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  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    9:34pm, EST

    Michelle Obama to Floridians: 'Don't let anybody push you out of line'

    By NBC's Jamie Novogrod

    Follow @JamieNBCNews

     

    ORLANDO, Fla. – Declaring "we are going to get this done," an emotional Michelle Obama rallied a central Florida crowd Monday night, telling supporters on the eve of the election that it's "all on the line" Tuesday. 

     "Your president is nowhere near satisfied," she said, making the pitch for a second term for her husband, President Barack Obama. 

    The first lady has maintained a busy schedule visiting key swing states since the Democrats' national convention in Charlotte, N.C., in September.


    Here in an Orlando park, she made her final solo campaign appearance of the 2012 cycle.

    "Together, slowly but surely, we have been pulling ourselves out of that hole that we started in," Obama said, casting her husband's first term in office as a difficult but productive road to economic recovery.

    Though she didn't mention Republican nominee Mitt Romney, she warned against moving backward, touting her husband's overhaul of the health care system and regulation of the financial industry.

    The campaign estimated the crowd at 2,600. The decision to hold the first lady's final rally here in Central Florida is no doubt tied to the campaign's strategy to win the state's 29 electoral votes.

    Both the Obama and Romney campaigns have poured tens of millions into advertising in the Sunshine State, hoping to win the so-called "I-4 corridor," a key part of the Florida puzzle.

    Obama was joined on stage Monday by Sen. Bill Nelson and Puerto Rican-born performer Ricky Martin.

    Nelson, who is leading in polls against his Republican challenger, U.S. Rep. Connie Mack, made a pitch for support in Spanish.

    Almost 4.5 million people in Florida have already cast ballots, taking advantage of early and absentee voting opportunities here. The latest data from the Florida Secretary of State's office shows that Democrats have cast 1,915,630 votes – giving them a lead against Republicans, who have cast 1,747,977 votes.

    But Michelle Obama warned that the president needs every vote he can get.

    "Don't let anybody push you out of line," the first lady said, telling those who haven't voted yet to get to the polls early. "Don't let any delays deter you."

    Michelle Obama was scheduled to appear later Monday with her husband in Des Moines, Iowa.

    635 comments

    Is she proud to be an American yet?

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    Explore related topics: mitt-romney, barack-obama, fl, michelle-obama, first-read, decision-2012, jamie-novogrod
  • 21
    Oct
    2012
    7:40pm, EDT

    Mayor Villaraigosa blasts Republicans on immigration

    By NBC's Jamie Novogrod

    Follow @JamieNBCNews

     

    DES MOINES, Iowa – Speaking to Democratic activists at a fundraising dinner here on Saturday, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa lashed out at the Republican Party and said a Mitt Romney presidency would halt progress won under President Barack Obama.

    "Today, between the Tea Partiers, the climate change deniers, the birthers and the flat-earthers, I hardly recognize the Republican Party anymore," Villaraigosa said, telling the crowd that as a mayor he has sought to work across party lines. 

    "Republicans used to stand for something,” he said. “And now they just stand in the way." 


    Villaraigosa was in Des Moines to headline the Iowa Democrats' Jefferson Jackson dinner, the state party's annual marquee fundraising event. 

    In an interview, he called the invitation a great honor. Past keynoters have included other Democrats on a national trajectory, including a turn in 2007 by then-candidate Obama.

    But if it seems like Villaraigosa is eyeing a White House bid, he wouldn't say.

    "My aspiration right now is to get the president elected," he told NBC News. 

    Villaraigosa will be term-limited next year in Los Angeles and said he wants to "finish strong." 

    Though he supported Hillary Clinton for president in 2008, he has since emerged as a visible surrogate for President Obama. 

    In September, he served as chairman of the Democratic National Convention, helping to raise the profile of the Hispanic community at a time when both parties are battling over the country's largest-growing demographic.

    Villaraigosa said during the interview that he predicted Obama would win more than 70 percent of the Hispanic vote in August – a time when the president, though still enjoying an advantage, was polling in the low 60s. 

    "I still maintain that when it's all said and done, Latinos will vote overwhelmingly for President Obama," Villaraigosa said Saturday.

