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Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Via Bill Gray: David Paleologos on the New Hampshire Primary
Jan. 10, 2012
C-SPAN | Washington Journal
David Paleologos talked about the New Hampshire primary, and he responded to telephone calls and electronic communications. Topics included the most recent polling data and the role of independents in the primary.
Mr. Paleologos participated from Manchester, New Hampshire.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Jackie Kucinich: Voices of Iowans: Considering the GOP candidates up close
http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics/story/2012-01-01/iowa-voters/52318344/1?csp=34news
By Susan Page, Catalina Camia and Jackie Kucinich, USA Today
DES MOINES – Mary Troll watched former House speaker Newt Gingrich cry as he talked about his late mother and she listened to the campaign pitch of Texas Gov. Rick Perry, but as the moment of decision nears in Iowa she finds herself leaning toward former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum.
"It'll depend on my prayer and my gut," says Troll, 50, a stay-at-home mother of five from Grimes, Iowa.
She's not alone in delaying a firm and final decision. A Des Moines Register statewide survey released Saturday night — three days before the Iowa caucuses open the presidential season — found four in 10 likely caucus-goers say they have a first choice for the Republican presidential nominee but still might change their minds.
The fluidity of the race was apparent in interviews with Iowans by USA TODAY reporters at a sports bar in Ames, a deli in Clinton, a coffee shop in Des Moines and an American Legion hall in Redfield. Voters discussed their priorities and concerns as they watched candidates make personal appeals and air a flood of TV and radio ads.
Andrew Petersen of East Des Moines says he's had trouble committing to a candidate because conservatives who have been elected before have "still grown government" once they got into office, despite their campaign promises. "I'm fearful that when they get into the White House, they'll do it anyway," he says.
For Elizabeth Zimmerman, 84, and daughter Diana Zimmerman, 53, it's taken more time than usual to settle on a candidate.
"It doesn't seem like one stands out from the crowd," says the elder Zimmerman, a retired teacher who had decided much earlier in the process to support George H.W. Bush in 1980 and George W. Bush in 2000. The two women came to a Romney meet-and-greet hoping he would address some nagging concerns.
"I worry he might not have enough charisma to beat (President) Obama," the elder Zimmerman says.
"And Romney-care," her daughter, a lawyer, chimes in, referring to the health care plan Romney signed as governor of Massachusetts that she finds suspiciously similar to Obama's health care plan.
Gingrich is also on their list of prospects. "But I have some concerns about him," Elizabeth Zimmerman says. Such as? "Maybe his volatile temperament and a tiny bit that he's had three marriages."
In the end, she says she's likely to support Romney.
In The Iowa Poll, taken Tuesday through Friday, Romney and Texas Rep. Ron Paul led the field, with 24% and 22% of likely caucus-goers. They were followed by Santorum at 15%, Gingrich at 12%, Perry at 11% and Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann at 7%. Former Utah governor Jon Huntsman, who hasn't campaigned here in favor of focusing on New Hampshire, was at 2%.
Over the four nights of polling, the Register reported there had been a significant shift of momentum: Santorum's support was surging as Paul's support ebbed.
The survey showed the different and sometimes conflicting priorities of Iowa voters as they weighed ideological purity, personal character and electability.
Romney was seen as the most electable and the best able to bring about change among those polled, but he was sank to fifth as the candidate best at relating to ordinary Iowans. Paul was rated the most ideologically consistent and the least ego-driven. Gingrich was judged to be the most knowledgeable by far.
Frank Seydel, a retired biochemist and pastor from Ames, voted for Bachmann at the Iowa's closely-watched straw poll in August but is now undecided. His wife, Linda, supported former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty at the straw poll; after a disappointing showing he dropped out of the race.
Since then, they have watched the nationally televised debates, read political blogs and dropped in to see various candidates to make a judgment about who would have the best chance of defeating Obama.
Bachmann? "I'm impressed with her as a candidate but … I'm concerned about her viability," he says. Romney comes across as smooth, polished, "rarely flappable" and has "conveyed a goal that could pull me in." Perry is "not as articulate as some of the others but he's Texas' longest-serving governor and that says a lot about his competence."
Then there's Gingrich, who is "clearly the intellectual," Seydel adds. "He just popcorns ideas all over the place. Half of those ideas don't work but a lot of (Thomas) Edison's ideas didn't work either."
