Posts tagged newt gingrich

AP source: Trump intends to endorse Gingrich (AP)

LAS VEGAS ? Real estate mogul and reality show star Donald Trump intends to endorse Newt Gingrich’s GOP presidential bid, according to a source close to Gingrich’s campaign.

Trump is set to announce his support Thursday in Las Vegas, where Gingrich is campaigning in advance of Nevada’s Republican caucuses on Saturday.

Trump’s backing would bring the former House speaker a blitz of media attention heading into the contest and following his defeat in Florida.

Trump announced Wednesday that he was to make news in the presidential race but did not say what it was.

Asked about the possible endorsement Wednesday in Reno, Nev., Gingrich said he had “no idea what the Donald is going to do.”

“He is always interesting,” Gingrich said of Trump. “And I don’t know of anybody who does a better job of getting attention by announcing that he will presently announce something.”

Gingrich sought Trump’s endorsement at a meeting in December at the real estate mogul’s Trump Tower office in Manhattan. There, Gingrich told reporters he had persuaded Trump to mentor promising children from some of New York’s poorest schools.

The former House speaker had come under fire for suggesting poor children should do janitorial chores in their schools to learn the value of work.

Gingrich also agreed to appear in a Republican debate Trump was to host in Iowa in December. But other candidates, including frontrunner Mitt Romney, turned down the debate, forcing Trump to cancel.

Trump had flirted with the idea of jumping in the presidential race as a third-party candidate but ultimately decided not to.

Appearing on CBS’ “Face The Nation” on Sunday, Trump praised Gingrich.

“He’s got great ideas. He’s very smart, he’s very tough and he is a great debater,” he said.

Gingrich was pounded by Romney in Florida in Tuesday’s Republican primary. Romney is considered a heavy favorite in Nevada, a state he won when he sought the GOP nomination in 2008.?

The source was not authorized to speak for the campaign and spoke on condition of anonymity. The endorsement was first reported by KLAS-TV in Las Vegas.

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Associated Press Writer Beth Fouhy in Las Vegas contributed to this story.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120202/ap_on_el_pr/us_gingrich

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Romney concedes ‘uphill climb’ in South Carolina (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney said Wednesday he has “an uphill climb” to win South Carolina’s presidential primary but is ready to defend himself from the “underbelly” of politics in a state known for bare-knuckled tactics.

Boarding a plane for the flight to Columbia, S.C., to campaign for the Jan. 21 primary, Romney said he’s prepared for the direct and indirect attacks that are sure to come from Newt Gingrich and other rivals for the GOP nomination.

“Politics ain’t bean bags and I know it’s going to get tough and no one’s going to be happy if things are said that are untrue. But I know that is sometimes part of the underbelly of politics,” the former Massachusetts governor said when asked if he was prepared for a whisper campaign about his Mormon religion or other aspects of his background.

“I hope no one associated with any of my effort, whether it’s my own campaign or anyone else that’s supporting me, I hope none of them do anything that departs from the truth,” he said.

Romney said he was surprised that Gingrich was so aggressively attacking his past tenure at the private equity firm Bain Capital. Gingrich, soundly defeated in the first two Republican contests, has gone after the front-running Romney as a former venture capitalist who earned millions through buyouts of companies that ultimately cost people their jobs.

“We understood for a long time that the Obama people would come after free enterprise. (I’m) a little surprised to see Newt Gingrich as the first witness for the prosecution but I don’t think that’s going to hurt my efforts,” Romney said. “Frankly, if I can’t take a few shots coming from my colleagues on the Republican side I’m not ready for Barack Obama.”

Romney also previewed a new line of attack against President Obama, whose campaign is certain to level similar charges against the former governor if they end up opposing each other in the general election.

Romney said Obama has been “a venture capitalist at Solyndra,” referring to a California energy company that declared bankruptcy and laid off 1,100 workers despite a $528 million loan from the Obama administration. He also said Obama was a “private equity guy at General Motors and Chrysler,” referring to Obama’s intervention to save the companies from collapse.

“So I’ll be talking about his record when I’m facing him,” Romney said.

The GOP front-runner, Romney said he faces “more of an uphill battle” in South Carolina, where he is less well known than in New Hampshire, which handed him a victory in its primary Tuesday night.