    He cited Republican opposition to the DREAM act, which would provide a path to citizenship for children who moved to the United States illegally as children, and which he said Republicans say is a "handout."

    Asked about Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, the rising Republican star who makes frequent references to faith, family and free market principles – ideas that some conservatives say will lead Hispanics to the Republican Party – Villaraigosa was polite but said the GOP has "gone so far to the right."

    "I have a lot of respect for him," Villaraigosa said of Rubio. "But that's not the point of view reflected in the Latino vote."

    (Rubio has said the Republican Party needs to soften on immigration, and has proposed alternative legislation which would not include the DREAM Act's pathway to citizenship.)

    While Villaraigosa called for moderation from the right, he was outspoken in his defense of the broad reforms enacted by the Obama administration that Republicans have called divisive and have pledged to undo.

    During his speech, he called the election a decision on the country's "fundamental direction."

    "What people don't realize about those first two years with Nancy Pelosi and Democratic majority in the House and Senate, and President Obama," he said, "it actually was the most productive congress since the Johnson administration."

     

    424 comments

    ...this from a guy whose city and state are being flushed down the crapper because of illegal immigrants (people who have entered the country without benefit of inspection)! i have no problem with legal immigrants (those who played the game and waited in line to enter). my grandfather was a legal im …

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  • 19
    Oct
    2012
    8:55pm, EDT

    Calling for patience on the economy, first lady asks for early support at the polls

    Gregory Shaver / AP

    About 2,500 people gathered to see First lady Michelle Obama speak Friday during a campaign event at Memorial Hall in Racine, Wis.

    By NBC's Jamie Novogrod

    RACINE, WI -- Days before early voting begins here in Wisconsin, first lady Michelle Obama told an audience of several thousand people Friday to get to the polls ahead of election day, declaring that the work of her husband, President Barack Obama, is "all on the line."

    "Early voting starts here in Wisconsin on Monday," Obama said, before explaining that new or unregistered voters could register on the spot at polling locations.

    Follow @JamieNBCNews

    It was the latest plea from the first lady to vote early, delivered in yet another state that will open its polls in advance of November 6th.


    In late September, on the second day polls were open in Iowa, Obama urged students at the University of Northern Iowa to visit a so-called satellite polling station the campaign had opened on campus for that day only. 

    And Monday, Obama told college students in Cleveland to vote early in Ohio -- declaring she had that day voted by mail in Illinois. 

    Early voting will be available this election cycle in a total of 32 states and the District of Columbia.

    The Obama campaign hopes that by encouraging early commitments, it can create early gains even as it pushes a message on the economy that dismisses snap judgment and calls for patience.

    Here in Racine County, a Democratic area south of Milwaukee, Obama told voters that while "we still have a long way to go to completely rebuild our economy," there are signs "every day" that things are looking up. 

    "The stock market has doubled.  Exports have grown by 45-percent.  Manufacturers have added 500-thousand jobs," Obama said.  "Do you hear me?" she added, growing animated.

    The first lady's visit comes as an NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist poll shows the president leading Republican nominee Mitt Romney by six points among likely voters, 51 to 45 percent.

    But it also comes days after a testy debate on Long Island, N.Y., in which Romney argued that improvements to the economy haven't come fast enough.

    The first lady's message Friday seemed in part a response. 

    "Real change is hard and it requires patience and tenacity," she said, adding later, "You see your president? How calm he is? How forward thinking he is? That is a lesson for all of our young people."

    Earlier, Obama said that listening to her husband "talk about his values" during Tuesday's debate "makes me fired up and ready to go, too."

    271 comments

    My lovely bride and I will be dropping our ballots off tomorrow, but the President pretty much has Washington in the bag already. Last weekend, we took an overnight trip to the eastern part of our fair state, and noted with equal parts of surprise and pleasure that Obama/ Biden and Inslee for Go …

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  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    6:34pm, EDT

    Romney attacks Obama on convention speech and jobs numbers

    Evan Vucci / AP

    Republican presidential candidate greets supporters Friday during a campaign rally in Orange City, Iowa.