The outcome will depend in large part on who bothers to show up at the caucuses. Romney is strongest among seniors, Paul with independents and younger voters, Santorum with evangelical Christians and the most fervent supporters of the Tea Party movement.
Steve Pfannes, a courier for FedEx from Boone, has supported Bachmann and Perry in the past but is now solidly behind Santorum.
"He used to be the little guy that no one listened to, but not anymore," he says. "He will take a defeat before he changes his principles and that's why I'm for him. He's fearless."
Pfannes went to Ames to catch a Santorum event at a sports bar. "I want to see his face," he says, reflecting an attitude that has defined the Iowa caucuses. "I've seen him on TV, but that's different than up close."
Monday, January 2, 2012
Jennifer Jacobs: GOP strategist in Iowa: Media will ‘stomp over there and eat Rick Santorum’
The rapidly-rising Rick Santorum, to date largely ignored by rivals and reporters, will face new scrutiny, a national GOP strategist predicted this morning in Iowa. And it has already started.
“The media works like Jurassic Park dinosaurs – 30 feet tall, huge teeth, not always the biggest brain, and it follows movement,” strategist Mike Murphy said on “Meet the Press” Sunday morning, which aired the Iowa Public Television studios in Johnston.
Santorum is moving, so the press will “stomp over there and eat Rick Santorum.”
The Des Moines Register’s new Iowa Poll shows that likely GOP caucusgoers are suddenly lining up behind the former U.S. senator from Pennsylvania. He earned 10 percent support on Tuesday, the first night of polling, but galloped to 22 percent on Friday, the final day.
The caucuses, the first-in-the-nation vote in the GOP presidential nominating process, are just two days away.
Earlier in the show, moderator David Gregory asked Santorum if anything less than a win in Iowa won’t measure up to expectations.
“That’s really pretty funny actually,” Santorum said. “Ten days ago, I was at 5 percent and every question I got was, why don’t you pack it up, why don’t you endorse another candidate and now 10 days later now you’re saying, ‘Oh, you’ve got to win!”
Asked to defend his endorsement of Mitt Romney in 2008 as “the clear conservative candidate,” Santorum said: “What changed was who he’s running against.”
Romney was a better candidate “relative to John McCain,” he said.
And Santorum was asked about his change of mind on abortion. In 2006, he said he supported exceptions in the cases of rape, incest and the life of the mother. Now he says he opposes all abortions. Was that a flip-flop?
“Today I would support laws that would provide for those exceptions but I’m not for them,” Santorum answered.
Murphy, in a separate segment, predicted Santorum will be “the happiest guy in the world I think Tuesday night.”
“Wednesday he’s got to stand on his head, drink from a firehose without drowning and learn Chinese in one week to roll this out nationally. Not impossible, going to be hard.”
Romney, the poll frontrunner, would love to beat Santorum in Iowa Tuesday, but “there’s no way Romney comes out of here a loser if he’s in the top two,” Murphy said.
Time magazine’s Mark Halperin predicted that the caucuses will either be great for Romney or really good for Romney.
“They would love to leave here in the top three in whatever order, being (Ron) Paul, Santorum and Romney because they believe they will never lose in the long run or maybe even the medium run to Santorum or Paul.
“(Newt) Gingrich and (Rick) Perry represent bigger threats for them. The worse case for Romney is if one of those guys surges in the last few days. No indication that will happen, but they’re out there working hard,” Halperin said.
Every time a GOP rival has become a poll-topping threat to Romney, “his well very skilled opposition research team has killed the person whose challenged him,” Halperin said. “They killed Rick Perry. They killed Newt Gingrich. They haven’t lifted a finger to kill Rick Santorum.”
But if Santorum emerges strong from Iowa, the Romney team will tactically kill Santorum with a thick opposition research file, Halperin said.
Saturday, December 31, 2011
Kim Geiger: Iowa poll: Santorum surges as Gingrich fades, Romney leads
While Mitt Romney and Ron Paul lead the pack among GOP candidates favored by likely Iowa caucus-goers, Rick Santorum’s surge continues, according to a new NBC/Marist poll released Friday.
The poll, which was conducted Dec. 27-28, also shows "tea party" supporters becoming more divided as the Jan. 3 caucus nears.
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney leads with 23% support from likely caucus-goers, followed by Texas Rep. Ron Paul, with 21%.
Next is former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who has surged to 15%, up considerably from just 5% in late November, the last time the poll was taken. Texas Gov. Rick Perry has also seen a bump in support, though not as drastic as Santorum’s. Perry went from 9% in late-November to 14% in this latest poll.