When he sought the nomination in 2008, Romney finished fourth in South Carolina, spurned by religious and socially conservative voters wary of his Mormon faith and past support for abortion rights.

“Our team recognizes this is going to be a challenge,” Romney said.

Earlier Wednesday, interviewed on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” he said: “I don’t know if we can win South Carolina.”

With an eye on Florida’s contest at month’s end, Romney began airing a new Spanish-language TV ad in that state.

Speaking with reporters traveling with him, Romney still savored his New Hampshire win with 39 percent of the vote. The victory made him the first Republican to sweep the first two contests in competitive races since 1976.

“It was like Christmas Day,” Romney said. “Each new report of votes coming in was like opening another present.”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120111/ap_on_el_ge/us_romney

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Valuable Hepworth sculpture stolen from UK park

(AP) ? Thieves have stolen a large bronze sculpture by one of Britain’s most important modern sculptors from a London park.

The sculpture by Barbara Hepworth, called “Two Forms (Divided Circle),” was discovered missing Tuesday morning after it was ripped from its plinth in south London’s Dulwich Park.

Local government officials said they will ask police and their metal theft unit to investigate the matter immediately.

The theft came after Metropolitan Police on Monday dedicated a unit to tackle those who steal cables and car metal parts for scrap metal ? a growing problem as prices for copper, lead and bronze soar.

The sculpture had been insured for 500,000 pounds (US$783,080) and is considered one of Hepworth’s most important later works.

Local officials are offering a reward of 1,000 pounds for information leading to the arrest of the thieves.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-12-20-EU-Britain-Stolen-Sculpture/id-849039fdbda7427aac9f19b9083d0ade

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What if Ron Paul wins Iowa?

Two new polls show that Ron Paul is the leading Republican candidate in Iowa. If Ron Paul wins Iowa and finishes strong in New Hampshire, he could change the election’s calculus.?

According to the latest Iowa survey of the Republican presidential field, Rep. Ron Paul of Texas is now on top, with 23 percent of likely caucusgoers supporting him. The Public Policy Polling survey puts?former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney second (20 percent) and a rapidly falling Newt Gingrich third (14 percent).

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A second poll released Monday also has Congressman Paul leading Mr. Romney, 24 to 18 percent. In that poll, by Insider Advantage, Texas Gov.?Rick Perry actually comes out 1.5 points ahead of Mr. Gingrich.

And New York Times polling analyst Nate Silver, who has developed his own forecasting model, is predicting a Paul victory in Iowa. That model ? which takes various polls into consideration, and weighs them according to accuracy and other factors ? now gives Paul a 52 percent chance of an Iowa victory. It assigns Romney a 28 percent chance of winning, and Gingrich an 8 percent chance.

The Iowa caucuses are just over two weeks away, and a lot can change in that time ? even in a primary field less volatile than this one has been.

But what if Paul actually wins Iowa?

Few experts believe he has much, if any, chance to win the ultimate nomination. His views ? which include abolishing the Federal Reserve, drastically cutting military spending, and dropping any federal role in regulating marriage ? are too far outside the Republican mainstream, they say. And despite being called the “godfather” of the tea party movement, an unscientific tea party straw poll taken by phone Sunday night gave Paul just 3 percent of the 23,000 votes cast.

That doesn’t mean, however, that he won’t be a factor.

An Iowa win would likely carry over to a reasonably good showing in New Hampshire, which has a strong libertarian streak and where Paul is already ahead of Gingrich in the most recent PPP poll.

A Paul win in Iowa ? combined with a thumping of Gingrich in New Hampshire ? is mostly good for Romney.

The more votes Paul siphons away from Gingrich, the less the GOP right has a viable alternative to Romney. It’s hard to see how Gingrich comes off of a poor showing in both Iowa and New Hampshire poised to do well, even though he seems ? for the moment ? better positioned in the next two contests, South Carolina and Florida.

“In addition to [Romney's] chances of winning Iowa outright, a close second-place finish behind Mr. Paul would be a reasonably favorable outcome for him,” writes Mr. Silver in his blog.

