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  • 27
    Jan
    2012
    9:00pm, EST

    Audience stacked for Florida debate? Not so, says state GOP

    By NBC's Jamie Novogrod
    Follow @JamieNBCNews

     

    THE VILLAGES, Fla. -- The Republican Party of Florida is pushing back on reports that Mitt Romney’s campaign stacked the audience at the CNN debate Thursday in Jacksonville with its supporters -- a charge the party blames on aides to former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.

    “I’m sorry if the Newt campaign feels like they didn’t have their best night, but I can’t allow the RPOF to be the scapegoat for that,” spokesman Brian Hughes told NBC News by telephone Friday night. 

    "We worked very hard,” Hughes added.  “The irony is there were some grumblings by Romney’s people in the hours before the debate that we had stacked it for Newt.”

    (The state party, not the Romney campaign, was responsible for seating about three-quarters of the 1,200-seat venue.)

    The pushback from the state party follows a story in the Huffington Post that quotes a Gingrich aide saying Romney’s campaign “definitely packed the room” in Jacksonville. 

    The aide, Kevin Kellems, was apparently making a reference to applause Romney enjoyed during several sharp exchanges with Gingrich.  It marked a reversal of sorts for the former speaker, who won the support of crowds during two debates in South Carolina last week.

    Romney campaign officials dismissed allegations that they packed the debate hall Thursday. One senior spokesman said he had invited only his parents.

    First Thoughts: Romney owned Gingrich, but problems linger

    Speaking in Orlando on Friday night, Romney compared the Gingrich campaign to Goldilocks complaining about her bowls of porridge being too hot or too cold.

    "I'm looking forward to debating Barack Obama. I'm not going to worry about the crowd," Romney said.

    Hughes tells NBC News that the state party worked to ensure that 900 seats went to unaffiliated Republican voters and remained off limits to volunteers and others connected to campaigns. There were 4,000 total requests for seats via the party’s website and county Republican offices.

    Romney stresses support for immigration before Latino crowd

    Hughes says that voters found to be affiliated with candidates were told to seek seats from the campaigns, each of which had an equally distributed number.

    “Any time that we saw a name that we recognized, or had a suspicion, we contacted those people, and said, 'listen, you’re affiliated with X campaign,'" Hughes says.

    The Florida Republican Party is not endorsing a candidate for president until the national party has a nominee.

    NBC’s Garrett Haake contributed to this report.

    177 comments

    Speaking in Orlando on Friday night, Romney compared the Gingrich campaign to Goldilocks complaining about her bowls of porridge being too hot or too cold.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: florida, gingrich, mitt-romney, romney, newt-gingrich, decision-2012, jamie-novogrod, romney-embed
  • 17
    Jun
    2010
    6:41pm, EDT

    Pac-Man to the rescue?

    Can naturally occurring microbes help clean up the oil spill? Some experts say yes.

    Scientists say microbes, some of the smallest living things on Earth, can gobble up some of the oil, much like the pint-sized yellow chompers who swallow dots in the Pac-Man video game.

    "You take natural oil-eating microbes in the water and give them fertilizer to make them multiply and degrade the oil faster. Oil is a natural product. It's inherently biodegradable,'' Terry Hazen, microbial ecologist in the Earth Sciences Division of the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab in California, tells the Miamia Herald.

    Florida Gov. Charlie Crist on Thursday visited a Sarasota company that sells microbes that eat oil. BP says it's open to using them. And the federal government is contacting its pre-approved list of companies to see how quickly they can ramp up production.

    Read more here.

    9 comments

    Aten, The drawings you need to operate have be the final redlined (revised) P&ID (process and instrumentation drawings), the rule is if its not shown on these drawings it doesn't exist. These drawing match the DCS that runs the platform(unit). You can't commission or start-up the unit without t …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: florida, microbes, gulf-spill
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