    By NBC's Jamie Novogrod

    ORANGE CITY, Iowa -- In his first rally since President Barack Obama accepted the Democratic nomination for president, Mitt Romney on Friday called Obama's speech in Charlotte, N.C., "extraordinarily disappointing" and castigated Obama for not proposing how to solve joblessness.

    Follow @JamieNBCNews

    "I read that this morning, you perhaps got the chance to do that," Romney said of the speech, suggesting he didn't watch the event live on television Thursday night.

    "But if you did, perhaps like me you found it extraordinary disappointing -- surprisingly disappointing," Romney continued, adding later, "I was surprised by his address because I expected him to confront the major challenges of the last four years, which is an economy which has not produced the jobs that the American people need."


    Romney made the remarks to several thousand people inside a basketball gym at Northwestern College, a small Christian liberal arts school here in conservative northwest Iowa.

    Campaign officials said 2,600 people were inside the gym, and another 800 to 1000 people were inside an overflow room, which Romney visited briefly afterward.

    The event came on the same day the Labor Department released a sour jobs report showing employers added 96,000 jobs in August and that more than 350,000 people had stopped looking for work.

    "It’s just simply unimaginable," Romney said of the numbers.  "The president said that by this time we’d be at 5.4 percent unemployment. 5.4 percent. Instead, we’re at about 8 percent."

    Romney said the difference accounts for 9 million people who could be working.

    Earlier Friday, Romney called the report a "hangover" after the Democrats' "party" in Charlotte.

    "This is a tough time for the middle class of America," Romney told reporters on a tarmac in Sioux City.  "There's almost nothing the president has done in the past three and a half, four years that gives the American people confidence that he knows what he's doing when it comes to jobs and the economy."

    Before Romney took the stage here in Orange City, campaign aides tossed to the crowd blue foam gloves designed to look like baseball mitts. 

    A scoreboard inside the gym had been programmed to list one team as "Mitt" and the other "Romney."  Scores were listed as 11 and 6, a reference to the Nov. 6 general election.

    Romney was introduced by two Iowa Republicans, Gov. Terry Branstad and Rep. Steve King, who represents the 5th district here and is running for re-election.

    Making an apparent pitch for Romney's conservative credentials, King told the crowd that Obama "undermines" the values of northwest Iowa "day after day after day."

    "Don't doubt this man's faith. Don't doubt his conviction," King said of Romney.  "Do not doubt his patriotism or his faith, and his love for Jesus Christ, our savior."

    Romney later urged the crowd inside the overflow room to re-elect King.

    "I wanna make sure he's in Washington when I get there so we can do the things we're promising doing," Romney said.

    627 comments

    After Mitten's speech at the RNC, he better just shut his face. That had to be the worst speech I have ever heard, and rated 38%(the worst in history) by his listeners. And as far as Jobs, NitMitt hasn't got a clue....... - O&Joe 2012

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  • 4
    Aug
    2012
    7:04pm, EDT

    Jindal on veepstakes: 'Paul Ryan brings a lot to the table'

    By NBC’s Jamie Novogrod

    J. Scott Applewhite / AP

    Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana

    JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Paul Ryan’s got a friend in Bobby Jindal.

    Jindal, governor of Louisiana, told an audience of conservative activists on Saturday that presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney would send a “powerful message” on budgetary issues were he to choose Ryan, Wisconsin’s U.S. House representative, as his running mate.


    The remarks came as Jindal – a buzzed-about veep prospect himself – wrapped up a keynote address to the Red State Gathering in Jacksonville, an annual conference of Tea Party and other conservative activist groups.

    Follow @JamieNBCNews

    "I think picking somebody like a Paul Ryan would send a very powerful message that this administration was serious about Medicare reform, entitlement reform, shrinking the size of government, and doing so in a courageous way," Jindal said of a Romney presidency.

    Ryan is chairman of the House Budget Committee and the author of a controversial plan that Democrats have attacked over its cuts to federal entitlement programs. 

    Romney, who won Ryan’s endorsement in March, has spoken favorably of the plan, pleasing conservatives who have helped to make Ryan’s name a nationwide brand.