The poll is bad news for former House speaker Newt Gingrich, who was atop the GOP field with 26% support last month. He placed fifth in this latest poll, with 13% support. Worse, 35% now say he would be unacceptable as the GOP nominee, compared with 16% last month. And 6% identify him as the “true conservative” in the race.
About half of likely Iowa caucus-goers identify as tea party supporters, and Gingrich’s lead among these voters has also dissolved. Tea party support now appears to be splintered between a number of candidates, with Santorum favored by 20%, followed by Romney and Paul with 17%, Gingrich with 16%, Perry with 15% and Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann with 10%.
The results of the NBC/Marist poll mirror the findings of a CNN-Time poll that was released earlier this week. Their methodologies were slightly different: Unlike the CNN-Time poll, NBC/Marist contacted some respondents by cell phone and the likely voter model included independents and some Democrats.
The CNN-Time poll found, among likely voters in Iowa, 25% support for Romney, 22% for Paul, 16% for Santorum, 14% for Gingrich, 11% for Perry, 9% for Bachmann and 1% for former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, who is not campaigning in Iowa.
kim.geiger@latimes.com
Friday, December 30, 2011
Julie Hirschfeld Davis: Gingrich Tamps Down Expectations to Win Iowa as Polls Show Slump
By Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Lisa Lerer
(For more on the 2012 election, see ELECT.)
Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich is seeking to reduce expectations that he will win the Iowa caucuses as his momentum stalls in national polls.
The former speaker yesterday also sharpened his criticism of former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney to blunt a barrage of negative ads Romney’s backers have unleashed against him.
“I never said I’d come in first in Iowa,” Gingrich told reporters at a rally in Virginia that drew only a couple of dozen people to a Richmond-area hotel ballroom. “There was a period when I was the front-runner, but frankly, if you get $7 million or $9 million of ads -- most of them false -- the sheer weight of negativity has a real impact.”
The two front-runners are keeping up their campaigning today, underscoring the competitiveness of the race even as the pace began to ease for the Christmas holiday weekend.
Romney will wrap up a four-day bus tour in New Hampshire, with plans to greet voters in pizza shops, Mexican restaurants, a toy store and diners. Gingrich will address Republicans in Columbia, South Carolina, where he will participate in a Christmas lunch. Next week, he heads back to Iowa to kick off an eight-day, 44 city bus tour that will take him through the final stretch of campaigning before the Jan. 3 primary.
Paul as Winner
Gingrich said he could imagine Texas Representative Ron Paul winning Iowa, or “a number of other scenarios,” adding, “It’s going to be a really interesting two weeks.”
Earlier, Gingrich downplayed the significance of an Iowa loss during an appearance before more than 200 Republicans at a breakfast in Short Pump, Virginia. Finishing in the top three or four in the Jan. 3 caucuses there, placing in the top two in New Hampshire on Jan. 10 and winning contests in South Carolina and Florida later that month would still position him to be the Republican nominee, he said.
“From then on, I think it becomes a fairly easy race,” Gingrich said.
As Gingrich worked to manage expectations, Romney received a boost when he picked up the informal endorsement of former President George H.W. Bush.
“Romney is the best choice for us,” Bush said in comments published by the Houston Chronicle yesterday.
Supporting Romney
As Romney campaigned in New Hampshire, the former president told reporters that he supported Romney because of his “stability, experience, principles. He’s a fine person,” he said. “I just think he’s mature and reasonable -- not a bomb- thrower.”
Romney has rolled out high-profile endorsements in recent weeks, including from New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley and 1996 Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole.
Some Republicans have raised concerns that Gingrich would be a weak general election nominee, citing his propensity for embroiling his party in controversy.
Bush, the father of former President George W. Bush, recounted how Gingrich broke ranks with his party at the last minute during negotiations over a bipartisan 1990 budget agreement. The intra-party dispute weakened Bush as he entered the 1992 re-election campaign, which he lost to President Bill Clinton.
“I’m not his biggest advocate,” the elder Bush said of Gingrich, the Houston Chronicle reported.
Romney Criticism
Stumping in Virginia as he mounted a late push to gather the 10,000 signatures needed to get on the ballot for the state’s March 6 primary, Gingrich portrayed Romney as insufficiently conservative to win the backing of the state’s Republicans.
