the race.

Lee Bright, a South Carolina state senator, said Thursday that Huntsman's campaign wanted to arrange a personal phone call between Huntsman and Bright, but that it had yet to take place. Several campaigns are looking to woo Bachmann's supporters, though Bright said he intended to remain neutral for the time being.

___

Associated Press writer Brian Bakst in St. Paul, Minn., contributed to this report.


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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Romney picks up important New Hampshire endorsement (Reuters)

LITTLETON, New Hampshire (Reuters) – Republican Mitt Romney, looking to close the deal in the early primary state of New Hampshire, picked up an important endorsement on Sunday from U.S. Senator Kelly Ayotte.

Ayotte was elected in 2010 from New Hampshire as part of big Republican gains in Congress, and is the top Republican elected official in the state. Her campaign had support from, among others, former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin.

Romney has won nearly every major Republican endorsement in New Hampshire so far, and has led in Republican polls in the state by a wide margin for almost two years.

On Friday, though, a survey by Magellan Strategies showed former House Speaker Newt Gingrich drawing within two percentage points of Romney.

New Hampshire holds its 2012 Republican primary election on January 10. The vote is regarded as one that Romney must not just win, but win convincingly.

The former Massachusetts governor has stepped up his campaigning in the state, where he owns a house. On Sunday he and Ayotte appeared at a rally in Nashua, her home town.

Ayotte was one of Palin's "Mama Grizzlies" in 2010, and is a former state attorney general.

In a statement, Ayotte cited Romney's experience as a businessman and governor, and his "excellent presidential debate performances" in her decision to endorse him.

Romney has also been endorsed by major New Hampshire figures like former Republican governor John Sununu and former U.S. Senator Judd Gregg.

(Reporting by Jason McLure, editing by Ros Krasny and David Bailey)


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