    Still, some at the conference here clearly had another veepstaker in mind.

    “I was going to God bless you and pray that our nominee has you and your first lady on the list to be vice president,” an audience member said as Jindal took questions.

    Jindal, brushing aside the compliment, responded that he has a “bias” toward the executive experience earned by governors, before adding that Ryan is an exception to that rule.

    Asked later if he was making an endorsement of a Romney-Ryan ticket, Jindal said no.

    “It’s certainly not my place to be making endorsements. I mean, it’s really up to Governor Romney to pick who he wants,” Jindal told NBC News.  “I just think Paul Ryan brings a lot to the table.”

    “Paul's a friend.  Paul's been a great leader. I think he’s an example of a great choice,” Jindal added later.  “I think there are several other examples of great candidates out there as well.”

    Jindal earlier told the crowd that he also admired Florida Gov. Rick Scott and Texas Gov. Rick Perry– whom Jindal backed for president during the Republican primaries.

    Perry, who dropped out of the race in January, announced for president at last year’s Red State Gathering, held in Charleston, S.C.

    459 comments

    Oh yes. Puhleeze, do this. Ryan for Vice President. Makes it way more clear what Romney plans on doing to the middle class, poor, and infirm. Rob them BLIND!

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  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    9:55pm, EDT

    10 GOP governors rally around Romney

    Charles Dharapak / AP

    Republican presidential candidate and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney greets Texas Gov. Rick Perry, left, and Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead, right, on Thursday as he campaigns at Basalt Public High School, in Basalt, Colo.

    By NBC’s Alex Moe and Jamie Novogrod

    BASALT, Colo. – Fresh from a foreign trip marked by a number of stumbles, Mitt Romney was back in his element late Thursday.

    It was a Republican governors’ love fest outside the resort town of Aspen as the presumptive GOP nominee was joined on stage by 10 prominent Republican governors.

    “I want to learn from these ladies and men if I become president of the United States on each policy, each major piece of legislation on how it affects them and their people instead of just dropping it in their lap,” Romney told several hundred people inside Basalt Public High School’s auditorium.

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    New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead, Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez, Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell and Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer all accompanied Romney on his first day back campaigning in America since his trip overseas.

    Each took turns praising the man they hope will defeat President Barack Obama in just a few short months.

    “We need a president that believes in the free enterprise system. And we need a president that can deliver the goods,” Brewer said. “I will tell you, Gov. Romney, you can do it, and I am behind you.  America is behind you.”

    Perry, who ended his own run for president in January, had one simple message: This election is about trust.

    “The difference between the current president of the United States and the next president of the United States is that this man trusts you. Barack Obama does not trust you,” Perry said. “He does not trust you to make decisions about your health care.  He does not trust you to make decisions about your children's education.  He does not trust you in Colorado to make decisions about your energy policy.”

    The event spurred plenty of vice presidential buzz too.  Among the ten governors here in Basalt, Jindal, McDonnell, Christie and Martinez have each stirred speculation.

    “It's a treat to be here from the Commonwealth of Virginia that's going from Obama blue to Romney red in 90 days,” McDonnell, chairman of the Republican Governors Association, said.

    The RGA has been holding closed meetings in Aspen for two days.

    Jindal took several minutes to boost Romney’s education platform, which he said would include a school voucher system of the kind he is instituting statewide in Louisiana this fall.

    “Our sons and daughters deserve nothing less than the best education we can give them -- the best education that any child will receive in the entire world. We'll get that Number 1 ranking back by electing Gov. Romney as the president of these great United States,” he said.

    But just who should be Romney’s VP?  

    The consensus by the governors in attendance: whomever Romney wants.

    “There are a lot of really capable ones, but I will leave that up to Mitt, he will have it all figured out,” Perry told reporters about the handful of governors rumored to populate Romney’s shortlist.

    “His decision,” Martinez said. “There is only one vote and that is his [Romney’s].”

    134 comments

    hmmm . . . . “He (sic - President Obama) does not trust you to make decisions about your health care" said Gov. Perry.

