Posted on 01/29/2008 7:28:48 AM PST by bigjoesaddle
Do the Florida voters realize they may be electing Hillary as President today? THe conservatives in America cannot vote for this guy McCain. For 8 years he has been President Bush's primary backstabber, and the arguements against him are too numerous for this post.
This day could be historic. In the future when they ask "where were you when Hillary Clinton was elected president?", You may have to tell them where you heard McCain won the Florida Primary on January 29th, 2008.
A Romney nomination guarantees a Hillary victory.
If McCain wins the nomination and the general election, we only get Hillary light.
The last intangible in the Florida primary is what has been a trend in this primary season to go against “momentum”. In NH voters said, No to Barack when he could’ve knocked out Hill. In Michigan voters said, no to McCain.
If Florida goes for McCain, it makes McCain all but inevitable. So far people seem to have resisted inevitability.
No, independents CANNOT vote for McCain in Florida. You have to be a registered Republican. That is why I have hope that Romney can win.
At the beginning of the coverage, they are always flooded with results from the liberal east coast and it's very deceptive.
The conservatives in America cannot vote for this guy McCain...
“Many Conservatives, especially Social Conservatives, will not vote for..Romney.” ~ Ingtar
Why?
NY Times thecaucusblog/Comments section [Mass. voters talking about Romney on May 11, 2007]:
.. he stated that he supported gay rights, but then attempted to have a Constitutional ammendment added to the ballot to have gay marriage banned in the state. ..
I firmly believe that hell change his mind and go agree with his base if hes elected just like he did on the abortion rights issue. ..
.I will never forget when he vetoed the stem cell legilation after the bills sponsors had worked so hard at generating bi-partisan support. And he vetoed the bill ...
...If you want to know what Mitt is really about, please try to find his speeches to the Federalist Society to see what hes really made of. ..
http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com
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11/10/2005 Mitt Romney addresses the Federalist Society
http://www2.nationalreview.com/corner/romneyaddress.pdf
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What is the Federalist Society?:
...the Federalist Society, the expanding network of conservative lawyers who over the past quarter-century have played a leading role in reshaping the nations judiciary and setting high-level Republican administration policy. ..
[...]
..One of the groups founding fathers was Edwin Meese, who would soon become attorney general under President Ronald Reagan. Olson was part of that Justice Department, and so was Giuliani, who served as its third-highest official. The plan was to sow talented conservatives at every level of the federal judiciary and ultimately gain a foothold at the Supreme Court. That was very much on our minds, Olson said.
It appears to be working as planned. When he took office in 2001, Bush leaned heavily on Federalists to create a legal power structure to continue the work of seeding the judiciary. Roberts, along with fellow conservatives Alito, Scalia and Thomas, now form a formidable bloc on the Supreme Court.
[...]
Split among GOP camps
But as the Federalists have grown, they havent been immune to internal fissures. Federalists have key figures in both the Romney and Thompson campaigns who believe their candidate is a more worthy vessel for their legal philosophies. And they say they havent had to make the sort of compromise that Giulianis conservative supporters have.
David McIntosh, a former Indiana GOP congressman and gubernatorial candidate, is vice chairman of the Federalist Society, and hes a domestic policy adviser to Thompson. Douglas Kmiec, another high-ranking official in the Reagan Justice Department, has gone with Romney, whom he calls authentic.
More: http://www.swamppolitics.com/news/politics/blog/2007/09/giuliani_burnishes_conservativ.html
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Governor Mitt Romney Announces The Advisory Committee On The Constitution And The Courts
http://www.mittromney.com/News/Press-Releases/Constitution_Courts
LOL!!!......I can’t believe the poll workers are THAT stupid (yes I can)...........
If Florida goes for McCain, it makes McCain all but inevitable. So far people seem to have resisted inevitability.
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I think it’s the reverse. Romney has the $’s . . . he can do well on super-Tuesday regardless. I think McCain/Huckabee are the best votes today to keep this thing from getting locked up for a RINO.
A very good analysis. I call McCain “it’s my turn McDole”.
Worst crop of Rinos in history.
I have been surprised that so many top Democrat Socialist “leaders” have endorsed Obama, who has been a U.S. senator for just over three years. This makes one wonder if all the popular superdelegates are as committed to HRC as I had always assumed. Anyway, the Democrats are elated with all the socialist choices out there. Some 500,000 SC voters voted 100 percent socialist on Saturday! This from the first state to secede in 1860. I guess without ol’ Strom around to “guide” them, SC people are lost as a goose.
Get a grip! There are several months left until the General Election. As we have already seen in this primary season, anything can happen at almost any time. Each of the top three GOP candidates has been touted as the next new thing at some point in this campaign, as have Her Heinous and Obama. It’s a strange year, but I think Her Heinous has WAY too many negatives to be elected President.
Actually — I’m rooting for Hillary in the Democratic Primary. She’s far less formidible than Obama. Obama is likeable, can be inspiring to lefties, and has the capability of swinging the center with an optimistic message and speaking style.
Hillary is obnoxious, highly disliked by anyone from the middle rightward, and her disapproval ratings are astronomical. Plus, if we beat her now in the general election — she’ll probably leave her Presidential aspirations for good. If she loses the primary, she’ll be back.
Go Hillary!
Romney/Thompson ‘08
H
Why? Because he says a lot of good things while doing mostly things that contradict what he says.
He has advocated big bail-outs for the auto industry and quazi-government health care in the last few weeks alone. He is on record as being pro-abortion, anti-gun, and as a supporter of gay rights. His “conversions” are far too in line with election cycles to ring even slightly true. One gets the feeling that he will say anything to put president on his resume. I swear in Michigan I thought he would promise that under his administration nobody would get the flu and all mosquitoes would die in a strawberry scented burst his first day in office. He is a liberal (if I take him at his word) at worst, or an outright liar at best (not sure if I identified best and worst right in that phrase).
Oh yeah, and he will get crushed in the general. I can already hear the democratic narrative: “Rich white Rockefellar Republican who made a living buying and breaking up companies... wasn’t it just four years ago that the Republicans attacked John Kerry as a ‘flip-flopper’? Well, let me tell you a little about Mitt...” Even the guy’s name sounds like he was born with a frat pin. Was Chet already taken in the family?
One needs only show a few strung together clips of his past interviews to deflate the social conservatives.
I don’t think McCain is exactly a prize, but I am choosing him for his leadership on national security and with the exception of the stem cells debacle, anti-abortion position. I also think he will perform MUCH better against the Democrats. McCain gives the impression of command on the terrorist issue, which I think is the best counterweight for the progressiveness of voting for a woman or black candidate that the soccer moms will feel. Men admire McCain.
All that being said, as a person who tends to be an idealist... when I think of how the Republicans refuse to back a real and viable conservative (of which I saw none), I am extremely dejected and bitter, so maybe we have already lost.
I’d rather put Dole up there than John Kerry.
You’re entitled to your bitter delusions.
Wait a minute....trying to understand. They won’t start reporting returns until ALL the polls are closed, including those in the Panhandle. But you are saying the early returns after all the Polls are closed will NOT reflect the Panhandle. So we can sort of expect to see an early McCain lead as the first votes are counted. I want to make sure I understand all this as I watch the returns tonight.
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