Silver adds, though, that a Paul victory in New Hampshire ? where Romney is currently favored ? could change things somewhat: “Although Mr. Romney might prefer that Mr. Paul win Iowa rather than a candidate like Mr. Gingrich or Mr. Perry who had a potentially broader base of support, all bets would be off if Mr. Paul won New Hampshire too.”

It’s also good news for Paul, even if it doesn’t propel him to the nomination.

Paul’s candidacy has always been about changing the conversation and promoting new viewpoints, and a victory in Iowa would give him a far greater platform to promote his ideas.

It’s easy to envision a Republican Convention, for instance, in which Paul plays a fairly large role. And a Republican Party that is forced to take Paul seriously rather regard him as a slightly batty uncle.

After months of shifting predictions of who will win Iowa ? Paul is the sixth GOP candidate to come out on top of the polls there ? could Paul finally be the one who peaks at the right time?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/5chaXdpc25Q/What-if-Ron-Paul-wins-Iowa

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Perry: Wall Street bailout biggest theft in US (AP)

MANCHESTER, Iowa ? Seeking a late surge, Texas Gov. Rick Perry sought Monday to tar GOP presidential rivals Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney for supporting the $700 billion Wall Street bailout and said the billions loaned to banks and other financial institutions at the height of the 2008 financial crisis amounted to “the single biggest act of theft in American history.”

Most of the money has been paid back.

In the final weeks before the Iowa caucuses on Jan. 3, Perry stressed his credentials as a Washington outsider ? someone who he says understands Main Street and is not beholden to the wealthy Wall Street set.

Perry said the values he learned growing up in rural Texas shaped his views.

“No one was going to bail out a dry-land cotton farmer” and no one should have bailed out Wall Street, Perry said in northeastern Iowa.

“This Wall Street bailout is the single biggest act of theft in American history,” he told voters at a pizza buffet. “And, you know, Newt and Mitt, they both were for it. That’s one of the reasons I say that if you really want an individual who is an outsider, someone who has not been engaged in part of that process, I hope you’ll take a look at me.”

Romney and Gingrich supported the Wall Street rescue that was shepherded into law in fall 2008 by Republican President George W. Bush. They have since become critics of the program, which conservative voters tend to loathe.

Perry joined the presidential contest in August to great fanfare but lost his luster following what was widely viewed as erratic behavior and lackluster performances in debates. He is hoping to achieve a comeback by pitching himself as “an outsider who truly believes that we’ve got more taxes and more regulation and more government than most Americans want.”

“We need to make the decision that we’re not going to support bailouts and these wasteful earmarks,” he said.

Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, has remained steady in polling and also has a sizable campaign fund. Gingrich, the former House speaker, has surged in recent weeks as voters started watching the race more closely.

Perry is hoping to leapfrog them both by casting former business executive Romney as a Wall Street insider ? although his venture capital firm was based in Massachusetts, not New York ? and Gingrich as a Washington elite.

“If you’ll have my back on Jan. 3 at the caucuses here in Iowa,” he told voters. “I’ll have your back for the next four years in Washington, D.C.”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111219/ap_on_el_pr/us_perry

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Republican presidential debate: Fact check (cbsnews)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/175369429?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Ron Paul: GOP Shouldn?t Have A Nominee Who Keeps Having To Explain Their Past Positions

video

On today?s Meet the Press, presidential candidate Ron Paul appeared to react to last night?s Republican debate. David Gregory quickly recapped the quarrel at the GOP debate over which candidate is the consistent conservative. Both Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich were criticized by Michele Bachmann for their prior support of the health care individual mandate, referring to them as ?Newt-Romney.? Gregory asked Paul what he thought of his rivals? conservative credentials.

RELATED: Ron Paul To Laura Ingraham: I Wouldn?t Put Newt Gingrich In The ?Conservative? Category

Paul argued that both Romney and Gingrich really come from the same mold, and that the Republican party could do better than a candidate who continuously has to explain their past support of policies that the contemporary GOP does not embrace. Paul touted his own brand of consistent conservatism, admitting that no one would ever be surprised at any positions he?s taken because he?s been saying the same things for the past 30 years.

Gregory asked Paul if he truly believed Romney and Gingrich are not consistent conservatives. Paul answered in the affirmative, adding that they willingly admitted their past positions and have not adequately explain themselves. Gregory pointed out that in recent weeks, Paul has been on the offensive against Gingrich in recent weeks, but not so much against Romney. Gregory asked Paul if this meant the libertarian candidate was more open to the idea of Romney being the party nominee than Gingrich.