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  • 1
    Aug
    2012
    8:15pm, EDT

    Foster Friess, former Santorum backer, to trim Super PAC donations

    By NBC's Jamie Novogrod

    Andrew Goodman / Getty Images file

    Foster Friess

    Follow @JamieNBCNews

    ASPEN, CO – Wyoming millionaire Foster Friess said on Wednesday that he plans to tamp down on donating to Super PACs before the fall election, saying he’d open the spigot more sparingly and selectively across a wider range of candidates and private charities to whom he could give money anonymously.

    “I’m going to reduce the amount of money I’m giving to Super PACs for (Mitt) Romney, and I’m going to increase the amount of money I give to support his and other candidacies – the governors, the senators,” Friess said.


    “The Super PAC money is going to be like $10,000 here, $5,000 here, $10,000 here,” he added.

    Donations to the tune of $2.3 million to the Super PAC supporting Rick Santorum during Republican primaries vaulted Friess into national headlines, which he says he and his wife didn’t appreciate.

    “I enjoy anonymity,” he said on Wednesday during an interview with NBC News.

    Friess is in this vacation community for the Republican Governors Association “Executive Roundtable” event, which offers high-dollar donors a chance to interact with noted governors – some of whom are rumored to be on Romney’s vice presidential list.

    Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie are among the veepstakers on hand.

    They, along with South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, will participate in a panel hosted by the Aspen Institute later Wednesday.

    Friess said his decision not to fund the Super PAC supporting Romney at the same level he supported Santorum’s is not an indication of lack of enthusiasm for the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.

    “You think I’m going to give away $2.3 million in every month of my life?  I don’t think so,” he said.

    He predicted the general election will swing 55 percent in Romney’s favor, an outcome he describes as a “landslide.”

    “I’m convinced this guy loves our country,” he said of Romney.

    NBC News intersected Friess as he walked with other donors from the lobby of an Aspen hotel to a nearby restaurant.

    He wore a white straw-style cowboy hat and paused to ask directions of locals.

    A group of women pointed him in the right direction. 

    “Women are God’s most beautiful creatures,” he said as they walked away. “After the white-tailed deer and the swan.”

    Friess was scheduled to meet on Wednesday afternoon with Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, to whom he said he would write a check.

    148 comments

    Why? Did old Foster run out of aspirins to put between his knees? I'm positive Willard let out a loud guffaw at that little humdinger! lmao Friess was scheduled to meet on Wednesday afternoon with Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, to whom he said he would write a check.

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  • 10
    Jul
    2012
    10:30pm, EDT

    Michelle Obama in Florida: 'We need to keep moving forward'

    By NBC's Jamie Novogrod

    Follow @JamieNBCNews

     

    Orlando, Fla. -- Speaking before a crowd of more than 2,000 Tuesday at the University of Central Florida, First Lady Michelle Obama listed President Barack Obama’s initiatives during his first term – including his recent executive order to stop deporting undocumented immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as children – and said those policies are all “on the line” in November’s election.

    “In the end, it all boils down to one simple question. Are we going to continue the change we begun, the progress we made?” Obama said. “Are we going to let everything that we fought for to just slip away?”

    “We cannot turn back now,” she added. “We need to keep moving forward.”


    The reference to President Barack Obama’s announcement last month that he had moved to block the deportation of hundreds of thousands of young illegal immigrants was perhaps an indication of how crucial Florida – rich in Latino votes – has become in an increasingly tight election.

    “He knows and believes that it is time to stop denying responsible, young people opportunities in this country because they’re the children of undocumented immigrants. It’s time to stop that,” Obama said of her husband’s support for the DREAM act, which would offer a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants who have graduated from high school.

    The measure has been held up in Congress since 2010.

    According to pool reports earlier in the day, Obama made a quick surprise visit to  the Blanchard Park YMCA in a mostly Hispanic neighborhood in Orlando. Many children recognized her – one girl covered her grin with both hands but could not hide it. Another asked for a hug.

    At the university, Obama spoke for about 25 minutes inside the basketball arena.  A state fire official estimated there were 2,251 people in the bleachers and on the gym floor.

    There was no mention of the president’s opponent, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, or of class and money – prominent themes in the attack ads released by both sides.