“When you get down to a choice between a Massachusetts moderate and a southern conservative in Virginia, you have a pretty good chance in the primary of winning,” said Gingrich, who was born in Pennsylvania, represented Georgia in the U.S. House and resides in McLean, Virginia.
Polls have shown Gingrich’s late-year surge flagging less than two weeks before voting begins with the Iowa caucuses. A Dec. 19 CNN national poll found Romney and Gingrich tied with 28 percent support.
Gingrich Confidence
Gingrich has continued to project confidence on the campaign trail. On Dec. 1, he declared he would be the Republican nominee and on Dec. 12 in New Hampshire, he said he was “by a big margin, the front-runner.”
Almost every national public opinion poll conducted during the first week of December showed Gingrich leading the Republican pack with a double-digit margin over Romney.
Gingrich’s advantage in Iowa has diminished or vanished, according to surveys in the state. While he held a double-digit lead over Paul and Romney in a CBS-New York Times poll conducted Nov. 30-Dec. 5, he ranked second behind Paul in an Iowa State University/Gazette/KCRG poll taken Dec. 8-18.
Gingrich has been bombarded by ads in Iowa from Romney’s backers and Paul’s campaign criticizing his record and character.
The pro-Romney Restore Our Future political committee has spent more than $2.5 million on ads and direct mail against Gingrich, Federal Election Commission records show. In its latest television commercial, the group says Gingrich has “too much baggage.”
Consulting Fees
It cited the $1.6 million in consulting fees he got from government-sponsored mortgage giant Freddie Mac, his 1997 ethics reprimand by the U.S. House and charges, which Gingrich dismissed as false, that he backed using federal funds for abortions.
Gingrich has called on Romney to stop the ads and challenged him yesterday to explain them in a one-on-one debate. Romney rejected the challenge today in an interview in New Hampshire with the Associated Press.
“There’s no question it has an impact, so we have to now overcome that impact,” Gingrich said today of the commercials.
--Editors: Jim Rubin, Jeanne Cummings.
To contact the reporter on this story: Julie Hirschfeld Davis in Washington at jdavis159@bloomberg.net; Lisa Lerer in Washington at llerer@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Silva at msilva34@bloomberg.net
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Jennifer Jacobs: Romney and Santorum rise, Gingrich falls in new CNN poll in Iowa
Jennifer Jacobs, The Des Moines Register
A new poll of likely GOP caucusgoers in Iowa shows Mitt Romney in the lead, with Ron Paul three points behind and Rick Santorum in third place.
Romney is at 25 percent in the CNN/TIME/ORC Iowa poll, followed by Paul 22 percent, Santorum 16 percent, Newt Gingrich 14 percent, Rick Perry 11 percent, Michele Bachmann 9 percent, and Jon Huntsman 1 percent.
The survey was conducted by telephone with 452 likely Republican caucus participants in Iowa by ORC International on Dec. 21-24.
Sampling error for Iowa is +/-4.5 percentage points.
Asked if they might change their mind, 43 percent of respondents said yes.
Another poll is coming soon: The Des Moines Register’s final Iowa Poll before the Jan. 3 caucuses will be published online at 7 p.m. Saturday.
Gingrich was in the lead with 25 percent in the Register’s last Iowa Poll, conducted Nov. 27-30.
Paul was at 18 percent, Romney 16 percent, Herman Cain and Bachmann 8 percent, Perry and Santorum 6 percent and Huntsman 2 percent.
Friday, December 23, 2011
Rebecca Stewart: CNN Poll: Economy still number 1 worry
(CNN) -The economy is the top concern for Americans, according to a new CNN/ORC International poll released Friday, and half name unemployment as the most important issue related to the economy.
With just three in ten saying things are going well in the country today and 70% saying they are going badly, economic issues are still the main priority for the country this holiday season.
Fifty-seven percent of the nation says the economy is the most important issue facing the country now, with the deficit listed a distant second at 16%.
When asked to name the country's biggest economic problem, 51% of Americans chose unemployment, and 27% named the deficit as their top economic concern, placing it second, as well.
But as heated debate over a payroll tax cut extensions take center stage in a congressional standoff, the poll indicates only seven percent of Americans list taxes as the most important economic problem in the country.
The CNN poll was conducted by telephone by ORC International from Dec. 16 to Dec. 18, among 1,015 adult Americans questioned by telephone. The survey's overall sampling error is plus or minus three percentage points.
– CNN Associate Producer Rebecca Stewart contributed to this report.