RELATED: New Ron Paul Ad Calls GOP Opponents ?Little Shih Tzus? And Features Exploding Fed Agencies

Paul conceded that Romney is more ?diplomatic? than Gingrich at times, and Gingrich?s drive to be determined can sometimes ?rub people the wrong way.? When Gregory tried to get Paul to say which of the two candidates he was more aligned with, Paul maintained that all of his rivals ?support the status quo,? which makes it hard for him to give his support to any of them.

Watch the video below, courtesy of NBC:

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Source: http://www.mediaite.com/tv/ron-paul-gop-shouldnt-have-a-nominee-who-keeps-having-to-explain-their-past-positions/

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Paul strength may help Romney in Iowa (AP)

AMES, Iowa ? Mitt Romney may have some help in Iowa: Ron Paul.

The Texas congressman’s allies and others say that he drains support from the rising Newt Gingrich, and, if that turns out to be the case during the Jan. 3 caucuses and Paul manages to triumph here, the theory is that Romney would benefit in the long-run.

“If Ron Paul can chip away at Gingrich just enough, he could conceivably win the caucuses, but he doesn’t have the longevity of Gingrich” because Paul has trouble expanding his support beyond his libertarian-leaning base, said Tim Albrecht, an Iowa operative who worked for Romney during his failed presidential bid four years ago.

The theory among some Republicans is that even if Paul, who has been working this year to shed his 2008 image as a GOP gadfly, earns credibility as a mainstream candidate by winning the Iowa caucuses this time, he’d struggle to challenge Romney in New Hampshire, South Carolina and Florida the way Gingrich could because polls suggest he doesn’t draw enough support from across the Republican ideological spectrum.

Whether that assumption is correct or not, a Paul victory in Iowa over Romney still would be a set-back for the former Massachusetts governor who for much of the year has been seen as the most likely Republican to win the GOP nomination.

The question is: to what degree?

Some Republicans say a victory by Paul ? who many Republican operatives doubt can win the race ? could help curb the perception of a crushing loss for Romney, who has tried to tamp down expectations that he’ll do well here even as aides operate an under-the-radar Iowa campaign and TV ads intended to help him are starting to flood the Iowa airwaves.

A recent Des Moines Register poll this month showed Paul in second place behind Gingrich, with 18 percent support. That’s up from 12 percent in October and 7 percent in June.

“The reality,” said Steve Schmidt, who ran Sen. John McCain’s campaign in 2008, “is that candidates who are not going to win the nomination play a very important role in determining who does.”

Paul, to be sure, is a factor in the race.

He raised $5 million between July and September, and supporters say Paul will be able to stay in the contest as long as he wants because of a loyal following that sends him cash when he asks and new GOP rules that award convention delegates proportionally. And he’s not being shy about trying to bloody his rivals ? particularly Romney’s chief challenger. This week, Paul’s on the air with a blistering commercial hitting Gingrich for “serial hypocrisy.”

To back up their assertion that Paul draws support from Gingrich, Paul’s allies point to data that show very little overlap between their candidate’s supporters and Romney’s backers. They argue that because very few Romney backers would pick Paul as their second choice, it likely won’t help Paul to go after Romney. But, they say, attacking Gingrich has little downside because voters who flee Gingrich are as likely to pick Paul as a second choice as they are to pick Romney.

Unlike four years ago, Paul is running a much more methodical campaign and, in Iowa at least, is seeking to win the state the old-fashioned way.

He has spent more than a month and half campaigning here, and more than half a million dollars on ads. His campaign is sending out mail and making phone calls. And his campaign has proven that it knows how to organize supporters, a necessity to turn out people to vote at precinct caucuses on a cold January weeknight. He came within about 150 votes of beating Rep. Michele Bachmann at the key Iowa test vote in August ? but his near-victory was barely mentioned in the press, supporters complain.

A recent New York Times-CBS poll showed 70 percent of likely caucus-goers had heard from Paul’s campaign in some way.

Paul’s support is particularly strong among young people.