    Still, Obama made a careful pitch of her husband as an ordinary man, whose origins as the son of a single mother “who struggled to put herself through school and pay the bills” leavens his judgment in office.

    “I have seen how as president you are going to get all kind of advice for all kinds of people,” Obama said. “But at the end of the day, let me tell you when it comes time to make that decision as president, all you have to guide you are your life experiences. All you have to direct you are your values.”

    "We all know who my husband is, don’t we?" Obama added. "We all know what Barack Obama stands for, don’t we?” 

     

    423 comments

    ALL immigrants are welcome here - but they have to enter LEGALLY. Obama does not care about this country - he just wants to change it for the worse. Can't wait till he's out of office - maybe he will move to Europe.

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  • 19
    Jun
    2012
    8:24pm, EDT

    Amid voter purge, Rick Scott says 'good process' in place

    By NBC’s Jamie Novogrod
    Follow @JamieNBCNews

     

    ORLANDO, Fla. -- Doubling down on his controversial effort to purge non-United States citizens from voter rolls, Florida Gov. Rick Scott dismissed criticism by civil rights advocates Tuesday, saying the state has a “very good process to make sure that U.S. citizens have the right to vote.”

    That right is at the crux of a debate here over Scott’s initiative, which has spurred lawsuits by civil rights groups and a suit by the Department of Justice – which says the purge violates the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

    Most Florida counties have backed out of Scott’s directive but two counties have continued to accept it, according to media reports. There, U.S. citizens removed from voter rolls will be given a 60-day period to respond, and after that will be able to vote using a provisional ballot.


    “Your vote’s always going to count,” Scott said, saying that he speaks from experience.

    Scott revealed during a radio interview last week that he voted by provisional ballot during two elections in 2006 because an election worker in Naples confused him for a man who had died. 

    “They just said I got to vote on a provisional ballot,” Scott told reporters Tuesday. “The nice thing about our state – when something like that happens, we have a good process. So my vote still counted.”

    But just how much a provisional ballot counts is debated by voters’ rights groups, which point out that provisional ballots aren’t counted until after Election Day. 

    (Scott’s story, ostensibly meant to show that the system works, also seemed to suggest just how easily a registered voter can be thrown from the rolls.)

    The remarks Tuesday came during a brief discussion with reporters after Scott addressed a lunch meeting of the Board of Governors, the body overseeing Florida’s university system. 

    The meeting had drama of its own, as the board votes later this week on tuition hikes.

    Scott opposes the increases and is pushing for a review of the university budgets.

    While university budgets have put the governor at odds with his state’s university system, the voter purge has created friction with the federal government.

    Florida has filed its own suit against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, saying the department refused to share a database containing immigration information. 

    Scott says the state was forced to rely on a motor vehicle database instead, which critics say has outdated and bad information.

    Still, the governor's aides believe the project is necessary and has proved successful.

    Reached by phone, Lane Wright, the governor's spokesman, said the Florida DMV identified 180,000 people as potential non-citizens. A "small sample" -- 2,600 names -- was selected for verification. 

    Of that number, at least 107 people have come forward to say they are not U.S. citizens, Wright said, adding that half had already voted in a prior election.

    Asked Tuesday what he’d say to a woman in Central Florida whose eligibility was challenged even though she had a voting record dating back to Eisenhower’s 1956 re-election run, Scott shifted the blame to the federal government.

    "What I'd say is she should be disappointed that the Department of Homeland Security didn't do their job," Scott said.

    64 comments

    Does this idiot really want to brag about his record with a 31% approval rating... Apparently... so... WTF - were the voters of FL thinking when they elected a freakin convicted FELON?

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  • 2
    May
    2012
    11:04pm, EDT

    Bachmann hopes to unify party with Romney endorsement

    Jim Young / Reuters

    Sources close to the Romney campaign said Congresswoman Michele Bachmann is expected to endorse the Republican presidential hopeful at a campaign event on Thursday sources close to the campaign say.

