Oped:Jack
Well if this is true Mitt Romney blew it big time..he has opted for the Good ol' Boy ticket...he may have gained the votes of young College Republicans...but has alienated Seniors,Veterans and Minorities...brilliant just brilliant Mr.Romney..I suppose the Tea Party/Strict Constitutionalists will have to support their choices for Congress and the Senate and give up on the Good Old Boy GOP POTUS/VP Ticket..!
ADDENDUM: Yup Mitt ROMNEY BLEW IT BIG TIME!
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By Holly Bailey, Yahoo! News
Well if this is true Mitt Romney blew it big time..he has opted for the Good ol' Boy ticket...he may have gained the votes of young College Republicans...but has alienated Seniors,Veterans and Minorities...brilliant just brilliant Mr.Romney..I suppose the Tea Party/Strict Constitutionalists will have to support their choices for Congress and the Senate and give up on the Good Old Boy GOP POTUS/VP Ticket..!
ADDENDUM: Yup Mitt ROMNEY BLEW IT BIG TIME!
_________________________________________________________________________________
By Holly Bailey, Yahoo! News
NORFOLK, Va.--Mitt Romney will name his vice presidential running mate on Saturday.
According to a statement the
campaign released late Friday, the presumptive Republican nominee will
announce his running mate at an 8:45am rally here on the USS
Wisconsin--the first stop of his four-day bus tour of key battleground
states. The campaign offered no further details, and aides traveling
with Ronney declined to comment.
But Republican sources told NBC News, the Huffington Post, the
Associated Press and CNN that Romney is expected to name Rep. Paul Ryan
of Wisconsin--reports the campaign refused to confirm. In addition, ABC
News's Jon Karl reported that former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, Ohio
Sen. Rob Portman and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio--all of whom were said to
be on Romney's short list--have all been told they are not the pick.
Soon after the Romney campaign
announced the Saturday appearance, speculation about the VP pick began,
with Romney's choice of venue for the announcement offering a potential
clue. The USS Wisconsin is the ship named after the home state of Ryan,
the chairman of the House Budget Committee who has created buzz among
conservatives recently. But the announcement also takes place in
Virginia, whose governor, Bob McDonnell, has also been rumored as a
possible vice presidential pick.
CNN reported late Friday that
Romney phoned several Republicans believed to be on his short list to
tell them he had made a pick--though he didn't identify who that person
was, nor did the network identify who he phoned. A Romney spokesman did
not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The campaign has tried its best
to stoke the buzz over Romney's VP pick. In recent weeks, the campaign
has sent out emails to supporters soliciting contributions as part of a
contest offering a chance to meet Romney and his running mate. More
recently, the campaign unveiled a mobile phone application, Mitt's VP,
that promises to reveal the name of Romney's running mate before it is
announced to the media.
Romney has also repeatedly
declined to offer any hints about who he might pick--most recently in an
interview with NBC News on Thursday. Asked about the vice presidential
announcement during a media briefing on Friday, Romney senior adviser
Eric Fehrnstrom directed reporters to download the campaign's mobile
app.
Romney and his vice presidential
candidate are scheduled to travel throughout Virginia Saturday, before
heading to North Carolina on Sunday, Florida on Monday and Ohio on
Tuesday. Romney aides are hoping the VP pick will offer new energy to a
campaign that has been besieged by negative attacks from President
Barack Obama's campaign and negative headlines about Romney's own
strategy.
Ryan, 42, has been viewed by
Republicans as a game-changing pick for the Romney campaign--a rising
star Republican who has been praised as a conservative intellectual.
Perhaps most importantly, Ryan and Romney get along. In the run-up to
the Wisconsin primary in early April, the two campaigned together nearly
everyday for a week--with Ryan even playing an April Fool's Day joke on the GOP candidate.
Reporters trailing Romney at the time noted the budding "bromance"
between the two men--a description Romney aides did not dispute.
Romney flew from Boston to
Norfolk late Friday afternoon with several of his senior aides,
including Fehrnstrom and senior strategist Stuart Stevens. He made a
brief appearance in the press cabin, where he made small talk on yogurt.
There were no major hints that a vice presidential announcement was
coming. Indeed, the campaign's mood was so relaxed that several
reporters skipped the flight to Virginia and had downgraded plans for
coverage of the bus tour thinking that a VP announcement would not come
until next week.
Upon landing, the presumptive
Republican nominee boarded a new campaign bus touting his plan to
"strengthen" the middle class but not his VP. Less than an hour before
the campaign announced that Romney would unveil his VP pick, senior
Romney aides were spotted mingling with reporters in the lobby of the
Marriott Hotel in Norfolk, where the candidate and his entourage are
staying, but gave no indication an announcement was imminent.
Reached by email about the VP news, aides all offered the same response "Keep an eye on the app," one said.
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