At least 1,000 students crowded into the Iowa State student union Thursday night to hear Paul’s rambling, half-hour speech ? and then many waited nearly 45 minutes to have their photo taken with the congressman.

The better organized campaign is driven in part by the political operatives who helped Paul’s son, Rand Paul, win his Senate seat in 2010. Allies say that victory helped teach Paul’s ideological backers how to turn grassroots, movement support into a winning campaign.

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Follow Kasie Hunt on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/kasie.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111209/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_romney_paul

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Paul strength may help Romney in Iowa (AP)

AMES, Iowa ? Mitt Romney may have some help in Iowa: Ron Paul.

The Texas congressman’s allies and others say that he drains support from the rising Newt Gingrich, and, if that turns out to be the case during the Jan. 3 caucuses and Paul manages to triumph here, the theory is that Romney would benefit in the long-run.

“If Ron Paul can chip away at Gingrich just enough, he could conceivably win the caucuses, but he doesn’t have the longevity of Gingrich” because Paul has trouble expanding his support beyond his libertarian-leaning base, said Tim Albrecht, an Iowa operative who worked for Romney during his failed presidential bid four years ago.

The theory among some Republicans is that even if Paul, who has been working this year to shed his 2008 image as a GOP gadfly, earns credibility as a mainstream candidate by winning the Iowa caucuses this time, he’d struggle to challenge Romney in New Hampshire, South Carolina and Florida the way Gingrich could because polls suggest he doesn’t draw enough support from across the Republican ideological spectrum.

Whether that assumption is correct or not, a Paul victory in Iowa over Romney still would be a set-back for the former Massachusetts governor who for much of the year has been seen as the most likely Republican to win the GOP nomination.

The question is: to what degree?

Some Republicans say a victory by Paul ? who many Republican operatives doubt can win the race ? could help curb the perception of a crushing loss for Romney, who has tried to tamp down expectations that he’ll do well here even as aides operate an under-the-radar Iowa campaign and TV ads intended to help him are starting to flood the Iowa airwaves.

A recent Des Moines Register poll this month showed Paul in second place behind Gingrich, with 18 percent support. That’s up from 12 percent in October and 7 percent in June.

“The reality,” said Steve Schmidt, who ran Sen. John McCain’s campaign in 2008, “is that candidates who are not going to win the nomination play a very important role in determining who does.”

Paul, to be sure, is a factor in the race.

He raised $5 million between July and September, and supporters say Paul will be able to stay in the contest as long as he wants because of a loyal following that sends him cash when he asks and new GOP rules that award convention delegates proportionally. And he’s not being shy about trying to bloody his rivals ? particularly Romney’s chief challenger. This week, Paul’s on the air with a blistering commercial hitting Gingrich for “serial hypocrisy.”

To back up their assertion that Paul draws support from Gingrich, Paul’s allies point to data that show very little overlap between their candidate’s supporters and Romney’s backers. They argue that because very few Romney backers would pick Paul as their second choice, it likely won’t help Paul to go after Romney. But, they say, attacking Gingrich has little downside because voters who flee Gingrich are as likely to pick Paul as a second choice as they are to pick Romney.

Unlike four years ago, Paul is running a much more methodical campaign and, in Iowa at least, is seeking to win the state the old-fashioned way.

He has spent more than a month and half campaigning here, and more than half a million dollars on ads. His campaign is sending out mail and making phone calls. And his campaign has proven that it knows how to organize supporters, a necessity to turn out people to vote at precinct caucuses on a cold January weeknight. He came within about 150 votes of beating Rep. Michele Bachmann at the key Iowa test vote in August ? but his near-victory was barely mentioned in the press, supporters complain.

A recent New York Times-CBS poll showed 70 percent of likely caucus-goers had heard from Paul’s campaign in some way.

Paul’s support is particularly strong among young people.

At least 1,000 students crowded into the Iowa State student union Thursday night to hear Paul’s rambling, half-hour speech ? and then many waited nearly 45 minutes to have their photo taken with the congressman.

The better organized campaign is driven in part by the political operatives who helped Paul’s son, Rand Paul, win his Senate seat in 2010. Allies say that victory helped teach Paul’s ideological backers how to turn grassroots, movement support into a winning campaign.

__

Follow Kasie Hunt on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/kasie.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111209/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_romney_paul

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