    By NBC’s Jamie Novogrod and Garrett Haake
    Follow @JamieNBCNews
    Follow @GarrettNBCNews

     

     

    Orlando, Fla. and Pentagon City, Va. – Michele Bachmann will endorse Mitt Romney during a campaign event Thursday in Portsmouth, Virginia, sources within the Romney campaign told NBC News.

    The news comes at the tail end of a string of endorsements secured by Romney in recent weeks, following the departure of his chief rival in the race, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum.

    Party leaders, including House Speaker John Boehner, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, and Texas Gov. Rick Perry – a former fellow candidate – all soon fell in line.


    But Bachmann’s endorsement may represent another kind of victory for Romney, who has tried for months to woo support from the same Tea Party Republicans who found a hero in Bachmann last summer, propelling her own brief run for President. 

    In Bachmann, he has one of their leaders in his corner.

    Bachmann’s former campaign manager, Keith Nahigian, insists the endorsement is outside the realm of politics, pointing to a friendship that developed between the two candidates last fall.

    “She really liked Romney during all the debates.  Really liked him behind the stage, behind the scenes,” Nahigian said. “He was so polite to her every time they saw each other.”

    Nahigian was reached by telephone tonight as he left a fundraiser for Romney at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Pentagon City.

    “Ever since she got out of the race, he’s called her,” Nahigian said.

    For Bachmann, the endorsement represents the end of a journey from fiery presidential candidate slinging arrows at the establishment to self-described unifier.

    “I want my voice to be one of uniting our party, the independents, the mainstream, the conservatives, evangelicals, the Tea Party movement,” she said during a recent appearance on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press.’"

    “I’m waiting,” Bachmann said, “for our party to come together and help in that process.”

    That moment seems to have arrived.

    The mission to unify her party was not always evident during Bachmann’s run, when she made headlines for asserting Romney and another high-soaring candidate at the time, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, were each complicit in laying the groundwork for President Barack Obama’s national health care plan.

    Bachmann created a single moniker for the candidates – “Newt Romney” – and during a bus tour in late December warned crowds that neither candidate could mount an attack on the issue.

    “It's not going to happen with Mitt Romney,” Bachmann told a crowd inside a diner in Onawa, Iowa, on Dec. 27th. 

    “He put that system into effect in Massachusetts,” she continued, referencing the health care plan he launched as Governor in 2006.

    Bachmann dropped out of the race on Jan. 4, a day after finishing last among the candidates competing in the Iowa caucuses.

    494 comments

    With endorsements like this, Romney's sure to win!! LMAO Obama/Biden - 2012

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    Explore related topics: barack-obama, michele-bachmann, first-read, decision-2012, garrett-haake, jamie-novogrod, romney-embed, appfeatured
  • 23
    Mar
    2012
    10:57pm, EDT

    Romney: Obama 'got tours backward,' should 'apologize' for energy policy

    By NBC's Jamie Novogrod
    Follow @JamieNBCNews

     

    SHREVEPORT, LA -- Mitt Romney said Friday afternoon that President Barack Obama should “apologize” to the American people for policies that the Republican presidential hopeful says have created “deficits that are too large” and “jobs that are too few.”

    The remarks, delivered at the foot of a natural gas rig in northern Louisiana one day before this state’s primary, took the president to task over delaying construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline, which would carry oil from Canada through the United States into Texas.

    Thursday, Obama said he would speed permitting for construction of the southern half of the pipeline.

    “This week he’s been taking credit for the lower half of the Keystone Pipeline being built.  If I’m president, we’ll get the upper half built,” Romney said amid applause.

    The Friday event was held in an area that has seen a flurry of natural gas exploration of the so-called Haynesville Shale, which runs underneath northwestern Louisiana and east Texas.

    The setting seemed chosen at least in part to answer Obama’s own two-day tour this week of key swing states where the president defended his administration’s energy policies amid rising gasoline prices.

    “I’m reminded of another tour he took at the beginning of his administration.  Remember, he went around the Middle East and apologized for America,” Romney said, referring to a series of trips during 2009 that included a speech in Cairo that drew criticism from conservative corners of the foreign policy world.

    “I think he’s got his tours backward,” Romney continued. “On his tour of the states here, where he’s been taking credit, he should have apologized for his policies.”

    The event also marked the second time in one day that Romney addressed the shooting death of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin, a story that has ignited a national discussion about race and gun laws.

    Calling Martin’s death a “terrible tragedy,” Romney told reporters here in Shreveport that it was appropriate for the district attorney to have called a grand jury investigation into the Feb. 26 shooting in Sanford, Florida.

    The shooter, an armed neighborhood watchman, has not been arrested. 

    “Our hearts go out to his family, his loved ones, his friends,” Romney said about Martin's death. “This shouldn't have happened.”

    In a written statement, Romney earlier called for an investigation into the shooting.

    Romney’s statements came on the same day that Obama made his first comments on the case. Speaking to reporters from the White House Rose Garden during his announcement of a nominee for president of the World Bank, Obama said, “If I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon.”

    38 comments

    It seems to me that in 2008 the country was ready for a knock down drag out fight after the Bush years. And we had one - for the entire year. Everybody got into it. And no fight was worse than the one we saw within the Democratic Party - Kucinich v Obama v Edwards v Clinton. Yet just 4 years later w …

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  • 3
    Mar
    2012
    10:57pm, EST

    Santorum says US 'equality' comes from Judeo-Christian ethic

    By NBC's Andrew Rafferty and Jamie Novogrod
    Follow @AndrewNBCNews Follow @JamieNBCNews

     

    BOWLING GREEN, OH -- Rick Santorum riled up Ohio Republicans in back-to-back Lincoln Day dinner appearances with Newt Gingrich on Saturday, critiquing President Barack Obama for creating an America dependent on government and selling himself as the only conservative competing for the GOP presidential nomination.

    “The problem with socialized medicine – socialized anything?  It’s a narcotic," Santorum said.  "You don’t even know what you’re missing. You don’t even see the dynamism of life, and the economy, because you’ve been given something for nothing, and you’re happy to have it. This is not us. We are different."


    The thought gave way to a swipe at Mitt Romney.

    "We need someone who can go into this election and draw a clear vision," he continued, "contrast a vision between a president who on every single issue believes in command and control."

    While the former Pennsylvania senator has drawn criticism for focusing on social issues ahead of the economy, he did not back down from hitting on issues like religion and family.

    At an earlier event, he took a veiled jab at the first lady and her campaign against childhood obesity.  "We'll talk about childhood obesity until the cows come home," Santorum said. "But we won't talk about one of the great underlying causes of childhood obesity, which is the instability of the community, the neighborhood and the family."

    Here, before a crowd of more than 600, Santorum said, “I love it because the left says, 'equality, equality.' Where does that concept come from? Does it come from Islam? Does it come from other cultures around the world? ... No, it comes it comes from our culture and tradition, from the Judeo-Christian ethic. "

    The speech earned Santorum a warm reception and four standing ovations, prompting him to joke, “If a speaker’s smart, when he gets a standing ovation like that, you stop.”

    (Stop he didn’t; Santorum continued for another 15 minutes.)

    The applause stood in contrast to former House Speaker Gingrich, who was politely received but won little of the enthusiasm the crowd awarded Santorum.

    Gingrich reiterated his recent vows to deliver gas at $2.50 a gallon and declared Obama’s “left wing view” a “fantasy,” calling it expensive to the American people.

    “I believe we have a chance, a very real chance,” Gingrich continued, to win a historic election of landslide proportions.

    As Santorum was on stage Saturday night, news broke that Mitt Romney would win the Washington state caucus. Campaign advisers were hoping for a strong showing in the Pacific Northwest to grab some momentum going into Super Tuesday.

    He'll stump in Tennessee and Oklahoma on Sunday, both states where polls show him in the lead heading into Tuesday. But he'll quickly return to the Buckeye State to campaign on Monday.

    "No matter what the election, no matter when it is, Ohio is the key," said Santorum in Lima.

    Romney projected winner in Washington state caucuses

    541 comments

    “I love it because the left says, 'equality, equality.' Where does that concept come from? Does it come from Islam? Does it come from other cultures around the world? ... No, it comes it comes from our culture and tradition, from the Judeo-Christian ethic. "

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